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STATE HOUSES

UGLY ARCHITECTURE \ / examples in remuera I 1 BACK DOORS FACING STREET Architecture of an unusual type that has little aesthetic recommendation is illustrated by a number of houses recently constructed by the State Housing Department in various pafts of the city, particularly in several Remuera areas. Severe, box-shaped affairs, some of the houses in outward appearance fully measure up to the description of one tenant who wryly likened those in his street to barns and superior sheds. Two adjacent houses in Lingarth Street. Renifoera, are scarcely things of beauty. Each presents a plain, square ' frontage, broken by two lines of small windows and a curiously designed porch that juts out at the left-hand corner. At either end of the porch, opening J directly on to'the street, are the back and front doors, the latter being protected by a glass screen. Window-cleaning Problem

The design is even less beautiful at the back, where the upper floor overhangs by about 2ft. at one end and by a few inches at tho other. Cleaning the 52 windows will lie one of the minor problems for tenants, especially at tho back, where the ground slopes fairly steeply away, necessitating the use of a very tall ladder. For these houses, of four 'rooms, kitchenette and bathroom, situated about a. quarter of a mile from the rather .infrequent Victoria Avenue tram, the State requires £1 18s 6d a week in rent. Situated immediately opposite aro three or four houses of similarly unprepossessing appearance. Alike in design, these are single-storev structures whose plain lines, flat roofs and plastered walls give them the appearance of small factory buildings. Strange Architectural Principles Wiles Avenue, off Arnev Road, Remuera, also has its quota of houses built according to strange architectural principles. The State lias erected a fairly large number of homes in this area, and, while some of the buildings are most attractive, others are marred by ugly features which, through slight alterations to the plans, could easily be avoided. Most noticeable are the cases where the back door opens directly, or almost directly, on to the street. Downpipes and vents adjacent to front doors spoil the appearance of other dwellings, especially when they are painted in colours which contrast vividly with the walls behind. Other hoiises whose lines can scarcely be a source of pride to the State are to be found among the group of homes that lias been built adjacent to the comer of Orakei and Upland Roads.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19400323.2.143

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXVII, Issue 23612, 23 March 1940, Page 15

Word Count
413

STATE HOUSES New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXVII, Issue 23612, 23 March 1940, Page 15

STATE HOUSES New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXVII, Issue 23612, 23 March 1940, Page 15