
Archway lecture theatre: Treasure or toilet block?
An award-winning Otago University lecture theatre slated for demolition has been slammed as "hideous", "fugly as hell" and looking like "a toilet block".
The Otago Daily Times yesterday reported that the Dunedin City Council was considering stepping in to save the Archway Lecture Theatre building from the wrecking ball. University wants to demo building
The building is on a draft list of 146 to be protected under changes to the district plan, but university vice-chancellor Grant Robertson wants it down. What do you think of the building? Let us know
The building went up in 1974 and won a New Zealand Institute of Architects Southern Architecture Award for Enduring Architecture in 2020.
In a heritage assessment report the DCC said: "This building is both unique and special to Dunedin. It also contributes to a nationwide body of Brutalist architecture."
However, many ODT readers have expressed far less favourable views of the building.
Former student Jeremy Callander didn't hold back
"I think I speak for every single human being that has ever had to sit through a lecture or an exam in the Archway Lecture Theatre, when I say that the Archway Lecture Theatre is......just the worst.
"The Richardson Building looks like a maximum security prison. The Commerce Building looks like the administration block of a maximum security prison at mardi gras. But the Archway Lecture Theatre takes the cake: it looks like a toilet block.
"Ooooh, it won a prize did it? News flash: you can pin a ribbon on a giant cow turd - doesn't make it cheese cake.
"To the university: just tear the damn thing down. You can ask for forgiveness later."
Readers on social media also had frank views on the building.
One called it "the ugliest building in education", another called it "hideous", and someone else said it was "fugly as hell. Bowl the bloody thing."
A minority of commenters wanted the building kept.
University music lecturer Andrew Perkins said: "They're wonderful, very well designed, and have everything going for them. I've been lecturing in them the past few years, and they're great!"
Another person said they loved Archway's "cheesy brutalist style. Keep Dunedin weird and leave it alone".
Mark Baxter, a life member of the Otago University Students Association, said it was "the only strongly Brutalist building left on the campus and is part of a set of very different architectural styles from different ages closely grouped together making an architectural history of NZ display, hence I think it'd be an architectural crime to demolish them".
- APL
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Green Island shed fire fuelled by loose hay
Firefighters attend a shed fire at a property in Bush Rd, Green Island, on May 8. PHOTOS: GREGOR RICHARDSON Loose hay strewn across the floor is believed to have fuelled a fire that burnt a Green Island shed to a crisp. On May 8, a large commercial shed in Bush Rd, Green Island went up in flames, prompting a large-scale firefighter response from around the city. In the fire investigation report, released to the Otago Daily Times under the Official Information Act, it said the cause of the fire was an accidental electrical failure. It said trickle chargers were mounted to a post near the tractor's front wheel and were connected by a switch and multi-board. There was an electrical fault in the chargers — the report said they could have either short-circuited or arched — which ignited loose hay strewn all over the shed's floor. Hay was also stored both at the front and rear of the shed, the report said. Wind carried the flames from the front of the shed to the back. Firefighters walk through smoke at the Bush Rd property. In the blaze, a tractor was destroyed, a car in the front of the shed was burned out, and an old Austin truck was severely fire damaged. Crews from the Roslyn, St Kilda, Dunedin, Wakari, Lookout Point, Mosgiel and Portobello stations all ended up attending after the initial call came in at 3.10pm. On arrival, the shed had largely already been destroyed. The roof had collapsed, and flames had consumed most of the structure. Once the fire was out, it was noted the most severe damage was near the tractor and front bay, where the fire started. Heavy machinery was used to remove parts of the building, helping crews to extinguish flames. A Fire and Emergency NZ spokesman said they recommended keeping any potentially flammable material, such as loose hay, away from potential heat or spark generating areas such as electrical sockets or equipment.


Otago Daily Times
4 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Theatre past its heyday, planner says
A planner's recommendation could clear the way for the University of Otago to demolish an award-winning lecture theatre. As part of proposed changes to the district plan, the Dunedin City Council has identified 146 buildings which are protected under the heritage schedule. Following hearings last month, council planner Peter Rawson recommended six of the buildings be removed from the list, including the University of Otago's Archway Lecture Theatre. Mr Rawson accepted the university's view the theatres were no longer fit for education and refurbishment was not possible. The university's evidence indicated scheduling the building would have a high cost and "constrain their ability to operate efficiently and effectively". "Therefore, I consider that the costs of scheduling the Archway Theatres building outweigh the benefits, and it should not be scheduled as a heritage building." Vice-chancellor Grant Robertson said yesterday the university was "highly supportive" of the recommendation, which aligned with its submission to the hearing panel. In his written submission, he asked for the building not to be included on the heritage list, saying the university was considering demolishing the theatres and the neighbouring Gregory Building — possibly replacing them with a formal garden space. Victoria University of Wellington senior architecture lecturer Christine McCarthy opposed the building's demolition, and said the recommendation was extremely sad. "It is such a progressive, innovative and challenging building that embodies the ethos of what a university would hopefully be striving for. "It's a shame that these values don't appear to be appreciated and that the architecture has been only understood superficially and conservatively." The Archway Lecture Theatre building was built in 1974, designed by notable Dunedin architect Ted McCoy, and won a New Zealand Institute of Architects Southern Architecture Award for enduring architecture in 2020. Mr Rawson also recommended proposed protection be dropped for the Lookout Point Fire Station, saying scheduling it could prevent Fire and Emergency New Zealand (Fenz) providing a fit-for-purpose fire station. In October, the council granted a certificate of compliance for the demolition of the building and an unattached accommodation block, meaning Fenz had a five-year period in which it could demolish the buildings, regardless of heritage protection. Protecting the building could have the "perverse outcome" of encouraging Fenz to demolish within that period, Mr Rawson said. Council city development manager Anna Johnson said a decision on the heritage plan change was expected to be released next month. "The second hearing will address the remainder of the matters covered by Plan Change 1 and will likely be in August 2025 — a separate decision would be released for this hearing."


Otago Daily Times
13-06-2025
- Otago Daily Times
Act of kindness about giving back
The Otago Daily Times helps Balclutha neighbours Wayne Morrison and June Waters keep close. PHOTO: NICK BROOK The Otago Daily Times has played a regular role in a full-circle friendship. Every morning, six days a week, 72-year-old Wayne Morrison walks from his Balclutha neighbour's letterbox up her sloping driveway to bring the Otago Daily Times to her door. For the past three years, Mr Morrison has brought 95-year-old June Waters her newspaper — a simple act of kindness that speaks volumes. Mr Morrison, a father of two and grandfather of four, spent 49 years at the local freezing works before retiring. He volunteers at Cross Recreation Centre and with his wife of 45 years, Loesje, has lived next to June for five years. Mrs Waters, a great-grandmother of 21, relies on a walking frame but is as sharp as ever and quick with a smile. ''I get help from Wayne, Meals on Wheels, Access care ... I have family in and out regularly. Somebody does my garden. Somebody does my lawns. Bruce brings round my groceries. Ruth comes and does my housework." Born in Gisborne and a Clutha resident since 1951, she proudly said: "I've still got it up top, my memory — which is better than the other way around." Her recent award for 70 years' service to the South Otago Women's Institute is proof of her community spirit. "She spent a lifetime helping others,' Mr Morrison, himself an ODT online subscriber, said. "Now it's our turn.'