After years of disuse, New Zealand’s National War Memorial will be restored with a multimillion-dollar earthquake strengthening project for the Carillon finally green-lit.
The towering Carillon in Wellington’s War Memorial Park has been closed for the past four years due to fears of collapse in a significant earthquake, a major risk given the capital sat on a number of fault-lines.
The 50m tall art deco tower was built in 1932 and was one of the most beautiful buildings in Wellington’s skyline.
It housed 74 bronze bells, which weighed from just a few kilograms to several tonnes.
The massive musical instrument used to be played regularly before the seismic risk was identified, bringing a long closure and bureaucratically bungled restoration efforts.
However, the Ministry for Culture and Heritage has progressed plans for a $9.5 million revitalisation, with work beginning on Monday.
Restoration chime at last
A newsletter sent by the ministry today confirmed the work, which was held over until next week to allow commemorations without scaffolding over the tower for Anzac Day services.
Work was expected to take about 18 months, meaning the Carillon will return to prominence in time for 2026 Anzac Day services. The Carillon was one of many Wellington buildings, including major landmarks, to fall foul of seismic regulations and require expensive re-fits.
The Town Hall was the signature example: The well-loved 1901-built neo-renaissance civic building, which once hosted The Beatles in concert, was earmarked for strengthening more than a decade ago with a $30 million budget .
Re-evaluations and cost blowouts meant Wellington ratepayers would now be forking out $329 million to restore the building to former glories by 2027.
Other buildings, including Wellington Train Station, parts of Parliament, and many office and apartment buildings have also been hit.
Heritage values were often behind expensive decisions to strengthen buildings, rather than opting to demolish and rebuild.
In the case of the Carillon, which has already had millions spent on it, a heritage ministry spokeswoman said the government was fully funding the project, and costs could be met within the ministry’s existing budget.