Premier House

Premier House (Māori: Te Whare Pirimia) is the official residence of the Prime Minister of New Zealand, located at 260 Tinakori Road, Thorndon, Wellington, New Zealand.

Premier House
Premier House during an open day in 2015
General information
Location41°16′36.4″S 174°46′14.8″E
Address260 Tinakori Road, Thorndon
Town or cityWellington
CountryNew Zealand
Current tenantsJacinda Ardern, Prime Minister of New Zealand, and Clarke Gayford
OwnerHer Majesty's New Zealand Government
Designated24 March 1988
Reference no.1371

A private house purchased for the Prime Minister's official residence when government shifted its base to Wellington in 1865, it was first greatly expanded and then, as its wooden structure deteriorated, shunned by the more modest political leaders on learning the cost of repairs.

It was leased to private individuals for six years in the late 1890s then returned to use as an official residence for the Prime Minister until the Great Depression when a new government in 1935 wished to avoid "show". For more than half a century generations of children came to know the building as their dental clinic until it was renovated and recommissioned as Premier House in 1990.

Early history

Construction

The original house was built in the early days of the New Zealand colony in 1843 for Wellington's first Mayor, George Hunter. This house, or at least a portion of it, is still located at the southern end of the current building. It has been greatly expanded over the years. Later the residence of Nathaniel Levin, the house was bought from Richard Collins in early March 1865 to become the official residence of the nation's Premier.[note 1][1] Wellington's The Evening Post thought the £2900 price "must be considered cheap". Auckland's Daily Southern Cross described it as "one of the handsomest villas in the country",[2] but Auckland's local morning paper, The New Zealand Herald, noted the acquisition with the comment "a piece of illegal extravagance".[3] A few weeks later the Daily Southern Cross described the original plan to build a new house as a "monstrous waste of public money".[4]

Expansion

The house changed little until Julius Vogel and his wife, Mary, arrived in 1873.[5] Within a year they had turned it into an eight-bedroom mansion complete with conservatory and ballroom. The grounds featured what is thought to have been the country's first tennis court.[6] The Vogels were noted for their lavish entertaining, resulting in the house acquiring the nickname of "The Casino".[7]

Official residents

The government of Frederick Weld completed the purchase of the residence.
(1875–1876 : Hon Dr Daniel Pollen, 9th Premier for 7 months)
(1877–1879 : Hon Sir George Grey, 11th Premier)
  • 1879–1882 : Hon Sir John Hall, 12th Premier
  • 1882–1883 : Hon Sir Frederick Whitaker, 5th Premier
  • 1883–1884 : Hon Sir Harry Atkinson, 10th Premier
  • 1884–1887 : Hon Sir Julius Vogel as a cabinet minister in the government of Hon Sir Robert Stout, 13th Premier.[11][12] More extensions were made to the house due to Vogel's poor health. His recurring gout resulted in an extra office being added for Cabinet meetings and in 1886 the construction of New Zealand's first lift.
The country entered a Depression in the late 1880s and after the Vogels moved out, the new government tried to sell the property. MPs’ salaries had been cut, and the Liberal ministers of the 1890s had to live cheaply. But the press and public fought back. Wellington people valued its spacious grounds as a public amenity. Only the furniture was sold. Some suggested turning the site into an old men’s home or a university, but it stayed empty.
(1893–1906 : Rt Hon Richard John Seddon, 15th Premier. Following Ballance's death Seddon remained in his modest ministerial residence at 47 Molesworth Street and the Tinakori Street residence was leased out from 1895 to 1900 when it became a ministerial residence again.)
Tenants
1893–1895 apparently vacant[12]
1895–1899 : Sir Walter Buller, lawyer and ornithologist.
1899–1899 : Percy Smith, surveyor general and secretary for lands and mines and ethnologist.
Official residents
Joseph, later Sir Joseph Ward Baronet, and his family at Awarua 1906
  • 1900–1912 : Rt Hon Sir Joseph Ward Bt, as a cabinet minister[12] then Prime Minister from 1906. Now called Awarua, the name of Ward's electorate,[12] the house again became one of the capital's main social places, hosting many formal and informal parties, especially after Ward became Prime Minister following Seddon's death in 1906. One party of particular note was the farewell party given by Miss Eileen Ward, daughter of Sir Joseph Ward, to farewell near neighbour Katherine Mansfield a few days before she left New Zealand for the last time in 1908.
  • 1912–1925 : Rt Hon William F Massey,[12] Prime Minister renamed it Ariki Toa, ‘home of the chief’. During the First World War the Masseys used it for patriotic activities.
  • 1925–1928 : Rt Hon J Gordon Coates, Prime Minister. The last Prime Minister to live there.[12] Further extensions were made to the building in 1926 when Gordon Coates lived there including rebuilding the conservatory and adding an enclosed veranda above it but major maintenance work seems to have been deferred again.
  • 1928–1935 : Rt Hon George Forbes, Prime Minister lived in a flat at Parliament House. Parts of Premier House's floor had subsided up to 30 cm. The ground floor was occupied by the Unemployed and Transport Departments and the upper floor as a ministerial residence by the families of Mr Masters, a former leader of the Legislative Council and Minister of Public Works, Mr Ransom.[13] Following a number of parliamentary debates it was decided by popular demand to not subdivide the land or build Ministerial flats on the grounds.[12][14] The garden continued to be the location of subscription garden parties raising funds for major charities like YWCA and Girl Guides.[15]

Dental clinic

In 1935 Prime Minister Michael Joseph Savage, faced with rebuilding the country's economy in the midst of the Great Depression, lived in Seddon's former residence at 47 Molesworth Street, later purchasing a house high in Northland. Premier House was turned into a school for dental nurses and a children's dental clinic, known to all as "the murder house".[16] It had 40 chairs, later 50.[17] Before fluoridation the molars of the nation's children were soon cored with amalgam.[18] At the time, Mr Langstone, the Minister of Lands, was living there and a new house was built for him in the grounds on the site of the stable.[12] During the war the garden grew vegetables for the local Armed Forces Service Clubs.[19]

Restoration

Premier House in 2015, the colour scheme giving some shape to the agglomeration of disparate structures

After many years of institutional use, by the 1980s the building had fallen into disrepair. It was rescued from this decline by Michael Bassett, Minister of Internal Affairs, who initiated moves for the restoration of the building to its early grandeur.

The restoration was undertaken by Auckland's Grant Group Architects and L.T. McGuinness Construction between December 1989 and 1991. The internal walls were retained and all rooms and most passages were left in their original position. Fire sprinklers, central heating and air conditioning systems were installed along with a new hydraulic lift.[20] The interior decoration carefully reproduces many 19th-century period features, while the overall design is modern. The decor includes a considerable collection of New Zealand art, both old and new.

The conservation of Premier House, as it was renamed, was a 1990 Sesquicentennial project. That year Geoffrey Palmer and his wife, Margaret, became its first official residents.[21] In 2018 the house was upgraded, with repairs and maintenance undertaken, at a cost of NZ$3 million.[22]

Official residents continued

John Key hosts John Kerry in Premier House, November 2016

Exclusions

Prime Minister Bill English (2016–2017) did not live at Premier House during his term because New Zealand law prohibits Wellington-based MPs from claiming taxpayer-funded accommodation in the capital.[23] His successor, Jacinda Ardern, who is based in Auckland, moved into the official residence.[24]

Value

The property has a land area of 1.5 hectares (14,569 square metres) and a rateable value (in 2020) of NZ$23,300,000.[25]

Other official residences

64-66 Harbour View Road

From 1939 Michael Joseph Savage (until 1939 at 47 Molesworth Street) lived in a house “Hill Haven” at 64-66 Harbour View Road, Northland, Wellington, which was subsequently used by his successor Peter Fraser until 1949. It was purchased for Michael Joseph Savage "because it is now not necessary (to be within easy walking distance of Parliament) and a Prime Minister is no longer bound to the lowly areas of the Thorndon flats".[26][27]

41 Pipitea Street

From 1950 Sidney Holland lived at No 41 Pipitea Street, Thorndon. The house was subsequently used by Walter Nash, Keith Holyoake and Geoffrey Palmer, and as a ministerial residence by Jim Sutton and Nick Smith. The house was also used for the Pacific Island Affairs Ministry.[28]

Vogel House

From 1976 to 1990 Vogel House in Lower Hutt was the official residence of the prime minister. It was used by Robert Muldoon and others.[29]

Notes

  1. "The Government have been fortunate in securing, at a moderate figure, the beautiful house and grounds, formerly the property of N. Levin, Esq, situated in the Tenekorie Road. It has now become the official residence of the Hon. F. A. Weld. The price paid was £2,950, which, considering the quantity of the land (2½ acres), the locality, etc., must be considered cheap" The Wellington Evening Post page 2, 13 March 1865

References

  1. Daily Southern Cross page 5, 19 September 1865
  2. Daily Southern Cross page 5, 21 March 1865
  3. The New Zealand Herald page 4, 21 March 1865
  4. Daily Southern Cross page 4, 29 March 1865
  5. Editorial, Evening Post, Volume IX, Issue 78, 14 May 1873, Page 2
  6. "Prime Minister's Residence". Register of Historic Places. Heritage New Zealand. Retrieved 17 April 2011.
  7. "Premier House, 1880". Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  8. The Wellington Evening Post page 2, 13 March 1865
  9. Wellington Independent, Volume XXI, Issue 2482, 19 February 1867, Page 3
  10. Arrival of Sir Julius Vogel. Evening Post, Volume XIII, Issue 35, 11 February 1876, Page 2
  11. Political. Oamaru Mail, Volume IV, Issue 1322, 8 October 1884, Page 2
  12. Home of Premiers. Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 131, 4 June 1937, Page 7
  13. General News. Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19647, 17 June 1929, Page 8
  14. Prime Minister's residence. Press, Volume LXV, Issue 19771, 8 November 1929, Page 12
  15. Here and There, Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 35, 11 February 1933, Page 20
  16. Fran Wilde, Thorndon, My Brilliant Suburb, Platform Publishing, Wellington 1985 ISBN 0908725000
  17. 260 Tinakori Road, Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 130, 3 June 1937, Page 10
  18. Report of the Commission of Inquiry 1957
  19. Work Increases, Evening Post, Volume CXXXV, Issue 20, 25 January 1943, Page 6
  20. "Premier House Prime Minister's Residence". LT McGuinness Ltd. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  21. "Inside Premier House in 1990". nzhistory.govt.nz. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  22. Walls, Jason (27 November 2018). "Upgrade costs for Premier House, official Wellington residence of PM Jacinda Ardern, triple to $3 million". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  23. "Bill English legally can't live in Premier House". Stuff. 1 February 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  24. "Jacinda Ardern's new government sworn in". Stuff. 26 October 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  25. Local Gossip, New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXVI, Issue 23339, 6 May 1939, Page 4
  26. Dominion Post (Wellington), 2012: 1 December pE1 & 26 December pA14
  27. Dominion Post (Wellington), 2013: 19 February, pA6
  28. Dooney, Laura (26 February 2016). "The history of one of Wellington's finest homes". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
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