Ground stabilisation programme for Rotorua Museum
-------- Original Message -------- News
Release Wednesday 24 March 2010 Ground
stabilisation programme for Rotorua Museum ROTORUA
24.03.10: A programme of ground stabilisation will begin
shortly underneath the Rotorua Museum of Art and History to
ensure the iconic Bathhouse building can continue to host
visitors and locals alike for another 100 years. The need
for the work was identified when geotechnical testing under
the Tarawera Gallery for the South Wing Extension Project
revealed some serious underground conditions requiring
remedial action to strengthen the ground structure under the
building. Museum director Greg McManus said it was
fortuitous that these conditions were discovered during work
on the extension as they would clearly have been required to
protect the museum, whether or not the new extension was
undertaken. “The geotechnical investigation has shown
that there are significant areas of weakness in the ground
caused by pockets of air and these have the potential to
slump in a natural disaster, such as a severe
earthquake.” “When issues were identified in the South
Wing it was thought prudent to continue the investigation
under the existing atrium and historic North Wing of the
building. These tests revealed similar although less severe
issues as those under the South Wing.
“As a result, a
programme of remedial work involving filling the voids with
a specially designed injection grouting process has been
identified and should begin in late March,” said Mr
McManus Rotorua District Council chief executive Peter
Guerin said the total cost of the work is estimated at
around $1.8 million, plus some professional fees. Work under
the South Wing will account for approximately $390,000 of
this and will be funded from the Centennial Project budget,
while work under the Atrium and North Wing of around $1.4
million will be funded through RDC’s loans
programme. “Although the remedial work is clearly an
unwanted expense at this time, it is better to find out
about the serious issues now and deal with them immediately
than to risk potentially bigger problems for the museum in
the future. Mr
McManus said he could assure locals and visitors that the
museum remained safe to visit in the meantime. “Expert
engineers assure me that the risk of any immediate problems
under normal conditions is extremely low. However in the
case of a major earthquake there is some risk of instability
and it is that risk that our stabilisation programme will
address.” The project is expected to be finished in time
for the opening of the completed Museum Centennial
Development Project in August of next
year. [ENDS]
Subject:
News
release: Ground stabilisation programme for Rotorua
Museum
Date:
Wed, 24 Mar 2010 11:53:13
+1300
From:
Megan Lacey
To:
undisclosed-recipients:;
“Our museum is far too important to this
community to remain at risk. This work will help ensure it
survives another hundred years of Rotorua history.”