Heritage Grant boosts St Saviour’s relocation project
25 July, 2013
Heritage Grant boosts St Saviour’s relocation project
St Saviour’s Chapel is one step closer to returning to the Lyttelton community with the Council approving a Heritage Incentive Grant of $143,431 today.
Natural Environment and Heritage Manager Helen Beaumont says the Council was very glad to contribute to a project which provides a particularly special result for the Lyttelton community following the Canterbury earthquakes.
“The return of this chapel from Park Terrace to Lyttelton, which as a community has experienced enormous loss of heritage churches and secular buildings, is a wonderful example of how the Council can help communities to incorporate heritage as part of the rebuild and recovery, restoring links to the past.”
St Saviour’s Chapel was erected in West Lyttelton in 1885. In 1975 the chapel was relocated within the grounds of the Cathedral Grammar School on the corner of Park Terrace and Chester Street West.
In 2012 the Cathedral Grammar School Trust Board advised the Anglican Diocese of Christchurch that St Saviour’s Chapel was no longer large enough for the school. The school offered the chapel for use elsewhere.
The Anglican Chapel Property Trust decided that it would return the chapel to Lyttelton. The site chosen in Lyttelton is that of the former Holy Trinity Chapel, at 17 Winchester Street. Holy Trinity Chapel was significantly damaged following the September 2010 and February 2011 earthquakes and collapsed as a result of the earthquake on 13 June 2012.
The grant will help cover the cost of works for deconstruction, transportation to Lyttelton, establishment on the new site including new foundations, restoring and attaching the porch from the Holy Trinity Chapel, restoration and incorporation of stained glass, and repair and reinstatement of the reredos. (An ornamental screen covering the wall at the back of an altar.)
The building is listed in the Christchurch City Plan as Group 2. The building is registered Category 2 by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust Pouhere Taonga.
www.ccc.govt.nz/heritage
Fact sheet- Heritage Incentive Grants and St Saviour’s Chapel
Heritage Incentive Grants
The
Christchurch City Council’s Heritage Incentive Grants Fund
provides financial assistance to owners of heritage items
listed in the City Plan and Banks Peninsula District
Plan.
• Owners of listed heritage items can
apply for grants of up to 50 per cent towards the following
conservation-related works
• Conservation of exterior
and interior heritage fabric (including earthquake
repairs)
• Seismic strengthening, fire and access
upgrades to meet Building Code
requirements
• Professional fees e.g., architects,
engineers & quantity surveyors
• Reimbursement of
non-notified Council resource consent fees
Original
construction of St Saviour’s Chapel
• St
Saviour’s Chapel was erected in West Lyttelton in 1885 but
is currently located within the grounds of the Cathedral
Grammar School on the corner of Park Terrace and Chester
Street West.
• The Chapel was made possible by an
endowment from Archdeacon Benjamin and was built on the
corner of Brittan Terrace and Simeon Quay.
• Woolley
Dudley provided funds to assist with the building of a
Chapel and the provision of a minister specifically for the
people of West Lyttelton and visiting
seamen.
• Christchurch architect Cyril Mountfort, the
son of renowned Canterbury architect, Benjamin Mountfort,
was commissioned to design the building.
• Captain
Robert Falcon Scott, the well known Antarctic explorer, and
the crews of the Discovery and Terra Nova also worshipped at
the Chapel.
A home in the city:
• The fortunes
of St Saviour’s, as an independent parish waxed and waned
until in 1975 parishioners gave the Chapel to the
Christchurch Diocese.
• A new home for the building was
sought and the successful applicant was the Cathedral
Grammar School. The school, although founded in 1881, did
not have a permanent purpose built chapel for
worship.
• In 1975 St Saviour’s was dismantled and
rebuilt on a site on the corner of Park Terrace and Chester
Street West.
• Prior to the Canterbury earthquakes the
building served as the school’s chapel.
Returning to
Lyttelton:
• The site chosen in Lyttelton is that
of the former Holy Trinity Chapel, at 17 Winchester
Street.
• The cob and stone Chapel formerly
located here was significantly damaged following the
September 2010 and February 2011 earthquakes. The Chapel
collapsed completely on 13 June
2012.
Architecture:
• St Saviour’s is
built in the Early English Gothic Revival style. It is a
board and batten building with a gabled roof and bracketed
gable ends.
• The interior of the building features an
open timber trussed ceiling and a timber dado.
• The
original Chapel altar was removed to the chapel at Scott
Base,
Antarctica.
ENDS