First Seatoun Scout Hall

38 Ferry Street, Seatoun, Wellington
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  • Constructed

    1932 - 1932

  • Architect(s)

    Unknown

  • Builder(s)

    H.D. Field

  • Home to Seatoun’s Scouts for over 60 years, the 1930 Seatoun Scout Hall is likely to be Wellington’s oldest purpose-built scout hall. The hall’s played a lengthy role in the Seatoun Community, mainly as a place where hundreds of children attended scouts and cubs. Many local residents enjoyed the popular weekly movie nights after its opening until cinemas were built in Kilbirnie and Miramar.

    Unoccupied since the late 1990s, the hall suffered a fire in 2011, which was extinguished before the building was completely destroyed.

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  • close History
    • The scouting movement started in England but it quickly went international.  That same year, New Zealand's first scout group was established at Kaiapoi.  Sea Scouts was established in 1909.  Soon scout groups were established all over the country, some 500 by the end of the year 1909.  Wellington's first scout group was established in Brooklyn, closely followed by the 1st Kelburn 1909 Scout Group, which occupies what is probably the country's oldest scout hall – the former Gardens' Battery caretaker's house, built about 1890.  

      Baden-Powell visited New Zealand for the first time in 1912 (he would make many subsequent visits).  The country's first jamboree was held in 1926, the year that the Rev. John Allan founded the 1st Seatoun Scout Group, with Allan Hepburn.   Bob O'Brien, in his history of Seatoun, suggests the group began much earlier – by 1910.   

      Plans for a hall were drawn up in 1930. The architect of the hall is not known.  No name is shown on the permit drawings.  The builder was H.D. Field.  The permit application was for a cost of £180  but another account suggests it was built at a cost of £221.   The hall was partly financed by an interest-fee loan of £100 from local resident Jack Owen and by raising money through movie shows in the hall after it was built.  In fact the hall's weekly movie night became a regular and popular feature of Seatoun life for a period, until the construction of theatres in Kilbirnie and Miramar.  

      In 1963 the hall, which was also used by cubs, was extended with a lean-to to its north elevation.  The permit application value was £700,  but again the figure contrasts with that in Struthers, which puts the cost at £1300.   The builder was E. Crawford and the addition was known as the Barnett Memorial Extension, after a substantial portion of the cost was provided for in Elizabeth Barnett's will. 

      The 1st Seatoun Scout Group was clearly an active and well organised scouting group but it began to suffer from a decline in numbers towards the end of the 20th century.  Some time in the late 1990s it was decided to merge with the nearby Worser Bay Scouts to form the Eastern Bay Scouts and Sea Scouts.  They operate out of the Worser Bay building.  

      The Seatoun Scout Hall was abandoned and was unoccupied for some time.   In 2011 the hall suffered fire damage, but the fire was extinguished before the building was completely destroyed. Since this time, the fate of the building has been in question.
  • close Architectural Information
    • Building Classification(s) close

      Not assessed

    • Architecture close

      The former Scout Hall is a single storey building of timber construction, with a corrugated iron roof and casement windows. The entrance, off an asphalt forecourt on the southern side of the building, is sheltered by a simple canopy carried on two steel poles.

      The building is clad in rusticated weatherboards, has a flag pole atop the gable facing the street, and is comprised of a main section under a gabled roof with a lean-to running along the northern side. The gable apex is infilled with lapped weatherboards resting upon small brackets. This treatment, reminiscent of that commonly given to modest California bungalow style houses in New Zealand, offers some variation in texture on what is essentially a very simple building with little in the way of decorative detailing.

      A single diamond-leaded fanlight above the northerly window beneath the gable end also lends a minor decorative note. Similarly the existing paint scheme goes some way towards highlighting the various elements of the facade. One feature of the facade that is not distinguished from the weatherboard wall surface is the vertical battening, two between the main windows and a third between the gabled section and the adjoining lean-to.

      A section of vertical corrugated iron cladding at the rear of the building, on the south-western corner, appears to relate to a second lean-to behind the main gabled section.

    • Materials close

      Timber

    • Setting close

      The Seatoun Scout Hall has a relatively modest appearance, and stands at the intersection of Ferry and Forres Streets in Seatoun. It terminates the view along Forres Street towards Ferry Street. Its location at the T junction lends the building greater townscape impact than it might otherwise have had.

      The western boundary of the building stands against the cliff, which separates Seatoun from Seatoun Heights, at the rear of the building. The façade, or eastern elevation, is narrowly separated from the footpath and carriageway by a raised plant bed. The building is in a predominantly residential area that it happily complements.

  • close Cultural Value

    The former Seatoun Scout Hall is a single storey building of timber construction, and is Wellington’s oldest purpose built scout hall. Its modest form and materials is a reminder of the kind of plain, utilitarian structures that communities once built for their own use.

    The Seatoun Scouts Hall has significant historic value as it is likely to be Wellington’s oldest purpose built scout hall. The Hall served the needs of Seatoun’s Scouts for over 60 years before the club merged with the Worser Bay scouts. Hundreds of Seatoun Scouts used this building and it served an important community function.

    The Seatoun Scouts hall has had a lengthy role in the Seatoun Community and this has imbued it with social significance, primarily for its role as a place where so many children attended scouts and cubs. The hall is also of social significance as weekly movie nights were held in the period following its opening and many residents used it.

    • Aesthetic Value close
      • Architectural

        Does the item have architectural or artistic value for characteristics that may include its design, style, era, form, scale, materials, colour, texture, patina of age, quality of space, craftsmanship, smells, and sounds?

        The former Seatoun Scout Hall is a single storey building of timber construction, and is Wellington’s oldest purpose built scout hall. Its modest form and materials is a reminder of the kind of plain, utilitarian structures that communities once built for their own use.

      • Townscape

        Does the item have townscape value for the part it plays in defining a space or street; providing visual interest; its role as a landmark; or the contribution it makes to the character and sense of place of Wellington?

        The townscape impact of the Scout Hall is modest, but it enhances the view along Forres Street towards Ferry Street. Its location at the T junction lends the building greater townscape impact than it might otherwise have had.

    • Historic Value close
      • Association

        Is the item associated with an important person, group, or organisation?

        The Seatoun Scouts Hall has significant historic value as it is likely to be Wellington’s oldest purpose built scout hall. The Hall served the needs of Seatoun’s Scouts for over 60 years before the club merged with the Worser Bay scouts. Hundreds of Seatoun Scouts used this building and it served an important community function.

    • Scientific Value close
      • Archaeological

        Does the item have archaeological value for its ability to provide scientific information about past human activity?

        The archaeological risk is unknown. There has been historic human activity in the Seatoun area prior to 1900. The flat land was formerly a kumara cultivation ground for Māori.

    • Social Value close
      • Public Esteem

        Is the item held in high public esteem?

        The Seatoun Scouts hall has had a lengthy role in the Seatoun Community and this has imbued it with social significance, primarily for its role as a place where so many children attended scouts and cubs. The hall is also of social significance as weekly movie nights were held in the period following its opening and many residents used it.

    • Level of Cultural Heritage Significance close
      • Authentic

        Does the item have authenticity or integrity because it retains significant fabric from the time of its construction or from later periods when important additions or modifications were carried out?

        The Seatoun Scout Hall retains significant fabric from the time of its construction, but since suffering fire damage, it is unknown what state the interior fabric is now in.

      • Representative

        Is the item a good example of the class it represents?

        This hall is a good representative of they type of building that was once commonly constructed by communities throughout New Zealand to serve their needs. It is constructed in a style and in materials common to the period.

      • Importance

        Is the item important for any of the above characteristics at a local, regional, national, or international level?

        The Seatoun Scout Hall is of local heritage significance for its architectural, townscape, historic, social, archaeological, and representative values.

    • Local / Regional / National / International Importance close

      Not assessed

  • close Site Detail
    • District Plan Number

      7/ 411

    • Legal Description

      LOT 2 DP 83848

    • Heritage New Zealand Listed

      Not listed

    • Archaeological Site

      Risk unknown

    • Current Uses

      unknown

    • Former Uses

      unknown

    • Has building been funded

      No

    • Funding Amount

      Not applicable

    • Earthquake Prone Status

      Unknown

  • close Additional Information
    • Sources close
      • Culliford, S.G. New Zealand Scouting: The First Fifty Years 1908-1958. Wellington: The Boy Scouts Association of New Zealand. 1958.
      • Kelly, Michael and Anne McEwan. ‘36 Ferry Street (Former 1st Seatoun Scout Hall), Seatoun.’ Unpublished report prepared for Wellington City Council, 2007.
      • O'Brien, Bob. Waka Ferry Tram – Seatoun and the bays to 1958. Wellington, 2001.
      • Struthers, J. Miramar Peninsula: A Historical and Social Study. Wellington: 1975.
    • Technical Documentation close
    • Footnotes close

      Not available

Last updated: 7/25/2017 5:00:57 AM