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New Plymouth District Council.

Taranaki Stories 
Business And Industry - The House that Jack Built - how one designer changed the face of Hawera and the dairy industry forever  
The Littlest LibraryThe Architect's DaughterBack to list
Duffill
Jack Duffill

By Rhonda Bartle

 

Plans for safekeeping

Safe in the Puke Ariki archives, in a specially built receptacle, lie many of the plans Jack Duffill drew up on his own or with his partners.

 

Thin and silent metal drawers slide open to reveal drawings for 440 different buildings 43 dairy factories, 220 houses and numerous commercial buildings, as well as many of our region's hospitals.

 

It's a collection Puke Ariki is very proud of.  More than 1700 individual plans tell of a long and illustrious architectural career that spanned 35 years.

 

Origins of a clever man

 'I think of him as being an important provincial architect, how's that for a label,' says Hawera writer and historian, Arthur Fryer.

 

Fryer writes historical pieces for the Hawera Star and there's not much about South Taranaki that he doesn't know.  'Jack Duffill was a man of his time,' he says. 

 

Duffill grew up in Hawera, where he was born in 1883.  Though he came from a farming background, he trained as an architect when the family relocated to Wellington.  At technical college, he found a way to pay his fees by teaching, staying just three papers ahead of his students. 

 

After setting up practice in Eltham in 1905, he met Joyce Wilson on the tennis court and it was love, set and match.  They were married in 1912, but the couple left immediately for Hawera without a honeymoon.

 

Duffill had been offered a partnership with architect J.W. Rough and took to the road in his motorcycle with his bride strapped into the sidecar beside him.

 

'Today, you'd describe him as a man's man,' Fryer says. 

 

A matter of good timing

The Rough and Duffill partnership turned out to be a very good career move and when Rough left for England around 1920, Duffill took over the business. Steven Gibson joined in 1918, and a new partnership of Duffill & Gibson was formed.

 

Hawera architect Clive Cullen of Clive Cullen Architects says Duffill was a talented man in the right place at the right time.  'It's not dissimilar to Frank Lloyd Wright in Chicago,' he says.  'Wright was the most famous American architect ever - the one who invented the prairie style house, the big low-hipped roofed houses with overhanging eaves, the ranch style house.  All handcrafted and individually designed and absolute art works in themselves. 

 

'He was in Chicago at the time when the meat industry was just booming in America, absolutely helter-skelter development, in the same way Duffill and Gibson would have been in South Taranaki at the time when the dairy industry was just flying along.'

 

A new line in dairy factories

Both Cullen and Fryer see Duffill's groundbreaking dairy factory designs as his greatest contribution to modern architecture.

 

Fryer says it was a major architectural contribution, with more than 100 Duffill factories built in the Taranaki area, as well as those in Nelson, Hamilton, Wellington and Auckland.

 

Cullen believes Duffill & Gibson did an amazing thing when they rebuilt virtually all the first generation dairy factories in the province. 'That first generation, they were all utilitarian concrete buildings but they were all purpose-made.  They used, at the time they were done, pretty smart technology in terms of the use of concrete and a very efficient way of putting buildings together for industrial purposes.'

 

He thinks doing so many of them helped Duffill & Gibson to work out the best design, and each one would have effectively become a prototype for the next. 

 

'They would have got better and better as they went on, dare I say it, to the extent of probably using the same drawings over and over again at times, so they probably made a fair bit of money from it.  The other things that they did, of course, were a lot of civic buildings, commercial buildings and houses.'

 

As Fryer says, 'Those houses are still good today.'

 

A concrete pioneer

Fryer acknowledges that Duffill's strength was his penchant for concrete, something he points out wasn't being used at the time.  'He was keen on stressed concrete.  We are not very far away from the Grafton Bridge in Auckland, and that was an 'early' concrete work in New Zealand. This is pre-World War I and here's Duffill down here using concrete for dairy factories.'

 

Many of the original wooden factories, made over a 20 year period till around 1890, were at the end of their limited lifetime, shrinking beneath the pressure of an ever expanding dairy industry. Puke Ariki holds the plans for 43 Duffill replacements.

 

An early Duffill design

A very early Duffill design can be seen in the Hawera band rotunda in King Edward Park and interest lies in its two storey construction.

 

Hawera Band Rotunda

Hawera Band Rotunda - now the observatory

 

'It had a cafeteria on the bottom level but on the top level, the band played,' Fryer explains.  'I haven't been able to talk to anyone who actually remembers the band playing there.  A friend said he thought it would have been almost impossible to keep the music on the stands.  It was a great idea but it just didn't work, so eventually, people got all keen about astronomy and built an observatory there.'

 

These days the band rotunda sports a shiny domed top and telescope but the flagstone bearing John Duffill's name still exists below.

 

More Duffill & Gibson designs

A very well-known Duffill & Gibson design is the looming Remembrance Arch on Princess Street, Hawera. Built in stone and concrete, it was to be used as an entrance to new Borough Council chambers but plans were put aside by a council strapped for cash.



Remembrance Arch, Hawera
Remembrance Arch, Hawera

Later, it was hoped to provide access to a proposed theatre, but that too fell through. 

'There was a bunch of Philistines who wanted to use the space as a parking lot and have the entrance through the arch,' Fryer says.  'Fortunately they weren't heard!'

 

The Patterson building on High Street, now a retail clothing store, is perhaps one of Duffill's greatest works and shows a marked flamboyance. An art deco exterior does little to reveal the beautiful layout inside, where a wide and stunning staircase draws visitors up to the second floor.

 

Patterson's

Patterson's

 

Originally Wilkinson's, where imported china was displayed on shelves before large wall-mounted mirrors, it was known as Hawera's 'posh shop' and people came from everywhere to admire it.

 

A Georgian building in a frontier town and a tilting water tower

One of the most curious projects Duffill was involved was overseeing the construction of the Patea Library in 1930, from plans drawn up by an award-winning architect who designed the Georgian revival styled library in Remuera.



Patea library

Patea Library

Image: South Taranaki District Council

 

The little Patea Library is an extraordinarily handsome building, a smaller version of the one in Auckland.  Built with money donated by a reclusive bachelor sheep farmer, it housed the Plunket Rooms and an adjoining flat, with a little L-shaped space for books. This year it will get the refurbishment it deserves.

 

The Hawera Water Tower, renovated in 2004, was another project where Duffill was called in as consultant.  Though he was not involved in construction, his expert opinion was sought when the tower was discovered to lean.



Hawera water tower
Hawera water tower

As Fryer says, 'There were not many people working in concrete who were sure of what they were doing. When the water tower was put up, it was designed on structural principles that were more attuned to working in wood. Duffill was on the very edge of things, he was working in concrete, a virtually new material.'

 

Though it still leans slightly today, the tower was straightened at night, leaving many people unaware it had been 'fixed'.

 

Not just 'A local boy makes good'

John Alfred Duffill was not simply a local boy made good, but a local boy who created sound original structures that have stood the test of time. 

 

He pioneered a completely new concept, that of building in permanent materials and his concrete buildings are forerunners to those being built today. 

 

Duffill's work marked a whole new trend in thinking, design and construction and his safely-kept drawings will long remain a testimony to his remarkable talent and skill.




Published 19 February 2005

 

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LIBRARY RESOURCES

Clement, Christine and Johnston, Judith, Women of South Taranaki - Their Stories (1993) Hawera Suffrage Centennial Local History Group, Hawera Star

 

Fryer, Arthur, A Little Bit of History, (1994) The  Post, Hawera

 

Hill, Perry Martin,  New Zealand architecture (1976), School Publications Branch, Dept. of Education, Wellington

 

Historic buildings of New Zealand North Island (1979), Cassell New Zealand,  Auckland

 

Shaw, Peter, A history of New Zealand architecture (1997), Hodder Moa Beckett, Auckland

 

Stacpoole, John, New Zealand Art; architecture 1820-1970 (1972), A. H. & A. W. Reed, Wellington

 

ARTEFACT RESOURCES

Duffill Architectural Plan collection

 

Reminiscences - Compiled by Arthur Fryer from notes taken at an interview on 18th Sept 1998, Miss Mary Duffill reminiscences about her father John Duffill. Mary Duffill talks of her father's architectural career and other interests such as aviation, vehicles, theatre etc.
(ARC 2002-292)

 

WEBLINKS

Puke Ariki is not responsible for the content of these external websites.

 

Eltham Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

Hawera Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

Historic Places Trust - Promoting the identification, protection, preservation and conservation of the historical and cultural heritage of New Zealand.

 

Manaia Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

Patea Heritage Inventory (PDF) - a comprehensive survey of historic buildings prepared for the South Taranaki District Council

 

RELATED TARANAKI STORIES

Eltham Town Hall Has Good Friends

 

EDUCATION

Pathfinders
These are guides to Puke Ariki's resources and provide in-depth information related to a particular topic.


PLACES TO VISIT

Why not vist some of Duffill's creations mentioned in this story.

 



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