- Amber House
TOCleft
Amber House is one of the older two story villas in
New Zealand 's third founded city of Nelson in the top of theSouth Island at 46Weka Street.It is a traditional colonial-style construction using native Rimu and Matai with an external
brick chimney that originally served four large fireplaces.The original, highly decorated, cast iron
sewage vent pipes are still intact and visible on the exterior of the building.Cabragh House School
From 1906 until 1927 Amber House housed a "Boarding and Day School for Girls and Little Boys" known as Cabragh House School operated by the Hornsby family from
Ireland .Edwardian photograph s of both the [http://www.AmberHouse.co.nz/#History scholars and the school have been preserved.]Original wallpaper
from the late 19th century that was revealed during recent renovations.
Because New Zealand has had for the last two centuries (and continues to have) the highest
ultra violet exposure levels of any populated region on earth it is extremely rare to find used (as opposed to unused roll) examples ofVictorian wallpaper in New Zealand that have not faded badly.This remarkable state of preservation is rather ironic considering that Nelson yearly competes with its neighbours Richmond and Blenheim for claiming the highest number of [http://www.niwascience.co.nz/edu/resources/climate/overview/climate_sunshine sunshine hours] in the country, with an annual average total of over 2400 hours. You can see the raw data here: [http://www.niwascience.co.nz/edu/resources/climate/sunshine/]
Earthquake resilience
in 1929 ( [http://www.teara.govt.nz/EarthSeaAndSky/NaturalHazardsAndDisasters/HistoricEarthquakes/5/en "Arthur's Pass" and "Murchison"] ), 1968 ( [http://www.teara.govt.nz/EarthSeaAndSky/NaturalHazardsAndDisasters/HistoricEarthquakes/10/en "Īnangahua"] ) and 1994 without a single crack blemishing its surface.
There has been speculation that, because deep below Amber House are separate beds of
shale andsand , these strata have acted like a naturally occurring analogue of the earthquake resistant [http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/politics/history-of-parliament/places-and-spaces base isolators] of the Parliament House inWellington to reduce the incidence of short periodicity lateral waves at Amber House during earthquakes.The evident resilience of this old chimney means that it is even possible that it pre-dates the 1893 magnitude 6.9 Nelson earthquake that moved the spire of [http://www.nelsoncathedral.org/ Christ Church Cathedral in Nelson] nearly a metre out of the vertical plane.
Old English Walnut tree
Amber House has the oldest English Walnut tree ("Juglans regia") in the South Island in the back garden. Although old, this venerable tree is relatively small since, when it was originally planted, it would have been only yards from the original shoreline and on very sandy soil with the roots lacking an adequate water supply. This desiccation has resulted in an almost
Bonsai like effect.History
(under construction)
Furniture
(under construction)
References
*
*External links
* [http://www.AmberHouse.co.nz/#History Edwardian photos of Amber House]
* [http://www.wellington.govt.nz/aboutwgtn/innovation/details/robinson.html Engineering Earthquake Technology]
* [http://www.earthquakeengineering.com/news_events/articles/india.shtml Isolation bearings]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.