Auckland's CBD Into the future
Auckland's CBD Into the future
Back to Street upgrades >>
St Patrick's Square upgrade
Project snapshot |
Design features |
History
History
History of St Patrick's Square and Federal Street
Park
St Patrick's Square, incorporating Federal Street Park, is on the western
ridge of the Central Business District of Auckland, between Albert and Hobson
Streets. The site close to the Hobson Street ridge was an ideal location for a
Catholic chapel in Auckland in the mid 19th century, with the Anglican St Paul's
Cathedral close to Point Britomart, and the Presbyterian St Andrews up on the
lower Symonds Street ridge, both to the east.
Much of the landmark appeal of the site has been eliminated by the
development of new buildings and towers dwarfing St Patrick's Cathedral - yet,
this remains a hidden treasure in Auckland. In the early 1970s a park was added
onto the northern terraces below the cathedral and a pedestrian mall was
created. In 2009 an upgrade of St Patrick's Square was completed. As the only significant area of green open space between
midtown and the waterfront, the upgrade has transformed St Patrick's Square into
a more an attractive and user friendly space for all the enjoy - a real urban
oasis.
Pre-Contact situation
While there are no known specific studies into the pre-contact archaeology of
this area, the site of St Patrick's Square lies close to Freeman's Bay to the
west (called Wai Kokota, or 'the place where cockles could be harvested), with Swanson Street apparently where a Maori track called Te
Tarapounamu led up the ridge towards a pa site. Below the Square in the Queen
Street valley flowed Te Waihorotiu, renamed Ligar Canal during European times.
To the east was the site of an old pa, Te Rerenga-oraiti, on the former
headland, which was once Point Britomart. The site was therefore close to food sources and pathways
linking pa and small settlements.
Origins of Chapel Square
Soon after Governor William Hobson declared Auckland to be the new capital of
New Zealand in 1840, his Surveyor-General Felton Mathew drew up a plan in 1841
for the new city, which included two grand residential squares, Wellington
Square and Hobson Square, both along the line of Hobson Street and to the
south-west of the present day St Patrick's Square. Neither of these ever came to
exist. What was to become Chapel Street (later Federal Street) from the harbour
to Wyndham Street appears to have only been intended as a service lane within
the Wyndham-Albert-Customs-Hobson block, ending in a T-shaped right-of-way.
This came to be known as Section 18 of the City of Auckland for
land registration purposes.
Mathew's plan of five lots along the northern frontage of Wyndham Street on
that block was changed that year when it was apparently resurveyed. The lots
were divided up into: Lots 32 and 33 fronting Hobson Street; Lots 1 and 2
fronting Albert Street; and Lots 34 and 35, which came to be the site of the
cathedral in the middle. A road is clearly visible on the allotment maps for the
City of Auckland from this time which would come to be called Chapel Street,
leading from the harbour straight up to the cathedral site, where it then
squared around that site, becoming two entrances off Wyndham Street,
before continuing south.
Published March 2010