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editorial / JULIA GATLEY

From Beaux-Arts to BIM

Fig. 1 The entry to the Auckland 
School of Architecture in 1991. 
[University of Auckland Libraries  
and Learning Services, Record 
Number 557368]

In September 2017, the University of Auckland’s School of Architecture and 
Planning celebrated its centenary. We launched a book on the School’s history 
(Gatley & Treep 2017), and opened an extensive exhibition of drawings, photo-
graphs, models, and ephemera, also from the School’s first 100 years (Milojevic, 
Treep, Barrie, & Gatley 2017). There were three further exhibitions: current stu-
dent work (Manfredini & Rieger 2017); library and archive collections across the 
100 years (Milojevic & Cox 2017); and a revised edition of the timeline on women 
in New Zealand architecture, prepared by Architecture + Women New Zealand 
(2017 [2013]). The latter newly named the women who had studied architecture 
in the School from the 1920s to the 1970s, when the institution started to become 
less particular about identifying women as such in its lists of student names.

This historic reflection followed survey texts on the history of architectur-
al education in the United Kingdom (Crinson & Lubbock 1994) and the United 
States (Ockman & Williamson 2012). There is also a tradition of individual 
schools marking significant anniversaries with their own histories. Of these, the 
Architectural Association School of Architecture (AA) in London has been among 
the most prolific (Summerson 1947; Gowan 1973–75, 1975), while the Yale School 
of Architecture in New Haven, Connecticut, has produced perhaps the most ex-
haustive study of its own past (Stern & Stamp 2016). The School of Architecture 
at the University of Liverpool is one that has attracted the attention of multiple 
authors, particularly developments that occurred under Charles Reilly’s leader-
ship (Crouch 2002; Dunne & Richmond 2008; Richmond 2001; Sharples, Powers, 
& Shippbottom 1996).



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In Australasia, the University of New South Wales celebrated 60 years of archi-
tecture in 2015 (Murray 2015), the University of Western Australia, 50 years of 
architecture in 2015 (George 2015), and Victoria University of Wellington, 40 
years of architecture in 2016. The School of Architecture, Design and Planning 
at the University of Sydney celebrates its architecture centenary in 2018, while 
in 2019, the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning at the University of 
Melbourne celebrates both the centenary of that University’s Architecture Atelier 
and the sesquicentenary of its teaching of architecture. The older planning pro-
grammes—those originally focused on town planning—were often established 
in schools or faculties of architecture, while more recent planning programmes 
have more diverse beginnings.

In addition to the centennial history and four exhibitions, the Auckland School 
of Architecture and Planning celebrated its centenary with a gala dinner enjoyed 
by 280 people, a series of panel discussions with alumni, and a symposium titled 
“Educating Architects and Planners, 1917–2017”. This special issue of Interstices 
brings together seven of the 30 papers presented at the symposium. 

The original call for papers for the symposium established our interests in a 
broad range of themes, including the formation and early history of schools and 
programmes, the gradual demise of the pupillage model, the extent to which 
Beaux-Arts methods were or were not used in particular schools, and more 
generally, the reliance on overseas models. Auckland’s inaugural Professor of 
Architecture, for example, Cyril Knight, had trained at the University of Liverpool 
School of Architecture and worked in New York, and his background influenced 
the early direction of the School. British qualifications remained common among 
the Auckland staff until the 1950s, when greater diversity started to be seen, in-
cluding the School’s first European émigré staff. The early reliance on Britain 
extended to the professions, with ties to the Royal Institute of British Architects 
(RIBA) and the Town Planning Institute of London (TPI). This changed over time, 
as the New Zealand professions and the tertiary sector both matured. Thus, the 
modernisation and professionalisation of programmes were of interest to us. For 
most of the twentieth century, the New Zealand Institute of Architects (NZIA) 
was heavily involved in decisions about the opening of new architecture pro-
grammes in particular tertiary institutions; now it is hands-off, taking the view 
that whether or not a particular institution offers architecture is purely a busi-
ness decision for that institution. Schools have also had changing priorities, and 
have responded to changing technologies, from environmental sustainability to 
the digital age, as well as changing demographics, including gender, ethnicity, 
and internationalisation. Key members of staff were another obvious theme, with 
their visions and their public voices, as critics or commentators. The work on 
our own centennial history had established further specific interests in accom-
modation, space, and the ways in which physical environments have influenced 
pedagogies at particular points in time.

While the symposium attracted a broad range of papers from across the region, 
the seven articles presented in this volume are tightly connected, and indeed 
interconnected, by virtue of their consistent focus on aspects of New Zealand ar-
chitecture and planning education. As the Auckland School was New Zealand’s 
only professional school of architecture until the mid-1970s, and also offered the 
country’s first professional planning programme, this necessarily includes re-
peated reference to it and its history.



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In the first article, “Persisting Beaux-Arts Practices in Architectural Education”, 
Milica Mađanovic investigates the endurance of Beaux-Arts practices in the 
Auckland School of Architecture from 1927 to 1969. She focuses on the School’s 
teaching of the history and theory of architecture, and more specifically on the 
books it recommended as reading for the history and theory courses. Her start 
date follows not the School’s opening, but rather the publication of reading lists 
in its annual prospectuses, and their inclusion of conservative, historicist texts 
that supported Beaux-Arts emphases on classicism, composition, and unity. Her 
conclusion is that “The reading lists published between 1927 and 1969 document-
ed three phases of the Beaux-Arts influence on history and theory teaching at the 
Auckland School: predominance, from 1927 to 1947; transition, from 1948 to 1958; 
and then decline, from 1958 to 1969.”

The second article is by Ann McEwan, who is already the author of one of the 
key texts on the history of architectural education in New Zealand, “Learning 
by Example” (1999). Here, in “Learning in London”, she focuses on the New 
Zealanders who studied architecture at the Architectural Association School of 
Architecture (AA) in London. This included the likes of Samuel Hurst Seager and 
Frederick de Jersey Clere in the nineteenth century, and a much larger number 
in the first few decades of the twentieth century. Her study is informed by archi-
val research in London, complemented by extensive newspaper searches. She 
shows that most of the New Zealanders who studied at the AA in the early twen-
tieth century returned to New Zealand and practised here, with a considerable 
proportion becoming well known. She compares their experiences to those of the 
New Zealand painters and writers who spent time abroad, and concludes that the 
AA training would have enhanced the standing of those architects who returned.

With his article “Ernst Plischke as Teacher”, Christoph Schnoor moves the vol-
ume to modernism and, more specifically, to the teaching initiatives of the 
Austrian-born émigré architect, Ernst Plischke (1903–1992). Plischke gave pub-
lic lectures in Wellington in the 1940s and applied for the position of Professor 
of Design at the Auckland School of Architecture in 1947. He was unsuccessful 
in this application, but 16 years later, in 1963, took up a professorial position 
in design at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, and taught there for 10 years. 
While the Auckland School in 1947 sought a professor with academic expe-
rience, Vienna in 1963 privileged practice experience and design reputation. 
Thus, Schnoor asks the question of whether academic experience or practice ex-
perience is the more useful criterion for selecting and appointing professors of 
design. He argues that Plischke was more than just an ordinary teacher, expect-
ing his students to produce high-quality work and developing in them a “moral 
compass” and, he hoped, a “noble mind”. 

In “Imric Porsolt: The ‘Messenger of Modernism’ in Exile”, Linda Tyler focuses 
on another émigré architect-academic, Hungarian Imric Porsolt (1909–2005). 
She surveys his career, including his training and early work in Prague, and his 
move to New Zealand in 1939, at the age of 30. Porsolt worked as an architect in 
Auckland during and after the war, started teaching part-time in the Auckland 
School of Architecture in the late 1940s, and then worked full-time in the School 
from 1950 through to his retirement in 1974. He was important in broadening 
the scope of the history and theory teaching in the School, newly introducing 
modernism, the applied arts, and New Zealand architecture. He was also active 
as a writer on New Zealand art and architecture. Tyler shows that his personal 



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approach derived from German philosophy and aesthetics, rondo-cubist Czech 
architecture, and the Viennese school of art history and criticism. He had a mis-
sion to educate others about modernism, evidenced by his instruction for the 
words “A Messenger of Modernism” to be engraved on his headstone.

In “Mud on His Boots”, Robert Freestone focuses on the career and teaching initi-
atives of a third individual—Professor Robert Terence Kennedy (1903–1997), the 
University of Auckland’s first Professor of Town Planning, appointed in 1957 to 
set up the Department of Town Planning within the Faculty of Architecture, and 
running it until his retirement in 1969. Kennedy had no formal qualifications, but 
a wealth of practice experience from the United Kingdom. Freestone’s research 
reveals Kennedy’s insecurities as an academic, but also the high regard in which 
others held him; clearly he saw himself quite differently from how others saw 
him. Freestone argues that Kennedy was “an archetypal British expatriate archi-
tect-planner, somewhat patrician but principled, steeped in old-world planning 
but not dogma, and striving to adapt best practice to the New Zealand environ-
ment.” He concludes that the expatriate Briton established a “firm footing” for 
New Zealand’s first professional qualification in town planning. 

The starting point for Gill Matthewson’s article, “Where Do You Go To?”, was her 
own experience as a first-year student at the Auckland School of Architecture 
in 1976. She was one of 24 women in a class of 74 students. Gender statistics in 
the School had shifted significantly that decade, following a dearth of women 
students throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Second-wave feminism gave wom-
en the confidence to imagine and pursue careers in the professions once again. 
Matthewson analyses the gender statistics from her own cohort, from pass and 
fail rates through to graduation and registration. She also explores the lives and 
careers of as many of her former classmates as she was able to track, providing 
a fine-grained reading of one particular student cohort from the School’s histo-
ry. She argues that the statistics and the stories demonstrate “the difficulty of 
architecture, both as a field of study and as a career”—for men, and especially 
for women—and shows that many alumni find rewarding work in architecture’s 
“expanded field”.

The final refereed article in this issue, “Propagating a Legacy”, by Aaron Paterson 
and Michael Davis, is concerned with the Auckland School of Architecture’s rep-
utation, earned in the 1980s, as a “drawing school”, with a recognised strength 
in “teaching and producing architectural media that challenges normative rep-
resentations of the discipline”. The pair have both taught second-year media in 
the School in recent years, including form-making and fabrication software such 
as Revit and Building Information Modelling (BIM). Their fear is that such pro-
grammes can encourage the production of work that is descriptive rather than 
speculative or critical; their aim is to teach the software in such ways as to main-
tain the School’s critical drawing culture. They describe their response to this 
challenge, through encouraging “undisciplined drawings” and insisting that BIM 
can be considered “part of a design workflow that informs an idiosyncratic media 
practice, rather than an end in itself.”

It is a pleasure to be presenting Lucy Vete’s Master of Architecture (Professional) 
thesis project in this issue, titled “Shifting Grounds” and completed in the 
Auckland School of Architecture and Planning in 2017 under Jeremy Treadwell’s 
supervision. With this project, Vete earned the top prize in the 2017 NZIA Student 



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Design Awards. In this annual competition, each of New Zealand’s three schools 
of architecture is represented by four finalists, and a jury selects a winner and 
two highly commendeds. Vete’s thesis abstract describes her research on Tongan 
conceptions of home and homeland. 

The issue’s non-refereed section combines photographs from the Auckland 
School of Architecture and Planning’s 2017 centenary celebrations; a review, by 
Sam Kebbell, of a recent exhibition of work by Sarosh Mulla and Aaron Paterson, 
titled Penumbral Reflections; and a photographic essay by Patrick Reynolds, re-
cording the University of Auckland’s Conference Centre Building, ahead of its 
likely demolition in 2019 or 2020.

This issue of Interstices is a counterpart to the School’s 2017 centennial histo-
ry publication. It is our conclusion that the researching and writing of histories 
of architectural and planning education is a worthwhile endeavour, because so 
many practitioners remember their education and training very vividly; it is 
formative, and influences careers and both personal and professional networks 
for many years afterwards.

 



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REFERENCES

Architecture + Women New 
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women. Auckland: School of 
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University of Auckland, 
September 8, 2017–July 24, 2018.

Crinson, M., & Lubbock, J. (1994). 
Architecture: Art or profession? 
Three hundred years of 
architectural education in Britain. 
Manchester and New York: 
Manchester University Press.

Crouch, C. (2002). Design culture 
in Liverpool 1880–1914: The 
origins of the Liverpool School of 
Architecture. Liverpool: Liverpool 
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Dunne, J., & Richmond, P. (2008). 
The world in one school: The 
history and influence of the 
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1894–2008. Liverpool: Liverpool 
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Gatley, J., & Treep, L. (Eds). (2017). 
The Auckland School: 100 years 
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George, B. (Ed.). (2015). UWA 
architecture: The first 50 years, 
1965–2015. Perth: Cullity Gallery 
and the Faculty of Architecture, 
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Gowan, J. (1973–75). Projects, 
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Gowan, J. (Ed.). (1975). A 
continuing experiment: Learning 
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Manfredini, M., & Rieger, U., 
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McEwan, A. (1999). Learning by 
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Milojevic, M., & Cox, S., curators. 
(2017). 100 years, 100 books. 
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Planning Library, University of 
Auckland, March–December.

Milojevic, M., Treep, L., Barrie, 
A., & Gatley, J., curators. (2017). 
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Auckland: Gus Fisher Gallery, 
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Murray, A., curator. (2015). 
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Ockman, J., & Williamson, R. 
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Richmond, P. (2001). Marketing 
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Sharples, J., Powers, A., & 
Shippbottom, M. (1996). Charles 
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Stern, R., & Stamp, J. (2016). 
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Summerson, J. (1947). The 
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