Neighbour Peter Grace outside the historic Dunedin Greenslade Mansion, owned by Otago Girls' High School. Photo by Linda Robertson.

Peter Grace said he was ''fired up'' Otago Girls' High School had been granted authority to demolish Greenslade Mansion, in Tennyson St.

From his living room in the historic building he was restoring - the former Temple Gallery in Moray Pl - he could see the mansion.

If the school did not intend to restore the mansion, it should sell it for the sake of Dunedin's heritage and to set an example.

''What sort of role models are they for the girls of the school? It's an important part of the city's heritage.''

Earlier this month, Heritage New Zealand (HNZ) granted authority to the school to demolish the mansion to clear land for a car park.

Glen Hazelton.

As part of the process, an archaeological assessment this month revealed the mansion was a ''highly significant archaeological site'', as it was built by a founder of Speight's Brewery, Charles Greenslade, who helped establish the Waipori power scheme.

''He worked hard to establish himself in Dunedin from his arrival in 1864 and much of the original mansion he built in 1887, in particular the interior decoration, fixture and fittings, which typifies his success by this time, are still present,'' HNZ senior archaeologist Pam Bain said in the authority.

The Rev Phillip Filleul built stables on the site in 1859, so a demolition condition was that any stone, cobbling or brickwork of the stable floor must be preserved.

Read more here:
Possible demolition upsets neighbour

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November 29, 2014 at 8:10 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Demolition