Moving Grounds: Irrupting Three Kings' Inverted Volcanoes

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dc.contributor.advisor Treadwell, S en
dc.contributor.author Lee, Zee Shake en
dc.date.accessioned 2015-06-07T23:03:18Z en
dc.date.issued 2014 en
dc.identifier.citation 2014 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2292/25780 en
dc.description Full text is available to authenticated members of The University of Auckland only. en
dc.description.abstract Once a complex of mighty volcanic cones, now an eccentric scoria quarry pit hemmed in between low-rise suburbs, the Three Kings Quarry is now on the verge of becoming a mass housing redevelopment. The current proposal to backfill the quarried land and fill with homogeneous terrace houses and multi-storey apartments refuses to recognize the significances of the articulated volcanic landscapes and is argued in this thesis to be an act of normalizing extremities and effacing traces. Auckland, described as ‘a city nurtured in a nest of volcanoes’, is characterized by a natural turbulence in which Aucklanders live, work and play.1 The volcanoes in Auckland which once established their significance as points of reference and assemblage – from Maori fortresses to water resources, signal stations for ship, surveying points and forts – now survive as park lands or as remnants of economic contributors supplying materials for roads and buildings. The disappearing volcanoes and their residue implicated by industrialization of the environment have generated a unique urban condition that provokes a rethinking of our social, environmental, and political policies. Neither praising nor disgracing the industrialization, the thesis discusses the urban issues that have emerged throughout the landform transformations, including decontextualization of place, homogenization of form and disguise of urban conflicts. Premised on the instability of ground and built environment, the thesis also seeks to interrogate the subject of time and change in architecture and landscape, from the perspective of the ephemeral, the time-based and through the notion of becoming. Within the proximity of the inverted volcanoes, can the dazzling manufactured landform suggest an architecture that offers functional devices and empirical propositions that question our existing policies, mode of practice, and way of living? Can the hybridization of architectural functions and unorthodox site settings suggest a new architectural expression for Three Kings as well as Auckland? Addressing these questions the thesis seeks to manifest interventional architecture – positioned around the themes of the event, emergence, dislocation, and divergence, in order to question our relationship with the eccentric altered landscape and spatial territories. en
dc.publisher ResearchSpace@Auckland en
dc.relation.ispartof Masters Thesis - University of Auckland en
dc.relation.isreferencedby UoA99264774512602091 en
dc.rights Items in ResearchSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Previously published items are made available in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. en
dc.rights Restricted Item. Available to authenticated members of The University of Auckland. en
dc.rights.uri https://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/docs/uoa-docs/rights.htm en
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/nz/ en
dc.title Moving Grounds: Irrupting Three Kings' Inverted Volcanoes en
dc.type Thesis en
thesis.degree.discipline Architecture (Professional) en
thesis.degree.grantor The University of Auckland en
thesis.degree.level Masters en
dc.rights.holder Copyright: The Author en
pubs.elements-id 488252 en
pubs.record-created-at-source-date 2015-06-08 en
dc.identifier.wikidata Q112906024


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