Local Heart, Global Soul

May 24, 2012

Hundertwasser is Everywhere, But to Catch Gabriel and Frederick We Need a Return Visit…

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

When I mentioned a few posts back that Austrian architect  Friedensreich Hundertwasser left his mark on Kawakawa, I wasn’t joking.

The quirkiness of his style is literally plastered all over the place.

There are even isolated tiles in the pavements and in walls…

Even a quick look around this small town will give you the idea that this guy’s influence has crept in almost everywhere!

The Café across the street,  gift shops and a raft of other local businesses have all been given what I might loosely term the  ’ Hundertwasser ‘ treatment, giving this small town a really special vibe.

I  can clearly see that the residents fell as much in love with  Hundertwasser ‘s style as he did with their town… a fitting  memorial to a man who’s work brings tourists from afar and puts some needed tourist dollars into the small businesses of this little community.

Hundertwasser lived close to the town of Kawakawa  for 25 years, at first for short stays, commuting back to Vienna regularly but as time progressed he started to spend more and more of his time at his New Zealand property preferring the small town community’s easy-going  and relaxed attitude and privacy afforded to him and as a place where he could enjoy an anonymity that he didn’t receive as famous architect in Europe.

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

I’d love to come back here again one day… not just to get more photographs of  Hundertwasser’s work around the town but also because we missed another very special item unique to this little town… the trains!

Kawakawa is the only town in New Zealand to have a train track running right down the main street!

Apparently this originated back in the days when Kawakawa was called “Irishtown” and was the centre of a booming coal mining industry and coal was transported to Opua on the coast.

After  coal production ceased the line was used for other transport purposes until it was overtaken by other larger links to bigger deeper water ports.

For a while here was a vintage railway group using the line until 2000 when circumstances closed them down, but in 2006 a new Trust was formed and  The Bay of Islands Vintage Railway now runs weekend steam train excursions though the town at weekends.

We looked for “Gabriel” the famed steam engine  or “Frederick” the diesel engine but with no success. Yet another reason to try and come back here again:  I’d love a train ride!

The Trust has a website and once you take a look at the video on the first page, I’m certain you’ll probably want one too!   www.bayofislandsvintagerailway.org.nz

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

May 23, 2012

Taking a Look at my Own Convenience…

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

Oh Dear, you know I’m weird right?  (but you love me for it anyway I hope LOL)

Yes, another  toilet post…  but with Conveniences as special as the ones we are visiting in Kawakawa, it’s worth taking your time and appreciating the view as well as the amenities.

Fortunately the rush on the Ladies side of the toilets has all but dissipated for the moment so I feel free to take my time and take a few (ok, quite a few) photographs.

Look for the photo that shows the mirror on the wall …with light from the coloured bottles  streaming onto it… or the baby changing table that will entertain your baby with shapes and colours…

…or the Ladies half of the most brilliant security gates (for when the Public Toilets are closed for the night) , even better than the one on the Gents side I think, and one that I would loooovvve to copy in the garden I might get to own one day.

Check out the crooked little window high up on the wall… and since the second Ladies cubical was empty and the door was open after I’d exited,  I took a quick snap of that too, and loved how even the toilets themselves don’t match.

Unconventional down to the finest detail.

The luminescence of the bottles in the walls when lit from the outside and seen from the inside could easily rival any stained glass window in any Cathedral… it’s stunning and your eyes are delighted as they dance  across patterns, shape and colour.

Why do so many Public places have to look like concrete slab boxes when they could  look like this? Everyone we saw was smiling… having fun.

I wish the world could be filled with more of such whimsy and be less grey /bright white/ stainless steel / clinically serious.

I also love not having to coax any of the five children  ”to please ”go” before we get back into the van and back on the road”  because at this Lavatory they couldn’t wait to have a look and a giggle inside!

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

May 22, 2012

Do I Dare to Step Into a Gents Toilets?

In this part of my journal of our retrospective tour of New Zealand, we still visiting the small town of Kawakawa, and it’s famous toilets designed by Friedensreich Hundertwasser.

Now I have a small problem…I’m not a gent, and I know that Himself would definitely draw the line at taking a camera into a Men’s loo… actually that does sound a little too perverted doesn’t it?  (and strangely somehow it doesn’t when applied to the Ladies.)

Anyway… at one point I noticed that the crowd of visitors thinned out considerably and whilst there was still a small queue on the Ladies side, that the Gents side appeared to be now empty. Noooo, I wasn’t brave/foolish/rude enough to actually pop into the Men’s loos but I did take a quick peek around the little corridor leading to the entrance of it and caught sight of what’s probably the best security gate I’ve ever seen, as well as some more amazing bottle and tile work.

Come and take a peek too…

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

May 21, 2012

Kawakawa: Going Out Of Our Way is NO In-Convenience…

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

Regular readers of my blog will know that  I have a fascination with the weird and wonderful of the everyday world around me: patterns on man-hole covers,  unusual doors and letterboxes, architectural detail … and unusual toilets.

If you need reminding, please see:

For When you Need to Bolt the Stable Door http://kiwidutch.wordpress.com/2011/11/04/new-559/

An Old Fashioned Dutch convienience …sure to surprise Loo.
http://kiwidutch.wordpress.com/2010/03/20/new-post-47/

USA: Getting ready for takeoff and a loo with a view…
http://kiwidutch.wordpress.com/2009/09/25/usa-getting-ready-for-takeoff/

Actually I suppose the latter stems from that fact that we own two of said unusual loos, and well also because when you travel  a little bit off the beaten track you can often find something quirky to add to your “collection” if you keep your eyes peeled.

In this instance however I didn’t have to open my eyes very wide at all because for a very small Northland town of approximately 1300 people, there are there is an inordinately long queue outside the doors of  the public convenience located in the middle of the main street.

In fact, would be even correct to say that many people touring through the region actually detour into the farming community of  Kawakawa expressly to use the public toilets!

An Austrian architect,  Friedensreich Hundertwasser came to the town in 1975 and lived there until his death in 2000:  he not only fell in love with the town but used his talents to quite literally leave his mark on it.

Hundertwasser melded art and design, used recycled materials such as old bottles, iron and tiles to make a brilliantly quirky Public convenience for the town.

The floors are cobbled with uneven tiles in a fashion reminiscent of the European streets he hailed from, there is nary a straight line anywhere to be found in the place, there are golden balls in the corners on the roof,  bulging shapes of every description incorporated everywhere and to top it off (quite literally) … a tree growing out though the roof!

Let’s have a look around…

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

(photograph © Kiwidutch)

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