JMK

By JMK

Re-pair Work Under Way

I took a shot walk around the block and found that the Knox Church Earthquake Re-pairs have started at last.

It has been a lovely mild day and was great to see the sun. It is my youngest son's birthday today so we are going out for a meal, which well be great!

Here are some other photos taken of Knox Church today

This is the blip I did in April

Knox Church has served as a centre of Presbyterian worship and community in central Christchurch for over 130 years. With the loss of St Paul's Trinity Pacific Church, it has become the sole Presbyterian Church within the four avenues. Although Canterbury was an Anglican formulation, Presbyterians have always played a significant role in the development of the province – from the Deans family onwards. Knox Church's congregation would like to preserve what remains of their church building for the future.

The church occupies a very prominent site at the eastern corner of Victoria Street and Bealey Avenue, and is consequently a city landmark. In the period in which the present building was built, Bealey Avenue was one of the city's most prestigious addresses, lined with the large homes of Christchurch's leading citizens. Victoria Street, then as now, was the major entry into the central city from the north. With the damage wrought by the recent quakes, much of the original context of Knox Church has been lost. This makes the retention of the church building itself central to the re-creation of the identity of the area, providing some continuity between past and future.

The Knox Church building was the work of prominent Christchurch architect R W England of the firm of England Bros. At its dedication service in 1902, the red-brick and Oamaru stone Gothic Revival church was described as 'the prettiest in Christchurch'. Although its walls have been deconstructed, the distinctive triple-gabled form of the roof remains. England Brothers designed a number of churches throughout the city around the turn of the nineteenth century, one similar example being the former St Albans Methodist Church to the north on Papanui Road. Christchurch's churches have suffered a heavy toll in the last two years, and much of our finest church architecture has been lost. Knox Church could however live again.

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