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A Southern Architecture
The Work of Ted McCoy

Ted McCoy
Introduction by Douglas Lloyd-Jenkins

 

Key Points

• Fifty years of work, in full colour, from a major New Zealand architect
• Brings together houses, churches, university public buildings
• McCoy has a distinctive style that relates to the environment

Book

The forms of Ted McCoy’s houses can recall the early stone and mud brick buildings of the colonial era in Otago, as this region has been both his locus and his inspiration.

Amongst New Zealand architects, McCoy is outstanding in that he has a detailed colour photographic record covering fifty years of work. He was awarded a national medal for his first commission, a students’ hall of residence, at the age of twenty-five. His work ranges from Central Otago holiday houses, through schools and churches to multi-storey university and commercial buildings, shopping malls, and a cathedral. In 1980, he was selected from all
New Zealand practices to design a new National Art Gallery in Molesworth Street, Wellington. He designed the New Zealand High Commissioner’s Residence in Canberra, Australia, and the Chancery for the High Commission in Papua New Guinea. He was called from retirement in 2000 to lead the fine redevelopment of the Otago Museum.

In this book, McCoy presents his work chronologically with an accompanying text. As
Douglas Lloyd-Jenkins comments in his introduction, ‘In trying to pigeon-hole McCoy exclusively as one thing on a list that might include – a post-war innovator, one of the master big building modernists of the 1960s and 1970s, a house architect of proven ability, a sophisticated maker of church architecture or a superb interpreter of the post-moedrn moment – is to lose understanding. Ted McCoy is not one, but all of those things.’

Contents

Introduction by Douglas Lloyd-Jenkins Houses / Churches / Large Buildings

Author

Ted McCoy holds the Gold Medal for lifetime achievement in architecture from the NZ Institute of Architects and has won eight national awards and twenty regional awards for his buildings. He was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2004 for services to architecture and heritage. With Gary Blackman he co-authored Victorian City of New Zealand (1968), and he was a contributing author to Historic Buildings of New Zealand, South Island, published by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust (1983).

Architecture
hardback, 176 pp
ISBN 978 1 877372 48 3 $80.00