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Efficacy of adaptive reuse for the redevelopment of underutilised historical buildings: Towards the regeneration of New Zealand’s provincial town centres

Itohan Esther Aigwi (School of Engineering and Advanced Technology, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand)
Temitope Egbelakin (School of Engineering and Advanced Technology, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand)
Jason Ingham (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand)

International Journal of Building Pathology and Adaptation

ISSN: 2398-4708

Article publication date: 21 August 2018

Issue publication date: 7 September 2018

2032

Abstract

Purpose

Most provincial town centres in New Zealand typically feature old and vacant historical buildings, the majority of which possess heritage values. The growing perception that it is cheaper to repurpose vacant historical buildings rather than demolishing and rebuilding them is one of the factors that have made the adaptive reuse approach so popular. However, will this also be the case for provincial town centres in New Zealand? The purpose of this paper is to identify and explore the key factors that could influence the efficacy of adaptive reuse, and check for significant differences in the effect that each perceived factor would have on the adaptive reuse efficacy as a justifiable resilient and sustainable approach towards the regeneration of a major provincial town centre in New Zealand that is currently experiencing inner-city shrinkage.

Design/methodology/approach

A focus group workshop was conducted with 22 stakeholders involved in an existing town centre regeneration agenda for Whanganui. Closed-ended questionnaires were administered to the workshop participants to measure their opinions regarding the efficacy of the adaptive reuse approach for the regeneration of Whanganui’s town centre. The participant mix comprised a combination of structural engineers, quantity surveyors, architects, estate valuers, building owners/developers, legal representatives, heritage representatives and local government council representatives.

Findings

The study reported a high proportion of respondents that strongly agreed to the positive impacts of adaptive reuse with regards to the discussed priority aspects, hence, justifying the efficacy of the approach, towards delivering a vibrant town centre for Whanganui. Also, the Friedman’s analysis suggests that no significant differences existed among all perceived adaptive reuse efficacy criteria by the workshop participants, therefore justifying the approach.

Originality/value

This paper’s originality pertains to the practicality of changing the use of vacant historical buildings in Whanganui, which is one of New Zealand’s major provincial town centres, to renegotiate resilience and sustainable urban regeneration for the area.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The study discussed in this paper was (partially) supported by QuakeCoRE, a New Zealand Tertiary Education Commission-funded Centre. The authors wish to express gratitude to all participants of the focus group workshop for their huge contributions to the study.

Citation

Aigwi, I.E., Egbelakin, T. and Ingham, J. (2018), "Efficacy of adaptive reuse for the redevelopment of underutilised historical buildings: Towards the regeneration of New Zealand’s provincial town centres", International Journal of Building Pathology and Adaptation, Vol. 36 No. 4, pp. 385-407. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJBPA-01-2018-0007

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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