Sarjeant redevelopment: Lifting the floor boards for first time in 100 years
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Sarjeant redevelopment: Lifting the floor boards for first time in 100 years

Sarjeant redevelopment: Lifting the floor boards for first time in 100 years

McMillan and Lockwood staff lift 100-year-old matai floorboards under the dome at the Sarjeant Gallery

The matai hard wood floor boards of the Sarjeant Gallery have been lifted for the first time since being installed 100 years ago.

As part of seismic strengthening the 100-year-old Sarjeant Gallery heritage building, floor boards under the dome and main entrance have been removed to give access to the basement level where concrete foundations will be installed.

Eventually all the floorboards will be lifted to protect them from potential construction damage as the restoration progresses around the building interior.

The McMillan & Lockwood team are working to a colour coded plan so they know where to put the boards back in the right place when all the restoration work inside the gallery is complete.

Taking photos of and carefully numbering each of the tongue-and-groove boards, the carpenters use a multi tool to cut through the nails and then make a careful cut line through the polyurethane before sliding each board’s tongue out.

Numbering in the thousands, the boards have been taken off site for safe, dry storage.

 

 

Click the video to watch a fascinating mini doco about the redevelopment 

 

McMillan & Lockwood staff lift 100-year-old matai floorboards under the dome at the Sarjeant Gallery

McMillan & Lockwood site manager Jarrod Lover says although the job was tricky and some of the tongues were brittle, the boards were in better condition than he expected.

When he first entered the Sarjeant Gallery he was impressed with the carpentry and detailing of the floor.

“It’s amazing the skill level that those guys must have had all those years ago. You don’t tend to work on buildings this old that often. It’s the oldest building I’ve worked on, it’s pretty impressive,” Jarrod says.

 

This article first appeared on August 11, 2020 in the NZ Herald and in the Whanganui Chronicle. Please see here.