Beehive (building)
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The Beehive, Wellington |
The
Beehive is the common name for the Executive Wing of the
New Zealand Parliament Buildings, located at the corner of Molesworth Street and
Lambton Quay,
Wellington. Credit for the design is usually given to
British architect Sir
Basil Spence, who made a rough sketch on the back of a dinner napkin in
1964 while dining with
Keith Holyoake. The building was subsequently drafted and constructed by government departments and completed in 1981.
The building is ten storeys (72 m) high. The top floor is occupied by the
Cabinet offices, with the
Prime Minister's offices on the ninth floor (and part of the eighth). Other floors contain the offices of individual
cabinet ministers.
Other facilities within the building include function rooms such as a television studio, press theatre, and a banqueting hall, as well as service rooms, among which are the parliamentary catering facilities of
Bellamy's including a bar known as
3.2 (due to its position in the building),
Copperfield's and the
Member's and Guests restaurant. The building also houses, in its basement, the country's main
civil defence headquarters.
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Bowen House (left), the Beehive (centre) and Parliament (right) |
The Beehive's circular
footprint is an elegant and attractive design feature. However it is also quite impractical, as many of its rooms are
wedge-shaped or asymmetrical, with desks and other office
furniture at awkward angles.
The Beehive's brown roof is constructed from 20 tonnes of hand-welded
copper. It has developed a naturally weathered appearance.
During the 1990s, there was a proposal to physically move the Beehive so as to allow for the extension of the Parliament Buildings. The plan was never carried out.
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The proposed shifting of the Beehive and extension of Parliament House |
.A tunnel leads from the building under Bowen Street, linking the Beehive with parliamentary offices in Bowen House.
The Beehive is extensively decorated with New Zealand
art, notably a large
stained glass window in the foyer that commemorates the country's 150th anniversary in
1990.
An extension has been built out the front to allow for a new security entrance. A new, bomb-proof, mail delivery room has already been built at the rear of the building.
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Beehive information*
history of NZ Parliament buildings