Bats Theatre

Oddfellows’ Building, Savage Club Hall

1 Kent Terrace, Wellington City, Wellington
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  • Constructed

    1923 - 1924

  • Architect(s)

    Clere and Clere

  • Builder(s)

  • This interwar stripped classical commercial building’s architectural interest is in the careful attention to form and detail.

    The building was built for the Manchester Unity Oddfellows Society who met upstairs. It’s been a theatrical production venue since it was built. Theatre groups who have used it are: the Wellington Savage Club (a men’s social and artistic club) from the 1930s, Unity Theatre from the 1940s until 1978, and BATS theatre from 1979. BATS is Wellington’s independent theatre with a focus on building new audiences by presenting diverse, relevant and challenging theatre.

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  • close History
    • Although best known more recently as the home of Bats Theatre, this building was originally built for the Manchester Unity Oddfellows Society. The society was a ‘benevolent fraternal organisation’ that spread from its origins in the UK and became a world-wide institution – particularly in the 19th century. The organisation now claims to be the "largest united international fraternal order in the world under one head." 

      The Manchester Unity Oddfellows Society was founded in Wellington in 1843  and met in the Oddfellows Hall, which was built on the corner of Lambton Quay and Grey Street in 1859. In 1922 it was sold to the T&G Mutual Life Society, the hall was demolished and the site is now occupied by the T&G Building.  The proceeds of this sale were divided between two branches of the Oddfellows Society, the Britannia Lodge and the Antipodean Lodge. The latter group purchased a building at 56 Cuba Street opposite James Smith Corner.

      The Britannia Lodge purchased part section 366 on Kent Terrace in 1923.  The same year architect Frederick de Jersey Clere and his son Herbert were commissioned to design a two-storey building with a purpose built lodge meeting room on the first-floor, and two shops and a dance hall / theatre venue on the ground floor. 

      Work was probably completed by the following year. The Lodge held its meetings upstairs and initially reserved the hall for its exclusive use. However, the Wellington District Branch Committee of the Oddfellows Society also used the hall for meetings on various occasions.  By the 1930s the Lodge began to hire the hall out for events such as concerts and dances. The building was used in this fashion for the next four decades.

      In 1944 the building was sold to the Wellington Savage Club (WSC), and became known as the Savage Club Hall. The WSC was established in 1905 with the object of providing “…rational entertainment, promote good fellowship, develop the artistic talents of its members and generally to encourage art of all kinds.”  Savage Clubs, which were essentially men’s social and artistic clubs with benevolent leanings, sprung up around New Zealand from the late 19th to early 20th century, and took their name from the original Savage Club, which began in London in 1857.  

      In New Zealand Savage Clubs took on a local flavour, and in particular adopted superficial elements of Maori culture, the most obvious being the bi-weekly entertainment evenings referred to as the ‘Korero’.  In the late 1950s the WSC set up a fund to assist the study of arts practitioners, which ran until the early 1970s.  Perhaps in connection to this, the first full-time use of the hall was in 1969 when the Unity Theatre Company took exclusive use of the space. They made considerable changes to the hall including the removal of the original stage, redesigning the backstage, and building tiered seating and a box office. 

      By the early 1970s the WSC was struggling with falling membership and dwindling finances. In 1973 the Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society, which had purchased 2 adjacent sites, wanted to purchase the hall for demolition so a multi-storey building, ironically named ‘Preservation House’, could be constructed.  This suggestion lapsed, but it did, by planting the seed, pave the way for the sale of the building to current owners, the Royal Antediluvian Order of the Buffaloes, in 1976. 

      Unity Theatre, which had leased the theatre space from WSC, continued this arrangement after the sale. However, it too was experiencing financial difficulties and was wound up in late 1978. In 1979 BATS (Bane and Austen Touring Society) took over the theatre and it has remained there ever since despite various management changes. In 1988 Nomis Productions (Simon Bennett and Simon Elson) took over BATS and in 1990 the theatre was damaged by fire. Over the next decade the lodge quietly continued its activities upstairs, while the theatre became the centre of independent theatre production in Wellington, drawing a loyal and dedicated audience. 

      In 2011 the Royal Antediluvian Order of the Buffaloes sold the building to Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh.  Jackson and Walsh issued a long-term lease to Bats. The new arrangement allowed Bats to occupy the majority of the building, and in particular to use the first-story hall that had once been the sole-preserve of the RAOB.

      In 2012 the Bats Theatre company relocated, temporarily, from 1 Kent Terrace while the building undertook strengthening and refurbishment. The process was expected to take eighteen months and Bats Theatre is expected to reopen at Kent Terrace in 2014. 

      The building is important to Wellington’s heritage. While the theatre has architectural and townscape value, the building’s real importance lies in its standing as a cultural resource and the contribution it has made to Wellington society. The building has been a venue for theatrical productions since its construction. Its association with the BATS theatre company is particularly important. BAT plays an important role in Wellington’s theatre scene; with its philosophy on the development of young talent, and of a youthful theatre audience. Many established members of the local theatre-fraternity owe their early career success to this development model and Wellington’s lively theatre-scene benefits from this experimental, supportive and altruistic approach. 

      Bats Theatre has played a crucial role in Wellington theatre, and fortunately, with the building’s strengthening and refurbishment, it looks likely to do so for many years to come.
    • Modifications close

      Not assessed

    • Occupation History close
      • 1923 - 1944
      • Britannia Lodge (and the hall could be hired out for events)
      • 1944 - 1976
      • Wellington Savage Club
      • 1969 - 1978
      • Unity Theatre (theatre space)
      • 1976 - 2011
      • Royal Antediluvian Order of the Buffaloes (upstairs)
      • 1979 - 2012
      • Bats Theatre (theatre space)
      • 2013 - 2014
      • Building vacated for strengthening and refurbishment
      • 2014
      • Bats Theatre (theatre space)
  • close Architectural Information
    • Building Classification(s) close

      Not assessed

    • Architecture close

      The Bats Theatre building is a small commercial building of the mid-1920s, three-storeys high, built entirely in rendered reinforced concrete and finished with timber-framed shop-fronts at the street level, a simple horizontal verandah and steel windows to the rest of the building. The front elevation to Kent Terrace is dominated by four square pilasters rising through the first and second floors; the outer two are Doric, the inner Corinthian. These support a heavy cornice with a running dentil moulding below, and a plain parapet. Greek key-patterned panels between the windows add further Classical overtones.

      At ground level, two shops still have their original doors and shop-front windows with red tiles below while, in the centre, the original Takaka marble steps and oak doors (nicely patched) open into a modest hall.

      Inside the hall, there are stairs on the left to the upper floors and, straight ahead, is the foyer, bar and the space used by BATS Theatre itself. On the left side, the original shop houses a small bar, on the right side the other shop houses the BATS office. Adjoining the office is a large walk-in safe with its original door and fittings intact. Opposite this, a generous open staircase ascends to the other levels of the building.

      The shell of the theatre space is raw concrete, now overlaid with seating, lighting, props and other paraphernalia of a modern theatre company.

      While the technical value of the building is fairly typical or representative of many interwar commercial buildings, it has a high level of authenticity in its front elevation, the only apparent change being the removal of an iron gate from the front entrance porch. A significant architectural feature, a glazed dome in the Grand Hall on the top floor, is still in existence.

      The building has high townscape value, as it is well scaled and discreetly enhanced by Classical detailing. It has group value in conjunction with several other significant heritage buildings in the same area, particularly the Central Fire Station next door (to the north), the Taj Mahal opposite, and the Embassy Theatre on the Majoribanks Street corner. These groups of buildings fittingly terminate the east end of the Courtenay Place precinct.

    • Materials close

      Reinforced concrete

    • Setting close

      The building fills the entirety of its small inner-city site. Its setting, the area of Kent and Cambridge Terraces at the eastern end of Courtenay Place is of high overall heritage value and the building both makes an important contribution to that setting and is enhanced by it. The setting has a large number of interesting old buildings and is characterised by their general low scale (two to three storeys), and masonry construction.

      To the north, the immediate neighbour is the Wellington Central Fire Station (1937); on the island across the road is the remarkable ‘Taj Mahal’ (1928) and the view across Cambridge Terrace is closed by a number of Edwardian commercial buildings and the Hannah Playhouse (1973). The glaring anomalies in the neighbourhood are the incongruous and over-scaled apartment block to the south and the unfortunate characterless New World supermarket that blocks the view of Waitangi Park and the waterfront from the two Terraces, both of which strongly detract from the setting. Further south, the Clemenger BBDO building and the Embassy Theatre (1924) round out one of Wellington’s important collections of heritage buildings; aside from the apartment building, the streetscape in this area remains much as it was in the 1940s and is of high importance and significance for that.
  • close Cultural Value

    1 Kent Terrace is a good representative example of an inter-war Stripped Classical Commercial Building. It was designed by the high-profile architectural practice of Clere & Clere, and is a good example of how a small commercial structure can be given architectural interest with careful attention to form and detail.

    The building is historically significant for its association with the Manchester Unity Oddfellows Society and the now defunct Wellington Savage Club. It is currently home to the influential local BATS theatre company.

    BATS Theatre has great social value. It has hosted theatrical performances since the building’s construction, and has been a formal theatre space since 1969. Hundreds of productions have been staged, and the theatre has provided an important independent venue for theatrical talent.

    • Aesthetic Value close
      • Architectural

        Does the item have architectural or artistic value for characteristics that may include its design, style, era, form, scale, materials, colour, texture, patina of age, quality of space, craftsmanship, smells, and sounds?

        1 Kent Terrace is a good representative example of an inter-war Stripped Classical Commercial Building. It was designed by the high-profile architectural practice of Clere & Clere, and is a good example of how a small commercial structure can be given architectural interest with careful attention to form and detail.

      • Group

        Is the item part of a group of buildings, structures, or sites that taken together have coherence because of their age, history, style, scale, materials, or use?

        It has high group value in its association with the other heritage buildings and structures, in particular, the Central Fire Station next door and the ‘Taj Mahal’ across the road.


        The building can be seen as part of a group of nearby performance spaces that include the Michael Fowler Centre and Wellington Town Hall at the nearby Civic Square, the State Opera House on Manners Street, the Paramount and Downstage on Courtenay Place, and the Embassy Theatre on Kent Terrace. 


      • Townscape

        Does the item have townscape value for the part it plays in defining a space or street; providing visual interest; its role as a landmark; or the contribution it makes to the character and sense of place of Wellington?

        The building is a well-known local performance venue that gains local landmark-status from its use and association with the BATS theatre company.

    • Historic Value close
      • Association

        Is the item associated with an important person, group, or organisation?

        The building is historically significant for its association with the Manchester Unity Oddfellows Society and the now defunct Wellington Savage Club. It is currently home to the influential local BATS theatre company.

    • Scientific Value close
      • Archaeological

        Does the item have archaeological value for its ability to provide scientific information about past human activity?

        The building is located in the Central City archaeological site reference NZAA R27/270.

    • Social Value close
      • IdentitySenseOfPlaceContinuity

        Is the item a focus of community, regional, or national identity? Does the item contribute to sense of place or continuity?

        The Wellington arts-scene is an important part of the local city ‘brand’ and venues such as BATS contribute to the city’s sense of identity.


        The building also contributes to the sense of place and identity of the Courtenay Place Heritage Area. 

      • PublicEsteem

        Is the item held in high public esteem?

        BATS theatre is likely to be held in high public esteem as a well-known local performing art venue.

      • SentimentConnection

        Is the item a focus of community sentiment and connection?

        Bats Theatre is likely to be a focus of community sentiment and connection for Wellington’s theatre community and the people that support that.

      • SymbolicCommemorativeTraditionalSpiritual

        Does the item have symbolic, commemorative, traditional, spiritual or other cultural value for the community who has used and continues to use it?

        Bats Theatre has high cultural value for the theatre community that it supports.

    • Level of Cultural Heritage Significance close
      • Authentic

        Does the item have authenticity or integrity because it retains significant fabric from the time of its construction or from later periods when important additions or modifications were carried out?

        The building retains authenticity in its exterior form and detail.

      • Representative

        Is the item a good example of the class it represents?

        The building is a good representative example of a 1920s commercial building.

      • Importance

        Is the item important for any of the above characteristics at a local, regional, national, or international level?

        Bats Theatre is important at a local level.

    • Local / Regional / National / International Importance close

      Not assessed

  • close Site Detail
    • District Plan Number

      12/ 436

    • Legal Description

      Lot 1 Plan A 1346

    • Heritage New Zealand Listed

      Not listed

    • Archaeological Site

      Central City NZAA R27/270

    • Current Uses

      unknown

    • Former Uses

      unknown

    • Has building been funded

      No

    • Funding Amount

      Not applicable

    • Earthquake Prone Status

      Not Earthquake Prone

  • close Additional Information
    • Sources close
      • Bats website. Last accessed May 2013
      • CT WN305/199
      • Cook, Harison. ‘Notes on Wellington Savage Club’. 1936. MS-0605: Wellington Savage Club Papers, ATL
      • Cyclopedia of New Zealand: Vol. 1, Wellington Provincial District. Cyclopedia Co. Ltd., Wellington 1897
      • Historic Places Trust. “Fredrick de Jersey Clere”. Professional Biographies. Accessed May 2013
      • Henderson, J. ‘Buffaloes and Bats - Manchester Unity Oddfellows Building, Heritage Inventory and Conservation Plan’. ITDN 373, School of Architecture, Victoria University of Wellington
      • Maclean, Susan. 'Clere, Frederick de Jersey - Clere, Frederick de Jersey'. The Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Updated 30 October 2012, last accessed May 2013
      • Manchester Unity Friendly Society (MUFS). History of the Loyal Britannia Lodge no. 3833, 1843-1943. Loyal Britannia Lodge, Wellington, 1993
      • Minute Book 1923-1931. MSY-4728: Manchester Unity Independent Order of Oddfellows. Wellington District Papers, Alexander Turnbull Library (ATL)
      • Murray, Russell. ‘Bats Theatre, 1 Kent Terrace, Wellington City IX’. Wellington City Council: Unpublished report, prepared for Plan Change 53, 2005
      • ‘Report on club premises and accommodation at 1 Kent Terrace’. C. 1974. 85-027-4/15: Wellington Savage Club Papers, ATL
      • Rules of the Wellington Savage Club. Wellington Savage Club, Wellington, c.1925
      • Thomas, Allan. ‘The Savage Clubs: a Spirit of ‘Bohemian Comradeship’. Turnbull Library Record, 31 (1998)
    • Technical Documentation close
    • Footnotes close

      Not available

Last updated: 11/24/2016 10:32:37 PM