Fergus George Frederick Sheppard (1908 – 1997) was a New Zealand architect, who served as the chief government architect from 1959 until his retirement in 1971. During his time in this capacity he was involved with the design of the Beehive, among hundreds of other public buildings.[1]
Personal life
Fergus Sheppard was born in 1908 in Auckland, the youngest of two, and son of bootmaker Lewis George Frederick Sheppard and Lillian Gertrude Sheppard (née Green), both first generationers to be born in New Zealand. He attended Auckland Grammar, and then studied at Auckland University.[2] In 1938, he married Marjorie Joan Targuse (1912 – 2008), daughter of Violet Targuse. They had four sons, one of whom was also an architect.
During World War Two, he served as a sapper (a combat engineer) and 1st lieutenant in the 4th Works Company.[2]
He died in 1997.
Professional career
Sheppard was appointed as acting Government Architect with the Ministry of Works in February 1959, following the sudden death of Gordon Wilson, and fully assumed the role in May 1959.[3][4] During his tenure there was a boom in construction of state owned buildings, and one estimate is that Sheppard was responsible for approximately 900 building projects, including many government buildings, educational buildings, and state housing.[5] During this period, government architects designed buildings in a post-war modernist style. According to Duncan Joiner, the last to hold the title of Government Architect, "Many of the government buildings of this period are elegantly simple in concept, and economical in their use of materials and services, reflecting a New Zealand architectural design response to stringent import controls. It was a period of inventiveness, and during this time New Zealand engineers and architects established their international reputation for seismic design."[6]
Sheppard produced the detailed architectural drawings of the Beehive, the executive wing of the New Zealand parliament, from the original concept designs by Scottish architect Sir Basil Spence,[7] who is quoted as having remarked "It is not a Spence building, it is a Sheppard Building."[8][9]
He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Architects in 1969,[10] held public roles as the President of the Royal Society of Arts, and as a member of the Historic Places Trust. He was chairman of the Wellington Branch of the Institute of Architects and went to hold key roles with the New Zealand Institute of Architects at national level.[1]
The "Sheppard collection" held by the Architecture and Planning Library of the University of Auckland, was originally compiled by Sheppard in an effort to collect information on every New Zealand architect.[11]
Selected Works
Among the buildings which Sheppard personally designed, collaborated on, or supervised the design of are:
Building
Image
Location
Notes
Auckland: Central Police Station
Auckland: Commonwealth Pacific Cable Terminal
1 Akoranga Drive, Northcote, Auckland
Auckland: Hobsonville Air Base's single men's barracks (1931),[12] now demolished.[13]
The Brutalist library building is a cornerstone of the Ilam university campus. Characterised by deeply set concrete frames, animated by an asymmetric arrangement of forms and intricate façade patterns in harmony with the landscape.
Christchurch: University of Canterbury, Science Block and Engineering School (1960)[10]
Lower Hutt: Soil Bureau (now Learning Connexion Art School) (1960)[12]
182 Eastern Hutt Rd, Taita, Lower Hutt
Sheppard and the director of the New Zealand Soil Bureau commissioned E. Mervyn Taylor to create a mural for the modernist building. With the restructuring of government departments in the early 1990s the Soil Bureau was rolled into a Crown Entity, and the building was tenanted and at some stage the mural was painted over.[14]
Masterton: Chief Post Office (now privately owned).
Colombo Hall is an example of late New Zealand international modernism, featuring a strong horizontal emphasis, a crisp, modulated appearance, and ground level open spaces, to provide transition between public and private areas as well as give the building an impression of lightness. Buildings designed later by Sheppard at Massey University feature a more Brutalist style.[5]
Putāruru: Post Office (now former post office)[17]
Tirau Street, Putāruru.
Circular design with delicate concrete arched roof shells. The modernist building was inspired by the Palazetto dello Sport stadium in Rome, Italy. The radial footprint and complex roof structure demonstrates significant innovation in both construction techniques and materials of its time.
The facade is an inverted pyramid constructed of alternating bands of pronounced concrete panels and deep-set slot windows. The fortress-like exterior conveys an image of a national library that is a safe-keeper of materials; a deliberate architectural design strategy from a specific historical time when national libraries were less interested in intellectual and physical accessibility. The National Library was the last major building to be completed by the Ministry of Works and Development before it was dis-established in the 1980s.
In 2021, the former Putāruru Post Office (1970) was the recipient of an "Enduring Architecture Award" in the New Zealand Institute of Architects (NZIA) Waikato Bay of Plenty Architecture Awards.[23]
In 2024, the University of Canterbury – Puaka-James Hight (Central Library) Building (1969-1974) received the "Enduring Architecture Award (NZIA) Canterbury Region Architecture Awards.[24]
^"Beehive Project: architect wants to bow out". Dominion. 16 June 1965.
^Robin Skinner, "The Beehive: A difficult collaboration," in Mark Swenarton, Igea Troiani, Helena Webster (eds), "The Politics of Making," 2013, p. 143.
^Docomomo (International working party for documentation and conservation of buildings, sites and neighbourhoods of the modern movement) (2003). "Beehive, Wellington"(PDF).
^Boffa Miskell Ltd with Chris Cochran, "Wellington Heritage Building Inventory nonresidential buildings," 2001 (Wellington: Boffa Miskell, 2001).
^DOCMOMO (international working party for documentation and conservation of buildings, sites and neighbourhoods of the modern movement) (2003). "National Library of New Zealand"(PDF).