Various pix Cuba quarter/downtown buildings in Wellington, NZ brought together in this post. Most of these have sold one way or another, but let me know if you like one and maybe it’s here on my wall or can be a print
Quality pigment ink giclee prints of some are available – see below.




















Prints
Quality giclee prints of 6 are available for $55 each, all professionally printed by Picaflor Fine Art Prints on 350gsm photorag etching paper with cardboard backing, packed in clear archival show bags:
- The 5 in the header are printed at 412 x 223mm (image and paper size) to fit the black or white Daytona Frame Multi range, or for mounting in a shadowbox frame
- 228 Cuba Street is 9″x11″ external paper measure (the frame shown is from KMart, not included in the price)
Any postage extra at standard NZPost rates.
Email alistairsart@gmail.com.


And a bit of history (geek alert!). Many of these buildings were built in and from 1906 when the Council trams were extended to the top of Cuba Street. The tracks were removed in 1964
Sketches https://wordpress.com/post/alistairsart.com/3432
104 Cuba Street (was Mr Bun) – Heritage NZ says it is “a two storey 1920s commercial building, … notable for its unusual Art Deco façade, particularly the prominent central oriel window on the first floor”. Sadly, Spark (or the landlord) painted the facade corporate charcoal (does grey make us want to buy phones?) then moved out, cultural vandals – one day someone classier will restore it
Cuba Superette, 301 Cuba Street -1 of my top 5 buildings not to be in if the ground moves. I like the wrought iron (Italianate?) balconies
149 Cuba Street – Lazule jewellers premises, now minus the facade sign.
Bats Theatre in the Oddfellows Building at Kent Tce
Iko Iko, well-known gift shop in the Mall, love the azure blue Art Deco facade
Hunter Building with its great early 1920s stained glass window, the old law faculty when I started at Victoria Uni in … the old days.
Weir House hostel in Kelburn -ditto. Huge first year away from home there in 1972
The Albemarle is a favourite, partly because of its dome and elaborate facade – gestures of wealth and optimism in 1906 – and its story: Edwardian temperance Hotel and headquarters of a workingman’s strike in 1913; downmarket boarding house in the 1950s; rooms by the day for the homeless and by the hour for the oldest profession by the 1970s. Currently an earthquake risk and unoccupied but redevelopment has finally started (yay). https://wordpress.com/post/alistairsart.com/3349
288 Cuba Street – built from wood in about 1906 in a New Zealand Italianate style (upstairs verandah without Juliet), initially to sell dyed calico. Its history since has been unremarkable, excepting only that Carmen Rupe, a famous and fabulous transgender woman, ran a trinkets and knick-knacks shop here in the 70s. Later it was home to Kiwi Art House Gallery, now further down Cuba St. https://wordpress.com/post/alistairsart.com/3559
Peoples Palace – https://wordpress.com/post/alistairsart.com/3562
290 Cuba (Li’s Chicken) https://wordpress.com/post/alistairsart.com/3547 A minor landmark in Wellington for student fastfood and location at the top T of Cuba Street, in very poor repair at present (eg the facade signage has fallen off). The current owners bought this print and say they have plans to tidy it, let’s hope. I squeezed the image into 1/2 width-ways to fit the panel.
Heritage NZ: “290 Cuba Street is a good representative example of a 1900s timber shop/dwelling. This building has architectural value due to the retention of original materials and most of the façade/shop front”.
Oils on flat acrylic backgrounds mostly; Footscray Ave, Hunter Building#1, Aro St, Queens Wharf gates; Weir House; Bats and the large one are oils; Hunter Building #2 and Aro Street houses are B&W acrylics
What a wonderful collection of old buildings with lots of character, thanks for posting Alistair.
Thank you Sharon
I absolutely love these. Each building is so well observed and is a personality. I especially like the neighborhood scene. I hope there will be more!
Thanks Claudia, I wasn’t too sure about the multiple building one actually, funny isn’t it!
I know what you mean, it is hard to judge one’s own work. But that one really attracted me as soon as I saw it and I enjoyed the feeling of neighborhood and being a place that you conveyed, plus, it has a balance to it, or something, I don’t know quite what to say it is, but the quality of everything in the picture being just right, alone and together.
Yes, it’d be nice to know what works, I battled this one and sort of abandoned it as near enough, I’ll stick it on FB too and see what happens, theyre mostly NZers so thats the market I guess. Interesting! Thanks