Tukutuku exterior (Photo/Supplied)
AUT has collaborated with one of Aotearoa’s first wahine Māori urban contemporary artists to apply a narrative lens over
the planning of spaces in its newest building, Tukutuku.
Tukutuku, at around 9000m2, is the largest development at the University’s North Campus and will accommodate around 2000
students and 200 staff. It is also AUT’s most sustainable building yet and on track to be the country’s most efficiently
heated and cooled tertiary education building.
On Friday 21 June the building was blessed in a dawn ceremony by Ngāti Paoa, who also gifted the name Tukutuku to AUT
for the building. Taken from the name of the matriarch of Ngāti Paoa, Tukutuku is also the lattice work of tukutuku
panels, weaving together people, place and shared purpose.
The University has worked with urban contemporary artist and consultant, Janine Williams (Ngāti Paoa, Ngāti Whātua ki
Kaipara), to co-design the cultural spatial framework plan, which applies a narrative lens from an iwi perspective over
the planning of the spaces.
Janine says that the narrative theme underpinning the spatial framework plan is the idea of the waka hourua, the
double-hulled waka. “The two different hulls of the waka work together in one journey, and this is symbolic of that
partnership between the mana whenua and the university.
“Traditionally, there is a sheltering, housing structure that sits at the centre of the waka. In the same way, Tukutuku,
as the heart of the campus, becomes a place of shelter, protection and gathering, and it’s all about the relational
value that comes from that. It is a place that is protective and inclusive. You grow your relationships, you eat food
there, you celebrate the important things and that’s what Tukutuku will provide.”
Janine has also created three artworks for the building, alongside descendants of her iwi, including a large digital
mural featuring kuaka, a representation of the iwi’s journey and partnership with AUT to bring about mātauranga Māori
and stories of the surrounding moana.Professor Damon Salesa and Janine Williams (Photo/Supplied)
AUT Vice-Chancellor, Professor Damon Salesa, says the University is extremely fortunate to have been able to work with
Ngāti Paoa and Janine on the space planning of the University’s new world-class building.
“Ngāti Paoa and Janine have helped us beautifully intertwine the story of our partnership with the new social and
physical heart of our campus. Tukutuku demonstrates our unique contribution as both Aotearoa New Zealand’s university of
technology and as a university of opportunity, weaving together the diverse strengths of our people, and our special
place in the world.”
Tukutuku will be open for the start of AUT’s Semester Two in mid-July, and there will be an official opening ceremony on
Friday 26 July.