Category: Media

803 Members of the Dunedin flat names group!

There’s been a lot of activitiy on the group over the last week or so – lots of photos being tagged and a few new comments attached to photos of named flats: Stagger Inn, Pink Box, The Moist Box, The Manor, to name a few.

Check out the photo collection and see if any flats you recognise are there.

I’m writing a book about the named flats of Dunedin, so any information that people have, particularly about when and why flats were named would be AWESOME.

On Thursday (24.09.09) I had a chat with Kathryn Ryan on Radio NZ about the project, check it out here.

803 Members of the Dunedin flat names group!

Sneaky Feelings, Husband House

Sneaky Feelings, Husband House, 1985. (17 on NZ singles chart)

“Sneaky Feelings, ‘Husband House’ single also on Positively George St best of. Sneaky Feelings were one of the earliest Dunedin / FN bands. The song is from the point of view of a woman from a flat where the six women were going out with the six guys at a flat called “Huband House”, which, of course was named “Husband House”. Ref.

Emma Lancaster looks at housing conditions for students in Dunedin

http://www.tumblr.com/audio_file/flatnames/169510876/tumblr_kotirn5eDN1qzcez1?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

The documentary focuses on housing conditions and health effects of poor housing conditions. Emma also speaks with Sid Brown, Dep Mayor of Dunedin about the tertiary precinct strategy. There’s a short segment on named flats and some great quotes from students about the reasons they choose to live in cold grotty flats.

My Flat Your Flat Our Place : online exhibition

The creation of identity and a sense of place was not at the forefront of my mind in 1991 when my flatmates and I named our flat Mouse House. It was because we wanted to name it something, and our flat was infested with mice.

Nine years later, an exploration into the history of print culture in New Zealand while studying through library school provided a lens through which to view the ephemeral nature of the student flat names, names that colourfully dotted my then community of North Dunedin. Some names endured but many instances of this print phenomenon were fleeting. I was intrigued, and continue to be, by the names, the materials used to build the signs, and the stories behind them.

I’ve been taking photos of flats for ten years. I’ve selected a small number here try and reflect the range of ways people have named their flats over the last decade. Some are beautiful, some are disgusting, some are witty, some are puerile – but all are creative, inventive and reflective of the individuals that made them, and those who came after; those who respected their efforts enough to keep these signs, or restore them, or rename them … or replace them with something of their own imagining.

The names themselves are generally reflective of contemporary political or pop culture, some are sexual in nature or are evocative of drinking behaviour. As to their physical nature, sometimes the signs are professionally crafted, sometimes they are hand painted, sometimes they are spray painted on the fence or written straight on the window in vivid. It varies.

Distance and nostalgia provided me with a different perspective on the experience of flatting, and in particular, flatting within the immediate campus environs.  This is a unique environment – the highest rental area in the country, a suburb of “young ‘uns” all experiencing living away from home for the first time. It has struck me, on reflection, that there may be more to naming a flat than just having a bit of a laugh.

The naming of flats occurs for many reasons: inarguable because it’s fun, but latterly, because it is perceived by some of the residents of North Dunedin that this is a tradition, that it is part of the culture of being a Scarfie. Your perception has become a reality, it has become a tradition. It is one of those “colourful” aspects of  student culture that is presented to the rest of Dunedin society, it’s a display of individuality, a mark of identity.

“We all come from some place, and we all live in some place. Our identity and our very sense of authenticity, it seems, are inextricably bound up with places we claim as ‘ours’.”
[Excerpt: Gentry, Kynan. “Place, Heritage and Identity” in  Heartlands : New Zealand historians write about where history happened. 2006 Auckland pp13-26.]

Naming flats is about creating a home, an identity, a sense of place. This exhibition is about this place, North Dunedin. A home away from home. It’s about being here, and being part of something incredible. You’re part of it. You’re living it everyday … this is My Flat Your Flat Our Place.

Sarah Gallagher, ex-Scarfie,  librarian, web junkie, flat names archivist.

[These photos were exhibited at OUSA Art Week 10-14 Aug 2009, at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.]

Be part of the project

A book is in production about the named student flats of North Dunedin in an effort to preserve and promote this ephemeral aspect of student culture in Dunedin.

If you have stories to tell about named flats you’ve created or lived in, I’d love to hear them.
●Flick me an email
●Check out the Facebook page called “Dunedin Flatnames Project” where people are sharing their stories.

My Flat Your Flat Our Place : online exhibition – click here 4 photos

Radio article about a new 5 star rating systems for student flats

http://www.tumblr.com/audio_file/flatnames/152147101/97LBQ4yB6qiqz5ggrPFbyuvk?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio
Student Flats (Audio – duration: 6′48″) Radio NZ “Afternoons” 22.06.09
The days of Scarfies freezing through the Dunedin winter could be on the way out, with the introduction of a”five star rating”system for student flats.

Student flat conditions monitored through a proposed rating system

http://www.tumblr.com/audio_file/flatnames/152145104/97LBQ4yB6qiqs07vUZMszBCd?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio
Five star rating proposed for Dunedin student flats (Audio – duration: 4′32″) Radio NZ – 22.06.09
The days of grotty student accommodation in Dunedin could be numbered, thanks to a new ratings system being considered by the City Council and Otago University and Polytech.
http://www.tumblr.com/audio_file/flatnames/152145631/97LBQ4yB6qiqtv7x9EfEuJYI?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

Student Accomodation (Audio – duration: 4′10″) Radio NZ – 28.03.09

Otago students say they’re paying higher rents despite the poor condition of their flats.

 

The intention is to enable students to make more informed choices about student housing, and to provide landlords with an incentive to upgrade the aesthetics and environmental standards of their properties.

Tertiary Plan Update / DCC – 22.06.09