Mount Eden Prisons: Difference between revisions

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Intended to house 220 prisoners, it was designed by P.F.M Burrows and resembles [[Dartmoor Prison]] in England. It consists of a radial design with a number of wings radiating out from the centre like the spokes of a wheel. This allows for control from the centre "from which the outlook may be complete and constant". This is obviously an application of the [[panopticon]] prison design theories of [[Jeremy Bentham]]. The old prison has been given a 'Category I' classification by the [[New Zealand Historic Places Trust]].<ref name="COR">[http://www.corrections.govt.nz/public/aboutus/factsheets/prisons/mteden.html Mt Eden Prison] (from the [[New Zealand Department of Corrections]] website)</ref><ref> [http://www.historic.org.nz/Register/ListingDetail.asp?RID=88&sm= Mount Eden Prison] (database entry on the [[New Zealand Historic Places Trust]] website)</ref> Mount Eden Prison was also the site of New Zealands last [[execution]], with Walter Bolton hanged on 18 February 1957 for murdering his wife Beatrice with [[poison]].<ref name="HER"/>
Intended to house 220 prisoners, it was designed by P.F.M Burrows and resembles [[Dartmoor Prison]] in England. It consists of a radial design with a number of wings radiating out from the centre like the spokes of a wheel. This allows for control from the centre "from which the outlook may be complete and constant". This is obviously an application of the [[panopticon]] prison design theories of [[Jeremy Bentham]]. The old prison has been given a 'Category I' classification by the [[New Zealand Historic Places Trust]].<ref name="COR">[http://www.corrections.govt.nz/public/aboutus/factsheets/prisons/mteden.html Mt Eden Prison] (from the [[New Zealand Department of Corrections]] website)</ref><ref> [http://www.historic.org.nz/Register/ListingDetail.asp?RID=88&sm= Mount Eden Prison] (database entry on the [[New Zealand Historic Places Trust]] website)</ref> Mount Eden Prison was also the site of New Zealands last [[execution]], with Walter Bolton hanged on 18 February 1957 for murdering his wife Beatrice with [[poison]].<ref name="HER"/>

There was a major riot at Mt Eden prison on Tuesday and Wednesday 20 July 1963. Prisoners rioted for 33 hours after a prison guard caught two prisoners trying to escape. Chaos ensued as prisoners burnt much of the prison. <ref>Elizabeth Binning, Go-ahead for new Mt Eden jail, The ''New Zealand Herald'', Friday 15 June, 2007.</ref> The riot was a sensational event in the lives of the two neighbouring boys' secondary schools, [[Auckland Grammmar School]] and [[St peter's College]].


Opened in July 2000, the ACRP part of Mount Eden Prisons was New Zealand's first privately run prison. It was originally managed by Australasian Correctional Management Limited (later called Global Expertise in Outsourcing NZ Ltd), before reverting to the state's Public Prisons Service in July 2005.
Opened in July 2000, the ACRP part of Mount Eden Prisons was New Zealand's first privately run prison. It was originally managed by Australasian Correctional Management Limited (later called Global Expertise in Outsourcing NZ Ltd), before reverting to the state's Public Prisons Service in July 2005.

There was a major riot at Mt Eden prison on Tuesday and Wednesday 20 July 1963. Prisoners rioted for 33 hours after a prison guard caught two prisoners trying to escape. Chaos ensued as prisoners burnt much of the prison. <ref>Elizabeth Binning, Go-ahead for new Mt Eden jail, The ''New Zealand Herald'', Friday 15 June, 2007.</ref>


===Expansion===
===Expansion===

Revision as of 20:44, 18 October 2007

Exterior of the old prison section.

Mount Eden Prisons refer to the three New Zealand prisons, located in Lauder Road in the Central Auckland suburb of the same name. The three prisons are:

  • Mount Eden Prison, capacity 421, medium-security men's prison
  • Mount Eden Women's Prison, capacity 54, female remand and short-term sentences prison
  • Auckland Central Remand Prison (ACRP), capacity 381, male remand prison

The three sections are housed in connected, but architecturally strongly dissimilar buildings.

History

Overview

Detail of the old prison section exterior.

The original prison was a military stockade built in 1856. It became the city's main prison when the old city gaol (corner of Queen and Victoria streets) was demolished in the same year.[1] The stone wall and the foundations were completed in 1872, the building proper was commenced in 1882 and finished in 1917.

Intended to house 220 prisoners, it was designed by P.F.M Burrows and resembles Dartmoor Prison in England. It consists of a radial design with a number of wings radiating out from the centre like the spokes of a wheel. This allows for control from the centre "from which the outlook may be complete and constant". This is obviously an application of the panopticon prison design theories of Jeremy Bentham. The old prison has been given a 'Category I' classification by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust.[1][2] Mount Eden Prison was also the site of New Zealands last execution, with Walter Bolton hanged on 18 February 1957 for murdering his wife Beatrice with poison.[3]

There was a major riot at Mt Eden prison on Tuesday and Wednesday 20 July 1963. Prisoners rioted for 33 hours after a prison guard caught two prisoners trying to escape. Chaos ensued as prisoners burnt much of the prison. [4] The riot was a sensational event in the lives of the two neighbouring boys' secondary schools, Auckland Grammmar School and St peter's College.

Opened in July 2000, the ACRP part of Mount Eden Prisons was New Zealand's first privately run prison. It was originally managed by Australasian Correctional Management Limited (later called Global Expertise in Outsourcing NZ Ltd), before reverting to the state's Public Prisons Service in July 2005.

There was a major riot at Mt Eden prison on Tuesday and Wednesday 20 July 1963. Prisoners rioted for 33 hours after a prison guard caught two prisoners trying to escape. Chaos ensued as prisoners burnt much of the prison. [5]

Expansion

In June 2007 it was announced that a new six-storey prison building and another four-storey accommodation block would be built on the southern side of the old Mount Eden prison building by 2011. This would increase the total number of beds by 450. The nineteenth-century prison complex would be converted to administrative space, in accordance with its heritage classification. Funding however has not been approved as of June 2007, though tenders are to be called for in 2008.[3]

The prison redevelopment will also see a new secure gatehouse, a visitor centre and a multi-level carpark added to the structure. Underground tunnels will link the different section. Another change will see the disappearance of barbed wire around the complex, which is to be replaced by secure building design.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Mt Eden Prison (from the New Zealand Department of Corrections website)
  2. ^ Mount Eden Prison (database entry on the New Zealand Historic Places Trust website)
  3. ^ a b c Six-storey jail for Mt Eden (+photos) - New Zealand Herald, Friday 15 June 2007
  4. ^ Elizabeth Binning, Go-ahead for new Mt Eden jail, The New Zealand Herald, Friday 15 June, 2007.
  5. ^ Elizabeth Binning, Go-ahead for new Mt Eden jail, The New Zealand Herald, Friday 15 June, 2007.