Cambridge clock in line for major overhaul

Tick, tock …… time stands still at the Cambridge Town Clock.

Cambridge’s historic town clock is up for ‘open heart surgery’.

Work on the exterior structure of the much-loved clock was already planned with more than $250,000 budgeted by Waipā District Council for the 2023-24 financial year.

But a series of mechanical failures and ongoing external deterioration means a more comprehensive fix is now required to keep the clock, listed as a Category Two Historic Structure, in working order.

Waipā District councillors were told today by property services project manager Greg Boyle the high-profile clock needs “open heart surgery”. Currently the clock needs specialist attention up to twice a month to keep accurate time, ensure the chimes ring and the four faces of the clock are aligned, he said.

Richard Crease on the left and Peter Wright on the right watch over Don Gerrand on the back of Flick as the fire engine goes past the Town Clock.

“It’s an old clock, dating from 1908 before it was moved to its current location in 1934. Our specialist contractor says we are now beyond quick fixes…this is open heart surgery. Unless we do the job properly and soon, the clock is at risk of failing completely.”

There were significant safety risks to constantly winding and re-setting the clock on site and it was recommended the winding mechanism be automated.

“Every time the clock needs fixing, the winding mechanism has to be accessed via a single, long ladder and tricky work must be done working at height. It’s simply not safe. The strong advice from our specialist is to remove the clock mechanism completely, dismantle, clean and repair the various parts; in other words, do the job once and do it right.”

Susan O’Regan

At the same time as the clock mechanism is being fixed, work to refurbish the clock tower will be undertaken, including specialist re-rendering. No seismic strengthening of the tower is required.

The major fix is likely to see the clock out of action for up to three months with work likely to begin around November. Once fixed, the clock will only require six-monthly cleaning and full servicing every 10-15 years, saving around $24,000 per year in ongoing operating and maintenance costs.

Councillors today agreed to the major refurbishment, with an estimated $450,000 budget. Mayor Susan O’Regan noted the cost was “hard to swallow” but said all councillors recognised the importance of the clock to Cambridge and the wider district.

“I hesitate to throw around the word ‘iconic’ but that is the case for the Cambridge town clock. It’s a treasured part of the local landscape and a real focal point for the town. So let’s look after it and do the job once, and do it properly,” O’Regan said.

Post Office and town clock at Cambridge circa 1913-1915. Alexander Turnbull Library.

More Recent News

Double ram

Tuesday 4 February Two youths will appear in the Tauranga Youth Court tomorrow (Wednesday) charged with two burglaries and two unlawful takes of a motor vehicle. Police executed a search warrant in Tauranga earlier today…

Bit between his teeth

Horse racing in the Waikato is a $505 million industry employing more than 6200 people and it is about to undergo radical change, reports senior writer Mary Anne Gill.   When Andrew ‘Butch’ Castles says…

Roa backs tribunal changes

Tom Roa has cast a vote of confidence in the refreshed compilation of the Waitangi Tribunal. He did not have his warrant renewed this month when Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka announced a new line…

O’Brien ‘excited and humbled’

Incoming Te Wānanga o Aotearoa kaiwhakatere chief executive Evie O’Brien says she is excited and humbled to be appointed. O’Brien was welcomed back to Te Awamutu head office on Tuesday with a pōwhiri. “It has what…