The building is classified as a
Category 1 Historic Place (
places of "special or outstanding historical or cultural heritage significance or value") by
Heritage New Zealand, being opened in 1922 with uninterrupted church use of the Boulcott Street site from 1843. Plans for the church were prepared by architect
Frederick de Jersey Clere in 1919. Architecturally, the design is traditional
Gothic of French influence. The front facade was said to have been modelled on that of the
Cathedral of St. Michael and St. Gudula in Brussels. The structure is reinforced concrete and brick with a timber roof supported by concrete arches with steel tie rods. Its construction was innovative in that it was 'the first occasion ferro-concrete was used for a church of Gothic design'. The church also houses an extensive collection of statuary, including a reduced, marble, copy of
Michelangelo's Moses (located in the church grounds) and life-sized representations of the
Pietà and the
Holy Family. In the transepts, the Our lady and St Joseph side altars are of brown-mottled marble and include prominent statues of
Our Lady of the Rosary (in
Dominican habit with blue veil) and Saint Joseph, with
votive candle racks in front of each of them. Other large statues in various parts of the church include the
Sacred Heart,
St Vincent de Paul,
St Marcellin Champagnat and
St Peter Chanel. The
Gothic marble
high altar and
tabernacle, in front of a blue backing, includes a sculpted,
reredos with statues. The altar was detached from the reredos and moved forward in the 1960s in the implementation of the liturgical reforms of the
Second Vatican Council (the celebration of the
Mass facing the congregation). This altar is fronted by a carved,
Last Supper set under an incised arch along its width. The ornate columns in the sanctuary are topped by marble statues of angels. ==Suzanne Aubert==