Paua House

The Paua House was a tourist attraction in the southern New Zealand town of Bluff, but now on display at the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch.

A wall of the Fluteys' lounge, in the replica Paua House built at Canterbury Museum.

The Paua House was originally just a standard New Zealand bungalow located at 258 Marine Parade, Bluff.[1] The house was owned by elderly couple Fred and Myrtle Flutey, who built up a massive collection of ornaments and trinkets made from the iridescent shells of the paua, a New Zealand species of abalone often used for souvenirs and items of kitsch. Over the course of some 40 years, the couple adorned the house with these ornaments, and also with the cleaned shells of paua found by the Fluteys on the local beach. By the time of the couple's deaths (Myrtle in 2000, Fred on New Year's Eve 2001)[2] the walls of their lounge were covered with over 1,100 shells,[3] and the Fluteys were playing host to thousands of visitors per year, with some reports suggesting one million people visited the house during the 37 years that the collection was built up.[2]

When the Fluteys died, the house was purchased by their grandson, Ross Bowen. Despite protests from locals who wished the house to stay in its shelled condition, Bowen loaned the Fluteys' collection to Canterbury Museum in Christchurch on a ten-year loan. Parts of the house were recreated by the museum and opened to the public in 2008.[4] It was seen by some quarter of a million museum visitors in its first two years on display.[5]

References

  1. "Paua shell house on exhibition in new Canterbury home, Newshub, 3 July 2008. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  2. "Iconic paua house recreated in all its glory", stuff.co.nz, 4 July 2008. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  3. "Fred Flutey in his pāua-shell house, Bluff", Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand, 3 December 2013. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  4. "Fred and Myrtle's Paua Shell House", Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 13 August 2016.
  5. McKnight, S., "Former Paua House for sale again", Southland Times, 18 March 2010. Retrieved 13 August 2016.

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