David Ross (architect)
David Ross was a Scottish-born New Zealand architect, active in Dunedin and Auckland, as well as Sydney in Australia for much of the 1860s to 1890s. He was the designer of a number of heritage listed buildings in Otago.
Early life
Born in Aberdeen, in Scotland, in 1828, David Ross was one of two sons of a watchmaker and his wife. Once his schooling was completed, he commenced his architectural career in 1850 with an apprenticeship to a firm based in Elgin. He later worked for architects in England before, in 1857, emigrating to Melbourne in Australia.Professional practice
By 1858, Ross, who had married Agnes Marshall by this time, was practicing in Melbourne on his own account with a number of ecclesiastical and dwelling commissions subsequently completed in the city. This may have included, at least partially, the St Mary of the Angels Basilica in Geelong. In 1862, he and his family moved to New Zealand, settling in Dunedin. He was briefly in partnership with William Mason but this arrangement did not last and it was dissolved. Ross went on to design several notable buildings in Dunedin and elsewhere in Otago. He also served as a city councillor for Dunedin in 1865.One of his earliest works as a sole practitioner was Moray Place Congregational Church; a Gothic-styled structure with capacity for 500 people, it was completed in 1864. The oldest surviving ecclesiastical building in Dunedin, it was listed as a category 2 heritage building by Heritage New Zealand in 2005. Another ecclesiastical commission was St James' Church at Palmerston, built in 1876 and listed as a category 1 heritage building in 2011.
Ross was a proponent of the use of concrete, one of the earliest architects in New Zealand to do so; one of his designs utilising this material is the Otago Museum, the construction of which commenced in 1874. Another building that incorporated some concrete is the heritage listed courthouse in the town of Lawrence, which was built from 1874–1875. In 1883, he designed the Italianate-styled Union Steam Ship Company Offices building on Water Street in Dunedin. The same year he won first prize in a design competition for the Auckland Harbour Board building. He relocated to Auckland, where he supervised the construction of the building which was very similar in appearance to his design for the Union Steam Ship Company Offices building. He lived in Auckland for three years and also worked on additions to Charleville, the residence of Alfred Issacs in Remuera, and the Star Hotel in Onehunga.
In 1886, Ross, who by that time was no longer living with his wife, went back to Australia, basing himself in Sydney for the next seven years. His output during this time included that city's St George's Hall. He then returned to New Zealand, where he took up residence in Wellington. There his architectural work was limited; he designed only two dwellings and a commercial building during the two years he lived in Wellington. One of the dwellings was the subject of a legal dispute as Ross was not paid for his work.