Cracroft Caverns

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Cracroft Caverns
Cashmere
300px
Entrance to Cracroft Caverns
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Site information
Controlled by Christchurch City Council
Open to
the public
yes
Site history
Built 1942 (1942)

Cracroft Caverns, also known as the Cashmere Caverns, are a series of large chambers in the hill of the Cashmere suburb of Christchurch, New Zealand.

Constructed secretly during the Second World War in response to the Japanese threat, they were intended to house operational headquarters in the event of attack. The military commandeered the Cracroft Wilson estate, founded by Sir John Cracroft Wilson in 1854, for their Southern Group headquarters, and work on the tunnels began in 1942.[1]

File:Cavern-and-ringlaser.jpg
Partially lined cavern (notice the rocks above the concrete ceiling) and ring laser equipment

Railways were built for access and for the removal of waste soil. The largest cavern was 7 metres high, 10 metres wide and 30 metres long. Prestressed concrete was used to line the caverns. Officers based in the estate house would come down stairs into the tunnels, while others were to enter through the access tunnels. Construction came to a sudden halt in 1944 as the threat of invasion receded, even though work on the bunkers was nearly complete.

The weekend before the military left the estate, fire broke out and the beautiful Cracroft Wilson House was burnt to the ground. The entrances to the underground complex were sealed after the war, and the existence of the caverns was largely forgotten until excavations were carried out in 1987. The caverns have now become the home of a series of ring laser experiments set up by the University of Canterbury's physics department. The ring laser takes advantage of the extremely stable temperate in the caves.

File:Plaque-Cracroft.jpg
Plaque above the main entrance

There is now an associated small public park behind the Princess Margaret Hospital, and parts of the caverns are periodically open to the public.

The Cavern is closed to the public at present due to damage from the 2010 Canterbury earthquake and 2011 Christchurch earthquake.

References

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External links