Jagas Paving had the privilege of creating the New Zealand Memorial & Garden at the Memorial Museum Passchendaele 1917 in the village of Zonnebeke, Belgium.
Jagas made the components which were assembled in a leafy forest on what 100 years ago was the resting place for 846 New Zealand soldiers killed in a single day of conflict.
Warwick Smith, general manager of Jagas, said the contract to create the garden was one of the most rewarding projects of his career.
The staff spent long hours pouring concrete and designing moulds to make all the elements of the memorial. Jagas was approached because it had done work in the past for landscape consultants Boffa Miskell, which won a design competition for the garden “And l think because we were mad enough to take it”, he joked.
For the pavers at the base of the design, bronze inlays representing the fallen troops were glued down and covered in hard mix. The solution set in two days, when the 1.2 tonne pavers were lifted and sandblasted to reveal the Mangutoroto aggregate concrete mix.
Warwick went to Belgium to supervise the installation. It was an emotional contract for the team, given that it was designed and made in honour of young men who lost their lives in the name of New Zealand.
The garden took the firm about eight months to make, with the most challenging item was designer Cathy Challinor’s three m tall memory column, a concrete cylinder pierced by 2700 tiny holes.
The total represented the number of casualties at the end of the day’s fighting on 12 October 1917 when Allied forces suffered a punishing defeat at the hands of Germany.
“It was a problem waiting to be solved,” Warwick said. “I wanted to do it. It was scary but the question was working out how to do it.”
Making the column involved using two precision cut metal cylinders with 10m plastic rods filling 2700 holes. Concrete was poured down between the cylinders to create the column.
The job was done carefully as Jagas staff had to keep turning the rods to prevent them setting in the concrete. Once the mixture had cured, the rods and cylinders were moved, leaving the finished column, which was shipped in a special cradle to protect it on the six-week voyage to Antwerp.
Warwick felt the finished work was a real accomplishment for Jagas. He spent seven days seeing the garden placed on the Passchendaele battlefield, an experience he said left him “blown away” knowing what had happened to the young New Zealand soldiers.
The Jagas Paving and Precast story
Jagas Paving and Precast is a business with a bright future and a solid background. Supplying top quality custom precast concrete components, porcelain and concrete pavers for over a decade has given the company a great name and a loyal clientele of developers, landscape designers and architects.
Rated No.1 by top architects and landscapers, Jagas is the preferred supplier of precast concrete architectural components and custom concrete pavers for many commercial business and property owners.
Jagas Paving and Precast is built upon the belief that a firm foundation of high quality products and excellent customer service are required for success.
Auckland’s best precast concrete suppliers – architectural precast and paving; manufactured with a total commitment to excellence.
Jagas provide concrete pavers and bespoke architectural components nationwide, with most products being delivered between the Bay of Islands and Hawkes Bay. The Jagas Paving and Precast company offices, warehouse and precast concrete production facilities are handily located in East Tamaki, Auckland.
You are welcome to visit our Auckland showroom to discover the extensive range of paving tiles available, or you can ask us about custom precast concrete and paving now.