DISTINCTIVE, solid huts made of locking timber with the air of yesteryear. You encounter them in various parts of the backcountry: Tongariro, the Kaimanawa and Ruahine Ranges, Arthur’s Pass, parts of the Canterbury foothills, and on the West Coast.
Between the 1950s and mid-1980s, New Zealand’s track and hut network was managed by the Department of Lands and Survey, and the New Zealand Forest Service. While both these government agencies were responsible for building their own huts, they occasionally contracted out the work to private enterprise. Beginning in the late 1960s, two competing building companies, Lockwood in Rotorua and Fraemohs in Christchurch, provided the design for a new style of backcountry hut. These were moderate-sized or larger huts, and the all-wood, interlocking construction was solid and provided insulation.
While superficially…