Matunga, HiriniGrant, EGreenop, KRefiti, ALGlenn, DJ2024-03-132018-06-272024-03-132018-06-269789811069031https://hdl.handle.net/10182/16969This chapter offers a personal discourse on the nature of indigenous architecture framed as a response to architects Frank Lloyd Wright and Rewi Thompson. It investigates the notion of a ‘different approach’ to architecture grounded in indigeneity, an indigenous ontology, epistemology and ‘being indigenous’. I investigate this ‘different approach’ through a prism that is my interpretation of Maori architectural history—extrapolating from the local to the national then international context to give my take on the concept of indigenous architecture. I use the Maori concept of whakapapa to signify that indigenous architecture—as a people/placed based human endeavour with its own tradition and genealogy has always existed, and continues to produce a coherent corpus of architecture. I do this by positing the notion of indigenous architecture as both design process and outcome, sourced in unique indigenous narratives and archetypes for design. I also posit the idea of an indigenous architectural chronology and typology that challenges some of the universalising assumptions of ‘western’ architecture and spatial design.pp.303-330, 35 chapters© 2018 Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd.architectureindigenous architectureA discourse on the nature of indigenous architectureBook Chapter10.1007/978-981-W-6904-8_12978-981-10-6904-8