Waitangi Park Explained

Waitangi Park
Location:Wellington, New Zealand
Coords:-41.2914°N 174.7848°W
Area:6.5ha
Created:2006
Operator:Wellington City Council

Waitangi Park is a remodelled recreational space in Te Aro, Wellington, New Zealand, that was opened in 2006. It lies near Te Papa (the National Museum of New Zealand), Former Post and Telegraph Building and Courtenay Place. The facility includes a waka-launching area, a children's playground, a skateboard zone, and a large grassy space.

Geography and history

The Waitangi stream formerly flowed from around Wellington Hospital in Newtown along Adelaide Road to the Basin Reserve and then along what is now Kent and Cambridge Terraces.[1] Its outlet was the Waitangi lagoon or swamp, formed by a shingle beach which periodically gave way, causing clumps of flax and toetoe to float out into the harbour.[2] [3] The lagoon used to harbour eel, fish, and shellfish, and was used by Māori for food gathering, fresh water, and waka launching. Early European settlers planned to dig a canal along the stream to use what is now the Basin Reserve as a harbour, but the 1855 earthquake uplifted the land and made this impractical.[4] The stream was piped underground instead.[5] The wetlands in the redeveloped Waitangi Park are fed by the outflow from the Waitangi stream, now lifted from stormwater drains and caused to flow through gravel and grass as part of the park's development.[6]

Wellingtonians formerly referred to the Waitangi Park area as Chaffers Park. Chaffers Park was created after industrial buildings on the site were demolished.[7] Chaffers Marina adjoining the area was opened in 1993.[8]

Redevelopment into Waitangi Park

Wraight Athfield Landscape Architecture (WALA) won the competition held to design the park. WALA saw the design through to completion in 2005. The redevelopment of the park won a number of awards from the New Zealand Institute of Landscape Architects, the New Zealand Institute of Architects and the Wellington Civic Trust, among others.[9] [10]

As part of the redevelopment, on the north-east side of the park the former Herd St Post Office was developed into lifestyle-apartments and into a commercial space called Chaffers Dock Apartments.

The redeveloped park was officially opened in March 2006. The redevelopment project cost a total of $22 million.[11]

The New Zealand Construction Industry Council (NZCIC) criticised the construction tendering process for the park, arguing that under-tendering caused problems. According to the NZCIC, the "initial tender accepted for the development at Waitangi Park was $2.1 million less than the estimated cost of the project, and at least $2.6 million below tenders from two other companies."[12]

Events

Numerous events have taken place at Waitangi Park, these include:

Regular events include:

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Adkin. G. Leslie. 1959. The Great Harbour of Tara. 2021-09-24. Wellington City Libraries. 97.
  2. Web site: Ward. Louis. 1928. Early Wellington. live. 2021-09-24. 304. https://web.archive.org/web/20100428125006/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WarEarl-t1-body-d16-d5-d6.html. 2010-04-28. web.archive.org.
  3. News: 5 Mar 1853. The Weather. Wellington Independent. 25 Sep 2021. Paperspast.
  4. Web site: Burgess, Dave. 3 November 2010. Group plans to slip a few eels downtown. The Dominion Post. 15 January 2015.
  5. Web site: 12 December 2010. Waitangi Park – an urban wetland recreated. Enviro History NZ. 15 January 2015.
  6. Web site: 12 Dec 2010. Waitangi Park – an urban wetland recreated. 2021-09-24. envirohistory NZ. en.
  7. Web site: 2014-02-07. Significant street full of history. 2021-09-24. Stuff. en.
  8. Web site: About Chaffers Marina. 2021-09-24. Chaffers Marina Wellington NZ. en-US.
  9. Web site: Waitangi Park . Wraight + Associates landscape architecture and urban design . 15 January 2015.
  10. Web site: Waitangi Park . New Zealand Institute of Landscape Architects . 15 January 2015.
  11. News: Waitangi Park opens in Wellington . New Zealand Herald . 15 March 2006 . 15 January 2015.
  12. Waitangi Park costs: Value better than lowest cost . Scoop.co.nz . 1 March 2006.
  13. http://2006nzfestival.telecom.co.nz/visual-arts/earth-from-above.php Festival Of The Arts 2006
  14. http://www.wellingtonnz.com/RestaurantsAndShopping/Shopping/WaitangiParkMarket/WaitangiParkMarket.htm Waitangi Park Market