Hataitai

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Suburb: Hataitai
City: Wellington
Island: North Island
Surrounded by:
 to the north Mount Victoria
 to the east Evans Bay
 to the south Kilbirnie
 to the west Mount Victoria

Hataitai is an inner suburb of Wellington, the capital of New Zealand. It lies on the southeastern flanks of Mount Victoria, 3.5 kilometres southeast of the city centre.

It is situated on the shore of Evans Bay, one of the two large indentations in the Wellington coast which almost separate the Miramar Peninsula from the rest of the city. Numerous small bays and beaches dot the shoreline between Hataitai and the central city.

Hataitai is on important transport links between the central city and Wellington International Airport, to the south of Evans Bay on the isthmus at Rongotai. Most notably, it lies at the eastern end of the Mount Victoria Tunnel, as well as a smaller nearby tunnel for buses only. This latter tunnel, originally a tram tunnel of the former Wellington tramway system, was opened in 1907, and it was subsequent to that that the suburb became a more popular place to live.

The suburb's name, Hataitai, has an interesting history. The ridge of the hill was thought to have been the petrified remains of the great taniwha (sea monster) Whataitai, one of the two creatures who helped form the harbour of Te Whanganui-a-Tara (now Wellington Harbour). When one taniwha broke through the rock that separated the then lake from Cook Strait, the waters rushed out, leaving Whataitai stranded on rocks. An earthquake later lifted the monster's body into the hills below Tangi Te Keo (Mount Victoria).