Waitangi Park

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Waitangi Park showing Chaffers Dock Apartments
Waitangi Park showing Chaffers Dock Apartments
Waitangi Park - ECO (ecological) messages abound
Waitangi Park - ECO (ecological) messages abound
Waitangi Park showing walk-on world map and Les Arts Sauts performance dome
Waitangi Park showing walk-on world map and Les Arts Sauts performance dome
Waitangi Park — emerging Wellingtonian visual artists engage in the "Earth From Above" exhibition
Waitangi Park — emerging Wellingtonian visual artists engage in the "Earth From Above" exhibition

Waitangi Park, a re-modelled recreation-space in Te Aro, Wellington, New Zealand, dates from 2005. It lies near Te Papa (the National Museum of New Zealand) and Courtenay Place. The facilities include a waka-launching area, a children's playground, a skateboard-zone, and a large grassy space.

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[edit] Events

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

[edit] Regular events

  • Waitangi Park Market. Fruit and vegetable market. Open hours: Sunday 7am - 12pm.[2]
  • Petanque
  • Skateboarding
  • Waka-launching

[edit] Design

Wraight Athfield Landscape Architecture (WALA) won the competition held to design the park. WALA saw the design through to completion in 2005.

[edit] History

Wellingtonians formerly referred to the Waitangi Park area as Chaffers Park. Prior to 1855 the park area consisted of part of a gently sloping beach (Chaffers Beach), often covered in water from harbour and stream. On the north-east side of the park, redevelopment of the former Herd St Post Office into lifestyle-apartments and into a commercial space called Chaffers Dock Apartments has commenced.

[edit] Geography

The surrounding waterway (wetlands) have become a symbolic spiritual cleansing mechanism for the Waitangi stream, recently lifted from the stormwater/sewer and caused to flow through gravel and grass. The Waitangi stream flows through Te Aro valley[citation needed] from the hills to the sea. In 1855 an earthquake raised the stream several metres where it flowed along the marshy area now known as Cambridge and Kent Terraces.

[edit] External links

[edit] References