Wellington Region

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Coordinates: 41°17′S, 174°46′E

Greater Wellington
Wellington Regional Council
Country: New Zealand
Present day Wellington region
Regional Council
Name: Greater Wellington
Chair: Fran Wilde
Population: 456,654
2006 Census [1]
Land Area: 8140km²
Website: http://www.gw.govt.nz
Cities and Towns
Cities: Wellington, Lower Hutt, Porirua, Upper Hutt
Towns: Otaki, Paraparaumu, Waikanae, Greytown, Masterton, Featherston, Carterton, Raumati
Constituent Territorial Authorities
Names: Wellington City
Hutt City
Upper Hutt City
Porirua City
Kapiti Coast District
Masterton District
Carterton District
South Wairarapa District
Part of Tararua District
Websites:

The Wellington region of New Zealand occupies the southern end of the North Island.

Contents

[edit] Governance

The official Wellington Region, as administered by the Wellington Regional Council (under the brand-name "Greater Wellington") covers the conurbation around the capital city, Wellington, and the cities of Lower Hutt, Porirua, and Upper Hutt, each of which also contains a rural hinterland. It extends up the west coast of the North Island, taking in the coastal settlements of the Kapiti Coast district, which includes the southern fringe of the area commonly known as the Horowhenua and the town of Otaki. East of the Rimutaka Range it includes three largely rural districts containing most of the area known as the Wairarapa, covering the towns of Masterton and Carterton, Greytown, Featherston and Martinborough.[1]

[edit] Regional Councillors

Greater Wellington Regional Council is a statutory body made up of 13 regional councillors, representing six constituencies:[1]

  • Wellington has 5 representatives
  • Kapiti 1
  • Porirua-Tawa 2
  • Lower Hutt 3
  • Upper Hutt 1
  • Wairarapa 1
Function Name Constituency Ticket
Chair[2] Fran Wilde Wellington
Councillor Chris Laidlaw Wellington
Councillor Sally Baber Wellington
Councillor Judith Aitken Wellington
Councillor Paul Bruce Wellington Green
Councillor Nigel Wilson Kapiti
Councillor John Burke Porirua-Tawa
Councillor Barbara Donaldson Porirua-Tawa
Councillor Sandra Greig Lower Hutt
Councillor Peter Glensor Lower Hutt
Councillor Prue Lamason Lower Hutt
Councillor Rex Kirton Upper Hutt
Councillor Ian Buchanan Wairarapa

[edit] Demographics

[edit] Production and income

The Wellington Region is by a large margin the most wealthy region in the country. The most up-to-date estimates for regional GDP prepared by the Ministry for Economic Development put the region's GDP at $17.5 billion in the year to March 2004 which was $36,700 per capita, 19% larger than the Auckland Region figure of $30,750, 38% larger than the poorest region, Northland ($26,600) and 3% more than the second highest region (Northern South Island, $35,800).[3]

At the time of the census in 2006 Wellington region recorded the largest percentages of people in all of the four highest income groupings ($40,001-$50,000: 8.9%, $50,001-$70,000: 10.5%, $70,001-$100,000: 5.9% and $100,001+: 5.2%) as well as the lowest percentage of residents in the 'loss' group (0.37%).[4] As at December 2007 people in the Wellington Region has a significantly higher average weekly income from all sources ($812/week) than other regions in New Zealand (18% more than second-place Auckland with $687/week).[5]

As of 2006, 25.8% of employed Wellingtons worked in professional occupations and 14.3% in clerical occupations, the largest percentage for each category of any region in the country. Conversely, excluding 369 people in areas not covered by an official region, Wellington has the lowest percentage of technicians and trades workers in the country (10.6%), the lowest percentage of machinery operators and drivers (4.1%) and the lowest percentage of labourers (7.1%).[4]

[edit] Ethnicity

Wellington Region is second only to Auckland in many statistics related to breadth of ethnicity. As of the 2006 Census, Wellington had the second-highest Asian population (8.4%, Auckland:18.9%) and the second-highest Pacific Islander population (8.0%, Auckland:14.4%). 26.1% of Wellingtonians were born outside New Zealand which is second to Auckland (40.4%).[4]

[edit] Gender

The Wellington Region has the second-highest percentage of women at 51.52% (Nelson:51.53%, West Coast:49.21%), particularly between the ages of 16-29, where it is at 48.86% with Otago next at 49.11% followed by Gisborne at 49.18%, contrasted with Marlborough at 52.61% for the same age group.[4]

[edit] Education

As of 2006, 21.1% of Wellingtonians have a degree, compared to only 6.6% on the West Coast, 17.7% for Auckland and 14.5% for Otago (though 0.97% of Otago residents have Doctorate level degrees, compared with 0.87% for Wellington). Auckland and Wellington are equal lowest for "No Qualification" at 18.1%.[4]

[edit] Transport

11.3% of Wellington households do not have access to a car, which is the highest for any region of the country.[4]

[edit] Telecommunications

Wellington statistics for mobile phone use at 76.3% is only exceeded by Auckland (76.4%) followed by Waikato (75.3%). Access to the internet is 65.5%, highest equal with Auckland, followed by Canterbury (61.3%). Somewhat surprisingly, Wellingtonians are least likely to have access to a fax machine (21.1%) after Gisborne (20.5%).[4]

[edit] Definitions of Wellington

The definition of the Wellington Region presented here is that of the coverage of the Greater Wellington territorial authority. The term "Wellington region" may also colloquially refer to a much smaller area, potentially excluding the Wairarapa and Horowhenua regions entirely, both of which have their own distinct communities and identities. In some instances the Kapiti Coast might be omitted as well, despite it's coverage by the commuter rail services.

To add to the confusion, during the 19th century New Zealand was run by provincial governments. The Wellington Province extended far further north, taking in the cities of Palmerston North and Wanganui.

[edit] Geography

A composite landsat-7 image of the southwestern part of the Wellington Region
A composite landsat-7 image of the southwestern part of the Wellington Region
A map showing population density in the Wellington Region at the 2006 census
A map showing population density in the Wellington Region at the 2006 census

The region occupies the southern tip of the North Island, bounded to the west, south, and east by water. To the west lies the Tasman Sea and to the east the Pacific Ocean. At the southern end of the island these two bodies of water are joined by the narrow and turbulent Cook Strait, which is only 28 km wide at its narrowest point, between Cape Terawhiti and Perano Head in the Marlborough Sounds.

The region covers 7,860 km², and extends north to Otaki in the west and almost to Eketahuna in the east. Physically and topologically the region has four basic areas running roughly parallel to each other along a northeast-southwest axis.

The first of these four regions is a narrow coastal strip of plains running north from Paekakariki. This area, known as the Kapiti coast, contains numerous small towns, many of which gain at least a proportion of their wealth from tourism, largely due to their fine beaches.

Inland from this is rough hill country, formed along the same major geologic fault responsible for the Southern Alps in the South Island. Though nowhere near as mountainous as these, the Rimutaka and Tararua Ranges are still hard country and support only small populations, although it is in small coastal valleys and plains at the southern end of these ranges that the cities of Wellington and the Hutt Valley are located.

The third topological stripe of the region is the undulating hill country of the Wairarapa around the Ruamahanga River. This area, which beomes lower and flatter in the south, terminates in the wetlands around Lake Wairarapa and contains much rich farmland. The final section of the region's topology is another section of rough hill country, lower than the Tararuas but far less economic than the land around the Ruamahanga River. Both of the hillier striations of the region are still largely forested.

[edit] History

The Māori who originally settled the Wellington area knew it as Te Upoko o te Ika a Māui, meaning "the head of Māui's fish". Legend recounts that Kupe discovered and explored the district in about the tenth century.

The Wellington region was settled by Europeans in 1839 by the New Zealand Company. Wellington City became the capital of Wellington Province upon the creation of the province in 1853, until its abolition of Provinces in New Zealand in 1876. Wellington became capital of New Zealand in 1865, the third capital of New Zealand after Auckland, and Russell.

[edit] People

Aerial view of Wellington city
Aerial view of Wellington city

Over three-quarters of the region's 464,700 people (2006 estimate) reside in the four cities at the southwestern corner of the region. Other main centres of population are on the Kapiti Coast and in the fertile farming areas close to the upper Ruamahanga River in the Wairarapa.

Along the Kapiti Coast, numerous small towns sit close together, many of them occupying spaces close to popular beaches. From the north, these include Otaki, Waikanae, Paraparaumu, the twin settlements of Raumati Beach and Raumati South, Paekakariki and Pukerua Bay, the last of which is a northern suburb of Porirua. Each of these settlements has a population of between 2,000 and 10,000, making this a moderately heavily populated coastline.

In the Wairarapa the largest community by a considerable distance is Masterton, with a population of almost 20,000. Other towns in the area include Featherston, Martinborough, Carterton and Greytown.

[edit] Famous sons and daughters

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Greater Wellington Regional Council's constituencies. Retrieved on 2008-05-08.
  2. ^ Newstalk ZB (30 October 2007). Wilde elected Wellington regional council chair. New Zealand Herald. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
  3. ^ Ministry of Economic Development Regional Economic Performance Report (2005-11-01). Retrieved on 2008-05-08.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g 2006 Census Regional Summary Tables (2007-07-03). Retrieved on 2008-05-08.
  5. ^ Nationwide Quarterly Review by Statistics New Zealand (2008-03-25). Retrieved on 2008-05-08.

[edit] External links