Access By land Access to the national park began as a rough track from Twizel along the western shore of Lake Pukaki to the Hermitage. The highway ends at Mount Cook Village, with a connecting road leading to the White Horse Hill camping ground. Another small road leads to a car park near Tasman Lake, the start of a short walking track and the Ball Hut Route. A pedestrian swing bridge was built over the Hooker River in the Hooker Valley in 1911, providing easier access to climbing routes.
Rodolph Wigley's
Mount Cook Motor Co was formed in 1906 to provide passenger and mail services to the Hermitage from the
railhead at
Fairlie. The first coaches held between five and nine passengers and the journey from Fairlie to the Hermitage took around seven hours, not including a meal break. The service evolved into Mount Cook Landlines, which transported visitors to Mount Cook Village from Queenstown and Christchurch until 1989. In 1989, the new owner of Mount Cook Landlines,
Tourism Holdings Limited, scrapped the coach services and the
Mount Cook brand.
By air and
The Footstool in background.|alt=Photo of a small plane at an airport in the mountains In 1920, following his success running a bus service to Mount Cook Village, Rodolph Wigley raised the idea of providing flights from Timaru and Queenstown to Mount Cook. A test flight took place in May 1920, with a plane circling Aoraki / Mount Cook but not landing, but nothing came of the idea. The first landing in the Mount Cook area took place on 4 December 1934. Squadron-Leader T. W. White and a passenger flew a
Spartan from
Timaru, landing at Birch Hill Flat, southeast of Mount Cook Village. Wigley's Mount Cook Tourist Company then built a small airfield,
Mount Cook Aerodrome, at Birch Hill Flat. The aerodrome opened on 3 May 1936.
Mount Cook Airline began scheduled passenger flights to the area in 1961. In December 2019, Mount Cook Airline was merged into
Air New Zealand and ceased operations. The Mount Cook company developed retractable skis for small aircraft, providing direct access to snowfields for skiers and sightseers. The first ski plane flight using retractable skis took place in 1955. Mount Cook Ski-Planes and Helicopters is now an independently operated company, offering landings on the Tasman Glacier. Helicopters also provide access to the mountains for hunters and climbers. The village has a small public primary school, opened in 1960, which is the only school in New Zealand situated inside a national park. In 1884, Frank Huddleston opened accommodation he called "The Hermitage" at a site near the Mueller Glacier, to cater for climbing parties visiting the area. The hotel was later expanded, but was severely damaged by two floods in 1913. The Hermitage was rebuilt on a more elevated site, opening in 1914, but that building was destroyed by fire in 1957. It was rebuilt quickly, opening in 1958, and since then has been altered and expanded several times as tourism increased.
Tourism A visitor centre in the village features interpretation exhibits about the area's natural environment and history as well as an artwork collection. Aoraki / Mount Cook National Park attracted over one million tourists in 2019, a significant increase compared to the three hundred ninety-eight thousand people that visited in the 2016/2017 season. Tourism significantly decreased after the
COVID-19 pandemic. The park is a popular location for day hikes, sightseeing flights,
heliskiing,
hunting,
kayaking,
mountaineering, ski touring and
tramping. The
Department of Conservation, alongside Ngāi Tahu, administers all activities in the park, including the White Horse Hill camping ground. Recreational helicopter flights and sightseeing planes operate in the national park. Aoraki / Mount Cook National Park also attracts
astrophotographers and
stargazers due to low
light pollution in the park. Mount Cook Village is the start of several walking tracks, such as the popular Hooker Valley track which is long (return) and typically takes three hours to complete. About 1800–2000 people a day walk the Hooker Valley track in the peak season.
Sealy Tarns is another popular track in the park. It is more challenging than the Hooker Valley track, and is nicknamed "The Stairway to Heaven" due to its steepness. Guided walking tours are offered on some other tracks, and boat trips and kayaking tours for tourists take place on the Tasman Lake at the end of the glacier. The park contains 15 huts, mostly in alpine terrain. The huts range from basic shelters to serviced huts, with the most accessible being Mueller Hut, which can be reached from Mount Cook Village within four hours. Aoraki / Mount Cook National Park is the starting point of the
Alps to Ocean Cycle Trail to
Oamaru. The cycle trail was constructed from 2010 onwards by the
New Zealand Cycle Trail project. the cycle trail still includes along public roads.
Mountaineering The peaks of the Aoraki / Mount Cook region have long attracted mountaineers. In 1882 Rev.
William Spotswood Green made the first notable attempt to climb Aoraki / Mount Cook. Green travelled to New Zealand with two Swiss guides to make the climb, after seeing Sealy's photographs of the mountain at an exhibition in London. At a dinner in his honour after the climb, Green noted that climbing would be easier if huts were built in the mountains, as the huts would provide shelter and a place to store provisions, lightening the load of climbers. He also suggested that New Zealand set up an Alpine Club, leading to establishment of the
New Zealand Alpine Club in 1891. After several attempts, the first successful ascent of Aoraki / Mount Cook was made on Christmas Day 1894, by
Tom Fyfe,
Jack Clarke, and
George Graham. In December 1910,
Freda Du Faur became the first woman to climb Aoraki / Mount Cook, and in 1913 her climbing party made the first ascents of the Footstool and Mount Sefton. Mountaineering on the Aoraki / Mount Cook massif is a hazardous activity. In 1982,
Mark Inglis and his climbing partner were trapped in a
snow cave for two weeks. Other mountaineering routes include crossing the Aroarokaehe Range via the
Copland Pass, and the Mount Cook Range via the Ball Pass. The area was the training ground for Sir
Edmund Hillary. On the opposite side of the Hooker Valley,
Mount Ollivier was Sir Edmund Hillary's first major climb in 1939. Since the establishment of a tramping track to Mueller Hut, not far below the summit, Ollivier is now one of the most accessible mountains in the park. Another mountain popular for mountaineers of intermediate skills is Sebastopol, the closest mountain to Mount Cook Village. At in height, it is only above Mount Cook Village, with the lower half of the ascent following the Red Tarns tramping track. Sebastopol offers one of a few view points taking in both the Hooker Valley and the Tasman Valley. There are 15 mountain huts in Aoraki / Mount Cook National Park for the use of climbers and hunters. Twelve of these are managed by the Department of Conservation, two belong to the New Zealand Deerstalkers Association and one, Caroline Hut, is privately owned by an alpine guiding company. Another hut—Red Stag Hut—sits just outside the national park in the adjoining
Te Kahui Kaupeka Conservation Park. Hooker Hut, built in 1910, is the oldest surviving hut in the national park. It has been moved three times as the Hooker Glacier receded, then was removed and restored before being reassembled in a new location in 2021. The oldest hut still in its original location is Sefton Bivouac, built in 1917.
International Dark Sky Reserve In June 2012, an area of including Aoraki / Mount Cook National Park and the Mackenzie Basin was designated as the
Aoraki Mackenzie International Dark Sky Reserve by the
DarkSky International. At the time of the designation in 2012, the reserve was the largest in the world, and the only reserve of its type in the Southern Hemisphere. The
night sky brightness in the reserve ranks at a level 2 on the nine-level
Bortle scale. == Management and conservation ==