The house's grounds are much more private than the previous residence, totalling . On one side the gardens border Alexandra Park and the
Mt Victoria Town Belt giving the impression of even greater expansiveness. The scale of the ground has allowed a range of different landscapes to be developed: rockeries, flower gardens, lawn areas, and a collection of mature trees. All this contributes to it now being considered a garden of national significance, although there are few ornaments or sculptures to be seen. The extensive grounds also contain tennis and squash courts, a bomb shelter, four cottages and a visitor centre.
Residence The current residence, in
Newtown, was designed in an eclectic style in the manner of a
half-timbered Tudor mansion. As it was intended to evoke a large
English country house, the house's rooms were designed in a range of styles—from
Elizabethan to
Tudor, to
Georgian and
Regency. Throughout the house are examples of what was considered good taste at the time: marble fireplaces, parquet floors, oak panelling, Mahogany doors,
leadlight windows, bronze electric light fixtures and neo-Georgian plasterwork ceilings. Various portraits of successive governors and other significant people are displayed along with a collection of
New Zealand art, some of which has been donated by previous governors. The house covers . Many of the rooms are set aside for official state occasions—for example, two dining rooms, a ballroom, a conservatory and drawing rooms. Government House is where the governor-general confers with the leader of the
New Zealand Government, hosts foreign dignitaries, and performs the functions of New Zealand's head of state, as the representative of the
monarch of New Zealand. The residence is also open to the public, running free tours of the state rooms throughout the year. As a result of renovations undertaken in the early 2000s, new carpets were provided for the public reception rooms. The carpets and rugs were designed by several New Zealand artists; Gavin Chilcott, Andrew McLeod, Tim Main and
John Bevan Ford. The weaving was done by the carpet manufacturer Dilana, in association with
Athfield Architects. The design of the drawing room carpet by Gavin Chilcott is derived from the
silver fern. Of particular interest is the spectacular
kowhaiwhai pattern, composed into a huge single composition x without a repeat, was designed by Andrew McLeod and inspired by
Theo Schoon's drawings of
Māori designs. This pattern was produced in three different colour-ways and appears in several of the reception rooms. ==See also==