The bay was called Te Tōangaroa by
Tāmaki Māori, referring to the need to drag
waka a long distance during low tide in the bay. During the early colonial era of Auckland, Mechanics Bay was the main trading port on the
Waitematā Harbour for Māori, in a separate location from the main
Auckland waterfront.
European settlement Along the harbour shore between
Point Britomart and St Stephen's Point in
Parnell were four bays: Official Bay, Mechanics Bay, St Georges Bay and Judges Bay. Some have now disappeared due to land reclamation and the quarrying of the bordering headlands. Closest to Point Britomart was Official Bay, so called because many government officials lived there during the 1840s. Almost contiguous with Official Bay was Mechanics Bay. It took its name from its use in housing the labour force the government had brought to construct the new capital. Mechanics Bay contained the mouth of the stream issuing from the springs in the
Auckland Domain to the south. The Bay had a broad, flat beach where Māori had long been in the habit of beaching their
waka (canoes). Next to Mechanics Bay was
St George's Bay and then
Judges Bay, so named because three of the magistrates of the early colony built their houses there. Next to Judges Bay is St Stephen's point, where a
small chapel was built. As early as the 1860s this shore front began to be modified by the European settlers. In particular it was in order to get the railway tracks around to the bottom of Queen Street that Point Britomart was quarried away and Official Bay and Mechanics Bay filled in. Initially the railway tracks came through the gully that lay between the Auckland Domain and the suburb of
Parnell, but later when a second route was formed further to the east through
Meadowbank the shoreline between Mechanics Bay and
Hobson Bay was also modified. St Georges Bay ceased to exist and became the shunting yard for the railway station, and Judges Bay was separated from the harbour by a railway embankment. The major thoroughfare of Mechanics Bay is Beach Road, which once ran around the beach front of the now reclaimed Mechanics Bay. The former
Auckland Railway Station is located here, an impressive brick 1930s structure designed by
Gummer and Ford. Formerly located at the bottom of Queen Street, the station was moved to Beach Road to be the centrepiece for the new downtown business area of Auckland. The plan was not a success. The station was decommissioned and the railway terminal returned to its original location, now named the
Britomart Transport Centre.
Aviation New Zealand's first
international airport was in Mechanics Bay. The first aircraft connecting New Zealand with the rest of the world in the 1930s were
flying boats. International flights from Britain by
Imperial Airways via
India,
Singapore and
Australia connected with
TEAL for the
Sydney to Auckland leg. Flights by
Pan American from America via
Hawaii also landed at Auckland. The
Short Solent or
Boeing 314 flying boats landed in Mechanics Bay, which was the centre of international aviation for New Zealand until the 1950s. Even after the construction of
Auckland International Airport at
Māngere in the 1960s, Mechanics Bay was still used by flying boats to the Pacific Islands, e.g. for the
Coral Route to Fiji. From 1962 to 1989, Mechanics Bay was home to first
Tourist Air Travel, then
Mount Cook Airline then
Sea Bee Air operating a fleet of
Grumman Goose,
Grumman Widgeon and Grumman Turbo Goose amphibian aircraft for regular scheduled passenger and freight services to the islands of the
Hauraki Gulf (particularly
Great Barrier and
Waiheke Islands) and operated charter flights to other areas such as the
Bay of Islands,
Manukau &
Kaipara Harbours and elsewhere around the country and to Pacific islands. Operating from what is now the Marine Rescue Centre, they were located near Compass Dolphin (since destroyed in a fierce storm in the early 1990s). . SeePort Open Weekend on
Auckland Anniversary Weekend in 2019 Mechanics Bay also has a heliport, which has been the base for a number of sightseeing and commercial flight companies, as well as the
Westpac Rescue Helicopter and NZ Police Air Support Unit known as the Eagle Helicopter. It is located next to the
Auckland Marine Rescue Centre at the eastern end of the
Ports of Auckland container terminal. In May 2013 a helicopter crashed in the water off Mechanics Bay, both the pilot and passenger were quickly rescued from the water unharmed by a nearby navy boat. Eagleflight Aviation have occupied and operated Mechanics Bay Heliport since mid-2018. A fleet of Airbus/Eurocopter H130 helicopters are operated by luxury charter company Helicopter Me. == Surrounding area ==