Te Aro Park Te Aro Park (formerly commonly known as
Pigeon Park) is a small public park situated on a triangular piece of land between
Manners Street and Dixon Street. Te Aro Pā was close to this location but by the 1880s very few Māori remained at the site. The Council bought the land in the 1870s, and it became known as Market Reserve and then Manners Street Reserve. but has since been moved further along to a pedestrian area in Courtenay Place. In 1939 a memorial and drinking fountain were installed by Taranaki Street Wesleyan Church to commemorate the centenary of Wesleyan missionaries landing in Wellington and preaching to Māori at Te Aro Pā. The memorial was retained in the redeveloped park. In 1988 Wellington City Council approved a design by
Shona Rapira Davies for redevelopment of the park as a symbolic waka (canoe). The project, named Te Waimapihi, ended up costing over $800,000, more than three times the amount agreed with Davies, and was finished a year later than agreed. A documentary was made about Davies' work on the park and the controversy that surrounded the project. The redeveloped park was opened in May 1992. A tiled upright structure forms the prow of the canoe, and trees planted at intervals along the sides represent paddlers. Paving at the park is formed from 30,000 clay tiles handmade by Davies and imprinted with plants and names. Warning signs had to be installed when it was discovered that the tiles become extremely slippery when wet. Triangular shapes throughout the park evoke Māori weaving, and flowing water in the park's pools represents cleansing and renewal. A piece of
pounamu (greenstone) was buried under the prow at the opening ceremony. From around 2018 anti-social behaviour at the park increased, and in August 2020 a police report on the area was submitted to Wellington City Council for review. The report identified problems including gang members and vulnerable people in nearby emergency housing, easy availability of alcohol from numerous outlets near the park and problems in and around the public toilets at the park. The police report led to publication by the Council of
Te Aro Park – Assessing Harm in September 2020. Proposed changes to the park included increased camera surveillance and better sightlines, better lighting, increased patrols by police and
Māori wardens and possible removal of the toilet block. The report also identified a need to increase awareness of and
mana of the artwork formed by the park's design and tiles. As part of this initiative, in 2022 the City Council removed car parks along one side of Te Aro Park and replaced them with a $600,000 timber boardwalk and planter boxes. The stated aim was to increase visibility around the park, make it look nicer, slow traffic and create more pedestrian space. The changes to the park did not address the issue of problems with people loitering in the park. The Council demolished the public toilets in the park in November 2022, saying this would lead to increased vibrancy in the area. The Council announced that permanent replacement facilities would not be built for over a year, probably in 2024, but that it intended to place some temporary toilets in a nearby street within a few months.
Oaks complex The wide end of the wedge formed by Cuba, Dixon and Manners Streets and adjacent to Te Aro Park was formerly occupied by the Royal Oak Hotel, but this was demolished in 1979 and replaced by the Oaks complex, which was completed in 1981. The building is made of painted steel, glass and tiles and originally had an airy, plant-filled central atrium. Architects
Warren and Mahoney won the overall prize in the Steel Awards of 1982 for their attempt "to recreate a contemporary meeting place using the light indoor/outdoor structure". In 1996 the central atrium area was filled in. A pedestrian overbridge originally joined the complex to James Smiths department store, but it was removed in the late 1990s. In 2011 Wellington City Council published the
Wellington 2040 City Strategy, which among other things suggested that the Oaks could be demolished to make way for a grassed area that would link Te Aro Park to
Cuba Mall. The Council's manager for research, strategy, and urban design later clarified that there were no immediate plans to demolish the complex, stating "the land is held by the owner under a lease in perpetuity from the council". In 2015, the Council's Transport and Urban Development Committee chairman
Andy Foster suggested that the Oaks could be turned into a covered market. In 2019 the Council released
Planning for Growth, a strategic plan for higher density living in the city. Councillor Nicola Young suggested that the Oaks complex was an eyesore that could be demolished to make way for a better building. The Oaks building is owned by Zadimas Properties. Zadimas leases the land under the complex on a 21-year perpetual lease. The rent is updated only every 21 years when the lease comes up for renewal.
Cuba Street and Cuba Mall Cuba Street runs north to south through Te Aro, stretching from the
Michael Fowler Centre near the harbour to Webb Street, between the
Basin Reserve,
Mt Cook and
Brooklyn areas. Cuba Street is known for its bohemian atmosphere and old architecture. Part of Cuba Street is pedestrianised as Cuba Mall, home of the
Bucket Fountain.
Courtenay Place Courtenay Place is one of the main streets in Te Aro. It runs east to west from Kent and Cambridge Terraces near the base of Mount Victoria to the intersection of Manners, Dixon and Taranaki Streets at Te Aro Park. Courtenay Place is known as an entertainment and nightlife district and has many theatres, bars and restaurants. Formerly it was also the site of large wholesale fruit and vegetable markets. The warehouses holding the markets have been converted into apartments, offices and entertainment venues.
Historic churches St Mary of the Angels (opened 1922) is a Catholic church in Boulcott Street, built in concrete and brick in a Gothic style.
St John's at 176 Willis Street s a Presbyterian church. It is built of wood in a Gothic style, and opened in 1885. Further along at 211 Willis Street is '''St Peter's''', another wooden church built in a Gothic style. St Peter's was opened in 1879 for the Anglican community. The first church on the site was opened in 1848.
Wesley Methodist Church at 75 Taranaki Street was opened in 1880. It is built of wood and combines Gothic elements with Classical and Romanesque features. Wesley Church is currently used by Pacific Island congregations. St John's, St Peter's and Wesley Church were all designed by architect
Thomas Turnbull. The
Congregational Church on the corner of Cambridge Terrace and Lorne Street (formerly known as 'Ritson's Corner') was designed by
William Fielding and opened in 1917. The church is made of brick in a "truncated form of Edwardian Gothic, known in Australia as
Federation Gothic". At the rear of the church is an annex used for Sunday School.
'Taj Mahal' 'Taj Mahal' is the nickname of a building on the median strip between Kent and Cambridge Terraces and Courtenay Place and Wakefield Street. The building was constructed in 1928 and opened in July 1929 as public toilets for tram passengers. With a dome at each end, the building quickly became known as the Taj Mahal. In 1966 the toilets were finally closed due to difficulty of access and lack of use. The building was saved from demolition by public protest, and since then has been used successively as storage for Downstage Theatre, an art gallery, and as home to various bars and restaurants. The Taj was formerly part of the beat for gay men looking for anonymous sex, and students have held capping stunts there. Stephen Oliver wrote a poem called 'The ballad of the Taj Mahal' about the building's varying uses. Since 2004 it has been home to The Welsh Dragon Bar, the first Welsh pub in the Southern Hemisphere.
Waterfront Te Aro is a coastal suburb, and has a popular publicly accessible waterfront area that includes the
Museum of New Zealand and Clyde Quay Wharf. Clyde Quay Wharf was completed in 1910 by the Wellington Harbour Board but was never used as much as other wharves in the harbour. In 1961 the wharf was closed. The Overseas Passenger Terminal was built on the wharf by the Wellington Harbour Board, opening in 1964 to cater for an expected increase in passenger shipping which never eventuated. The building was also used as a function venue. to make way for a new apartment complex called Clyde Quay Wharf, which opened in 2014. The spire and four wall mosaics from the old building were used in the new one. A new outdoor recreation area,
Waitangi Park, opened in 2006. The Wellington waterfront west of Taranaki Street, including
Frank Kitts Park and
Civic Square, is part of Wellington Central, not Te Aro. The popular beach at
Oriental Bay is five minutes' walk from the north-eastern edge of Te Aro. ==Politics==