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Overview | Attractions | Events | Facts | Kids | Last Minute Deals
Alberton
100 Mt. Albert Rd., Mt. Albert
09/846-7367 Fax 09/846-1919.
Wed-Sun 10:30am-noon, 1-4pm
Admission charged.
This is perhaps the finest of all Auckland's historic homes open to the public.
This once simple farmhouse built in 1863 grew into the magnificent mansion that
stands today. Owned by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust, it provides an
intimate glimpse into Victorian life.
Auckland Art Gallery
Wellesley and Kitchener Streets
09/307-7700 Fax 09/302-1096.
Daily 10am-5pm both galleries
Closed Christmas Day and Good Friday
Admission to main gallery free; fees for some touring shows.
New Gallery
09/307-4540.
Admission charged; children under 12 free.
Recognized as the leading New Zealand art gallery, Auckland City Art Gallery and
the New Gallery hold over 10,000 New Zealand and European artworks. The Main
gallery emphasizes historical collections with guided tours at 2pm daily, while
the New Gallery, opened across the street in 1995, houses an extensive
contemporary collection of new ideas, new works, and new artists.
Auckland Museum Te Papa Whakahiku
Auckland Domain
09/309-0443; 09/306-7067
Daily 10am-5pm Closed Christmas Day and Good Friday
Bus 635 from Downtown Bus Terminal; Explorer Bus stops every 30 min. past the
hour at museum door; Link Bus every 10 min. weekdays, every 20 min. weekends
with a 5-min. walk from its Parnell Rd. stop to museum.
Admission Permanent Collection by donation
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Maori Concert and Discovery Center
Admission
charged.
Auckland's imposing museum building stands in the Auckland Domain on the rim of
an ancient volcano surrounded by parks and gardens. This Greek Revival-style
museum is known for its Maori artifacts, the largest collection of its kind,
including Portraits of Maori chiefs by C. F. Goldie. Other exhibits in the
museum are dedicated to natural history, geology, and local history, including a
reconstructed streetscape of early Auckland.
Also on site is Discovery Center, an interactive children's activity
center that is a perennial favorite.
Maori Treasures Gallery has a new look. Key attractions in this area are
the impressive 82-foot war canoe chiseled from one enormous totara trunk and
covered with intricate, symbolic carvings. That same artistry is reflected in
the 85-foot meetinghouse with its carved and painted walls and rafters, also
greenstone weapons, tools, and feather cloaks.
Twice daily at 11am and 1:30pm, Maori concerts by the world-traveled Pounamu
Maori Performance Group bring this history and culture to life.
Auckland Zoo
By car, take Karangahape Road (which turns into Great North Road west out of the
city), past Western Springs. Take a right onto Motions Road.
Motions Rd., Western Springs,
09/360-3805; 09/360-3819
Daily 9:30am-5:30pm (last admission 4:15pm Closed Christmas Day
Explorer Bus. Free parking
Admission charged. children 5-15; under 5 free; family tickets.
Sumatran tigers snarl, lions roar, and monkeys chatter. Over 900 birds and
animals from every continent make their home in this outstanding parkland,
recognized as one of Australasia's leading zoos with an international reputation
for its animal management programs. Visit the McDonald's South American
Rainforest, where troops of spider monkeys, bonnet macaques, squirrel monkeys,
and siamangs swing from branch to branch. Discover New Zealand's unique
wildlife, including the kiwi and tuatara, or check out Pridelands for giraffe,
zebra, lions, and rhino. And visit the zoo's two most famous residents, Kashin
and Burma, in their state-of-the-art elephant house. Children will also love the
Adventure Playland, which features fun educational activities.
Albert Park
Wellesley St. W, Kitchener St., Waterloo Quad
These 15 acres of formal gardens, fountains, and statue-studded lawns are a
favorite for Aucklanders who pour out of nearby office blocks and the university
and polytechnic to eat lunch on sunny days. The park is built on the site of a
garrison from the 1840s and 1850s that was used to protect settlers in their
conflicts Maori tribes. There are still remnants of its stone walls (with rifle
slits) behind university buildings on the east side of the park.
Beaches. Auckland's beaches are commonly categorized by area : east,
west, or north. The ones closest to the city are the east coast beaches along
Tamaki Drive on the south side of the harbor, which do not have heavy surf. Of
these, Judge's Bay and Mission Bay are especially popular. The most visited is
Piha, 25 mi west of Auckland. Whatipu, south of Piha, is a broad sweep of sand
offering safe bathing behind the sandbar that guards Manukau Harbour. Bethells,
to the north, is beautiful, but often has heavy surf.
Cathedral Church Of St. Mary
Holy Trinity. Parnell Rd. and St. Stephen's Ave
Daily 8-6.
A Gothic Revival-style wooden church. Built in 1886, it's one of a number of
churches commissioned by the early Anglican missionary Bishop Selwyn. The
craftsmanship inside the church is remarkable. St. Mary's originally stood on
the other side of Parnell Road, and in 1982 the entire structure was moved
across the street to be next to the new church.
Ewelme Cottage
14 Ayr St., Parnell
09/379-0202
Wed-Sun 10:30am-noon, 1-4:30pm Explorer Bus to Parnell Village
Admission charged.
This house was built for the Rev. Vicesimus Lush and named for Ewelme Village in
England. The roomy kauri cottage is authentically preserved down to its 19th
century wallpaper.
Highwic
40 Gillies Ave., Epsom
09/524-5729
Fax 09/524-5575.
Wed-Sun 10:30am-noon, 1-4pm
Admission charged.
Highwic is one of New Zealand's finest Gothic Revival houses. Built in 1862 from
an American pattern book, its distinctive architecture and large gardens offer a
glimpse into the lives of a large, wealthy Victorian family.
Kelly Tarlton's Antarctic Encounter & Underwater World
23 Tamaki Dr., Orakei Wharf
09/528-0603 Fax 09/528-5175.
Daily summer (Nov 1-Mar 31 9am-9pm; winter (Apr 1-Oct 31 9am-6pm. Christmas Day
10am-5pm.
Take Mission Bay city bus, Explorer Bus, or Fuller's Harbour Explorer.
Free parking.
Admission charged. free for children under 4. Special rates for families and
seniors
The creation of New Zealand's most celebrated undersea explorer and treasure
hunter, this harbor side marine park offers a unique view of the sea. A
submerged transparent tunnel, 120 yards long, makes a circuit past moray eels,
lobsters, sharks, and stingrays. In Antarctic Encounter, you enter a replica of
explorer Robert Falcon Scott's 1911 Antarctic hut at McMurdo Sound, then circle
around a deep-freeze environment aboard a heated Sno-Cat (snowmobile) that winds
through a penguin colony and an aquarium exhibiting marine life of the polar
sea. You emerge at Scott Base 2000 for a glimpse of this century's anticipated
Antarctic research and exploration.
Museum of Transport Technology and Social History
825 Great North Rd., Western Springs
09/846-0199
Fax 09/846-4242.
Daily 10am-5pm Closed Christmas Day
Bus 045 from Customs St. E.; Explorer Bus
Admission charged.
MOTAT is the largest museum of transport and technology in the country, covering
40 acres between its two closely linked sites in Western Springs, just 3 miles
from the city center. You'll find trams, trains, steam engines, aircraft, and
more. The Museum houses major collections of road transport, early Auckland
historical buildings, primary industry, and medical and dental equipment
displays. Once that's explored, you can take a working tram ride (every 20 min.
from the Great North Road entrance past the zoo to the aviation displays at the
Sir Keith Park Memorial site (small charge). Displays here include interesting
military exhibits, rail memorabilia, and one of the most impressive collections
of historical aircraft in Australasia, including the only Solent Mark IV flying
boat in the world.
National Maritime Museum
Eastern Viaduct, Quay St.
09/358-3010.
Oct.-Easter, daily 9-6; Easter-Sept., daily 9-5.
Admission charged.
New Zealand's rich seafaring history is on display in a marina complex in
Auckland Harbor. Experience what it was like to travel steerage class in the
1800s or check out a replica of a shipping office from the turn of the last
century. There are detailed exhibits on early whaling and a collection of
outboard motors, yachts, ship models, and Polynesian outriggers. A scow conducts
short trips in the harbor. The museum also hosts workshops, where traditional
boat building, sail making, and rigging skills are kept alive.
The pride of the museum is the KZ1, the 133-ft racing sloop built for the
America's Cup challenge in 1988.
Parnell Rose Gardens
Gladstone and Judges Bay Roads
09/302-1252.
Free.
Daily dawn-dusk.
Take a leisurely stroll to enjoy this collection of some 5,000 rosebushes. The
main beds contain mostly modern hybrids, with new introductions being planted
regularly. The adjacent Nancy Steen Garden contains the antique varieties. The
garden also contains some incredible trees. There is a 200-year-old pohutukawa (puh-hoo-too-ka-wa)
whose weighty branches touch the ground and rise up again, and a kanuka that is
one of Auckland's oldest trees.
Rainbow's End Theme Park
Great South and Wiri Station Rds., Manukau City
Free parking
09/ 262-2044 ;09/262-2030
Fax 09/262-1958.
Take the Manukau motorway exit 15 min. south of Auckland City and drive 1,312
ft. to the end of the Rainbow
Daily 10am-5pm; during Jan, 10am-10pm closed Christmas Day All-day Super Pass
(includes unlimited rides all day); Mini Pass (includes any 3 rides):
This is Auckland's premier adventure playground, with 23 acres devoted to rides
and attractions for children. For those under 10, there's a Dream Castle with
its own mini rollercoaster, a mini carousel, and Ferris wheel. Older children
will love New Zealand's only double-loop rollercoaster, and then there is the
log flume, the pirate ship, the Enchanted Forest, and a replica of an abandoned
mine. Add go karts, dodgems, bumper boats, virtual theatre, and a special
section for the toddlers, and the whole family will be glad you came.
Rugby Hall of Fame
Eden Park on Sandringham Road
849-5555
Buses 23 and 24
Provides a comprehensive display of the game and its star players.
Sky Tower
Skycity, Victoria and Federal Sts.
09/912-6400
Daily 8:30am-late Underground parking for small fee.
Admission charged. Reservations suggested.
In the first 18 months after it opened in August 1997, Skytower attracted over a
million visitors, making it New Zealand's most popular paid attraction. About
1,076 feet, it is the tallest building in the Southern Hemisphere, affording
unforgettable views over the sprawling environs of Auckland. It is taller than
both the Eiffel Tower in Paris and Sydney's AMP Tower, and has four observation
decks, including an outdoor area, a glass lift and glass floor panels,
multilingual audio guides, and a revolving restaurant. Access to the observation
decks is via three glass-fronted lifts, which can transport 225 people every 15
minutes, and whizzes up the building in a speedy 40 seconds.
The Main Observation level features the latest technology, with live weather
feeds and touch computer screens giving geographical information.
Side Trips from Auckland
Waiheke Island is just 35 minutes from downtown Auckland by ferry and of its
permanent population of about 8,000, nearly 1,000 commute to the city each day
to work. In summer the island's population swells to over 30,000 as people come
to enjoy its winning combination of white sand beaches, lush native bush, green
farmland, top wineries and vineyards, and excellent cafes and restaurants.
Whangaparaoa Bay
A succession of picturesque bays leads to Whangaparaoa Bay (Cape Runaway, at the
very tip of the North Island's East Cape.) The beaches are deeply shelved and
littered with driftwood, and the old Anglican church, nestled under Norfolk
pines on a lone promontory, should not be missed. Cape Runaway can only be
reached by foot, and it's advisable to seek permission before going on private
land.
Great Barrier Island
This island at the mouth of the Hauraki Gulf has acres of long, white sandy
beaches on its eastern shore, deep-water sheltered inlets on its western shore,
and a rugged spine of steep ridges running down the centre. The 80,000 hectare
reserve has a number of walking tracks that combine old logging trails and
tramways. Natural hot springs, towering kauri forests and a peaceful setting
make it a perfect escape. Flights and ferries operate from Auckland, 88km south.
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