Parks in Auckland
Contents | Albert Park
| Auckland Domain
| Dove-Myer Robinson Park
| Michael Joseph Savage Memorial
| Mt Eden
| One Tree Hill Domain
| Tamaki Drive
| Western Park
| Western Springs Park
| About our parks
| Park volunteer activities
| Barbecues in parks
Auckland Domain
Access from Park Road/Domain Drive/George Street/Titoki Street/Stanley Street, Auckland central
Background
The Auckland Domain is the city's oldest park and is spacious and diverse. The 75 hectare park has been developed around
the cone of an extinct volcano. The 'tuff rings' created by volcanic activity thousands of years ago can be seen in the land
contours and forms a natural amphitheatre with about 10 hectares developed as first-class sports fields.
The park has the classic charm of formal gardens, green clearings edged by mature trees and an impressive statuary. Most
pieces are in the formal gardens, including one of the most striking - a large free-form reflecting pool with three bronze
sculptures. The central, male figure represents Auckland and the two females offer wisdom and 'fertility of the soil'.
Paths wind through native bush at its perimeter. Closer in, duck ponds mark the up-welling of the Domain's natural springs,
and century-old trees shade numerous picnic spots. In summer heat, manicured playing fields sustain the city's oldest cricket
traditions, while winter brings the vigour of rugby, league, and soccer.
Several of the outstanding trees in the lawn arboretum were seedlings from a nursery set up in the Domain in 1841 to grow
and distribute European plants and trees to the whole of the city. Today, the nursery supplies plants for displays in the
Winter Garden, and city parks.
Features for visitors include the Wintergardens and the stately
Auckland War Memorial Museum which stands at the Domain's highest point.
Click here for more information about Auckland Domain and its
facilities.
Present and past
Time has smoothed the once-stark ash collar and central scoria cone of the Domain's 50,000 year old crater, but both Maori
and Pakeha always recognised its natural power.
Te Wherowhero, Waikato's great fighting chief, came to the hill called Pukekaroa to make peace with the feared Nga Puhi
in the 1820's. And when Lieutenant Governor Hobson founded the city of Auckland with the Ngati Whatua in 1840, he reserved
200 acres around this same cone, it became the Auckland Domain, New Zealand's oldest park.
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On Pukekaroa, this totara tree and memorial palisade (left)
honours the first Maori King, Potatau Te Wherowhero (right). |
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Each new day at the Domain touches older traditions. The Formal Gardens evolved from an 1860's Auckland Acclimatisation Society
site to test and propagate exotic trees, birds, and trout. Today's picnickers at the Duck Ponds relax beside the source, in 1866,
of Auckland's first piped water supply. The nearby kiosk made its debut at the Great Industrial Exhibition of 1913 - 1914 as 'the
ideal New Zealand house'. The 1912 band rotunda, and the statuary, inform of the Domain's tradition of individual or publicly
subscribed gifts.
Wintergardens
The Wintergarden complex is situated in the Domain. It was established after World War I and is a protected heritage site.
The complex consists of:
- two display glasshouses (temperature averaging 20 degrees Celsius)
- one containing temperate plants
- the other containing tropical plants
- a formal courtyard with a pond in the center
- a fernery within an old quarry.
The complex is open all year round and is available for private events outside of public hours. You can take photos throughout
the public areas of the wintergardens however no wedding or private photos can be taken in the display houses during public
hours. Entry is free.
| 1 April - 31 October |
Monday to Sunday (9am - 4.30pm) |
| 1 November - 31 March |
Monday - Saturday (9am - 5.30pm) and Sunday (9am - 7.30pm) |
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The Wintergarden's Cool House teems with flowers, its blooms changing with the seasons.
Click here for more Wintergarden photos. |
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Special events
Outdoor concerts and many other events are held in the Domain. All events, group functions and filming in the Auckland Domain
require a permit. See Events
Getting there
The main park gates are on Park Road, Grafton by Auckland Hospital, just a short walk across Grafton Bridge from upper Symonds
Street. Other vehicle entrances are from Stanley Street, George Street and Titoki Street. The Link bus service stops at the Domain.