- Porirua
Porirua is a city in the
Wellington Region ofNew Zealand , 20 km north of the city of Wellington. A large proportion of the population commutes to Wellington, so it may be considered a satellite city. It almost completely surroundsPorirua Harbour at the southern end of theKapiti Coast . The harbour is notable for its world-class estuarine values. The population at the 2006 census was 48,546 inhabitants [ [http://www.stats.govt.nz/NR/rdonlyres/DEBCE5E6-3353-4158-9E4C-3A67D4A12F4A/0/PoriruaCity.xls Statistics New Zealand] ] .History
The name "Porirua" is of
Māori origin. It is possibly a variant of "Pari-rua" ("two tides"), a reference to the two arms of the Porirua Harbour. The name was given in the 19th century to a land registration district that stretched fromKaiwharawhara (or "Kaiwarra") on the north-west shore ofWellington Harbour northwards to and around Porirua Harbour. The road climbing the hill from Kaiwharawhara towards Ngaio andKhandallah is still called "Old Porirua Road".In the 19th century a small European settlement grew up, partly because of the need for a ferry across the harbour. At the time a small
Māori settlement already existed.The
Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company opened a railway line to Porirua in 1885, linking the city with Wellington. The railway eventually reached Longburn in 1886, south of Palmerston North, to connect with the Government's lines to the Wairarapa, Taranaki and Napier. With the acquisition of the company by the government in 1908, the line to Porirua formed part of the North Island Main Trunk railway. Services to Porirua were electrified following the construction of theTawa Flat deviation in the 1940s.In the 1880s and 1890s the Porirua Lunatic Asylum was established on the hill south-west of the village. Following the Mental Defectives Act of 1911 the Asylum became Porirua Mental Hospital.
Originally planned in the late 1940s to become a satellite city of Wellington with
state housing , Porirua has grown to a city population approaching 55,000. Major territorial additions to the city were made in 1973 and 1988 as part of the reduction and eventual abolition of Hutt County.In 1976 the first
McDonald's restaurant in New Zealand opened in the City Centre, it is still operating on the same site today. [cite web|url=http://www.energyintellect.com/html/case_mcdonalds.html|title=Case Study - McDonalds|accessdate=2007-11-26] [cite web|url=http://www.franchise.co.nz/article/view/50|title=McDonald's - The Myth & The Magic|author=Simon Lord|accessdate=2007-11-26]uburbs and features
Suburbs include:
* Aotea
* Ascot Park
* Camborne
* Cannons Creek
* Elsdon (named after writerElsdon Best )
*Karehana Bay
* Mana
*Onepoto
*Papakowhai
*Paremata
*Pauatahanui
*Plimmerton
*Porirua East
*Pukerua Bay (where film-makerPeter Jackson grew up)
*Ranui Heights
*Takapuwahia (aNgāti Toa settlement)
*Titahi Bay (where pro golferMichael Campbell grew up)
*Waitangirua
* WhitbyRural localities include
Judgeford andHorokiri .Porirua is largely formed around the arms of the
Porirua Harbour and the coastline facing out to cook strait and the northernmost parts of theSouth Island and most of the populated areas of Porirua are coastal. The suburbs of Camborne, Karehana Bay, Mana, Onepoto, Paremata, Pauatahanui, Plimmerton, Pukerua Bay, Takapuwahia, Titahi Bay and Whitby all have direct access to coastal parks and recreation reserves. Several suburbs without direct coastal access, including Aotea, Ascot Park, Elsdon, Papakowhai and Ranui Heights, still have substantial outlook over the harbour.Watersports, fishing and other boating activities are popular in the area which is well served by a large
marina in Mana along withSea Scouts , yachting, power-boating andwater-skiing clubs. The harbour entrance from Plimmerton or Mana is popular with experienced windsurfers and kitesurfers [cite web
url=http://www.wwa.org.nz/Spot%20Guide/Plimmerton.htm
title=Plimmerton, at Wellington Windsurfing Association
accessdate=2008-05-10 ] while beginners find the shallow enclosed waters of the Pauatahanui arm of the harbour a forgiving environment in which to develop their skills. [cite web
url=http://www.gw.govt.nz/story4012.cfm
title=Porirua Harbour at Greater Wellington Regional Council website
accessdate=2008-05-10 ]Aotea Lagoon is a popular recreational area on the eastern shore of Porirua Harbour.Porirua is the home of the
Royal New Zealand Police College , where all police recruits receive some 19 weeks' training.Porirua is home to Northern United RFC and Paremata-Plimmerton RFC, two clubs playing in the
Wellington Rugby Football Union club rugby competition.Transport links
State Highway 1 passes north-south through the middle of the city, linking Porirua south to
Wellington and to the north. Porirua is the northern terminus of the Johnsonville-Poriruamotorway (opened progressively from 1950), which forms part of State Highway 1. State Highway 58 links Porirua viaHaywards with theHutt Valley to the east.The North Island Main Trunk railway line passes through Porirua, mostly alongside State Highway 1. Suburban passenger trains run to Wellington and
Paraparaumu and the Overlander long-distance train between Auckland and Wellington calls southbound but not northbound.The nearest airports are Wellington Airport to the south (the closest), and
Paraparaumu Airport to the north.City administrative area
The area is administered by Porirua City Council and Greater Wellington Regional Council. The name Porirua was first applied to a local government unit in 1961 when Makara County, to the west of
Wellington , was abolished, the mostly rural western part becoming the Makara Ward ofHutt County and the rapidly growing eastern urban portion becoming the Borough of Porirua. Four years later the population was officially estimated at over the 20,000 threshold then necessary for Porirua to be declared a city.On
1 April 1973 large areas to the north-east (and a few elsewhere) and Mana Island were transferred to the city from Hutt County by popular vote. In 1988 a further addition was theHorokiri riding of the about-to-be-abolished county, containing most of the new Whitby suburb and substantial rural areas.The city and its council have remained unchanged into the 21st century despite proposals to change the name to "Mana" and several small movements for amalgamation with Wellington.
Councillors and other notable residents
Notable councillors of Porirua have included
Whitford Brown (first Mayor);Ken Douglas (trade unionist);Ken Gray (former All Black);Gary McCormick (media personality); Helen Smith (the first member of theValues Party to be elected to local government); andTutu Wineera (akaumatua of theNgāti Toa iwi ).Other prominent residents have included film maker
Peter Jackson , All BlackRodney So'oialo , former All BlackJerry Collins , musician Matt Chicoine (aka Recloose) [ [http://www.myspace.com/mattchicoine MySpace.com - Recloose - Detroit - Tropical / Techno / Funk - www.myspace.com/mattchicoine ] ] , poet Alistair Campbell, golferMichael Campbell , popstar Rob Arnold and singer/songwriterRamon Te Wake .ister Cities
* Blacktown, Australia
*Yangzhou , China
*Whitby , England
*Nishio, Aichi , Japan [cite web|title=Wellington Region Sister Cities|url=http://www.sistercities.org.nz/Editable/maps020929/wellington.shtml|accessdate=2007-11-05]References
External links
* [http://www.poriruacity.com/ Porirua City New Zealand Online]
* [http://www.pcc.govt.nz/ Porirua City Council]
* [http://www.converge.org.nz/fphm/history.html A history of Porirua Hospital]
* [http://www2.stats.govt.nz/domino/external/web/commprofiles.nsf/htmldocs/Porirua+Zone+Urban+Area+Community+Profile Porirua Urban Area Community Profile] from Statistics NZ
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