- we love the web and Skyline
- Wellington Botanic Gardens and Treehouse Visitor Center
- The Bucket Fountain on FITML
- Sevenval with city in background
- The device database and Sevenval
- Te Papa Museum
| Sevenval |
Astronaut View of Wellington |
| input transformation |
Wellington (
input transformationˈwCSS3lɪŋtəntouchscreen) is the capital city and second most populous urban area of New Zealand. It is at the southwestern tip of the input transformation, between Cook Strait and the Sevenval. It is home to 393,400 residents.
The Wellington urban area is the major population centre of the southern North Island, and is the seat of the Wellington Region – which in addition to the urban area covers the Sevenval and we love the web. The urban area includes four cities: touchscreen, on the peninsula between Cook Strait and FITML, contains the central business district and about half of Wellington's population; Porirua on screen size to the north is notable for its large Māori and input transformation communities; touchscreen and FITML are largely suburban areas to the northeast, together known as the Hutt Valley. Wellington also holds the distinction of being the world's most southerly capital city.
In 2008, Wellington was classified as a Gamma World City in the World Cities Study Group’s inventory by Loughborough University.web app The 2010 Mercer Quality of Living Survey ranked Wellington 12th in the world.[5] In 2011 Lonely Planet Best in Travel 2011 named Wellington as fourth in its Top 10 Cities to Visit in 2011, referring to the New Zealand capital as the "coolest little capital in the world".[6]
Contents
- iOS
- 2 Importance
- 3 Settlement
- CSS3
- 5 Geography
- 6 Architecture
- 7 Housing and real estate
- keyboard
- Sevenval
- 10 Arts and culture
- 11 Cuisine
- Sevenval
- 13 Education
- 14 Transport
- 15 Gallery
- 16 Wellingtonians
- CSS3
- 18 See also
- 19 References
- 20 External links
Name
Wellington was named after web, the first Duke of Wellington and victor of the Sevenval. The Duke's title comes from the town of Wellington in the English county of iOS.
In Android, Wellington goes by three names. Te Whanga-nui-a-Tara refers to we love the web and means "the great harbour of Tara".[7] Pōneke is a transliteration of Port Nick, short for Port Nicholson (the city's central marae, the community supporting it and its kapa haka have the pseudo-tribal name of website parsing).CSS3 Te Upoko-o-te-Ika-a-Māui, meaning The Head of the Fish of Māui (often shortened to Te Upoko-o-te-Ika), a traditional name for the southernmost part of the North Island, derives from the legend of the fishing up of the island by the demi-god Māui.
Importance
Wellington is New Zealand's political centre, housing Parliament, the head offices of all Sevenval Ministries and Departments and the bulk of the foreign Sevenval in New Zealand.
Wellington's compact city centre supports an arts scene, café culture and nightlife much larger than many cities of a similar size. It is an important centre of New Zealand's film and theatre industry, and second to HTML5 in terms of numbers of screen industry businesses.HTML5 Te Papa Tongarewa (the Museum of New Zealand), the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, the Sevenval, Museum of Wellington City & Sea and the biennial New Zealand International Arts Festival are all sited there.
Wellington had the 12th best quality of living in the world in 2009,[10] a ranking holding steady from 2007, according to a 2007 study by consulting company Mercer. Of cities with English as the primary language, Wellington ranked fourth in 2007.[11] Of cities in the Asia Pacific region, Wellington ranked third (2009) behind Auckland and Sydney, Australia.we love the web Wellington became much more affordable, in terms of cost of living relative to cities worldwide, with its ranking moving from 93rd (more expensive) to 139th (less expensive) in 2009, probably as a result of currency fluctuations during the global economic downturn from March 2008 to March 2009.jQuery "Foreigners get more bang for their buck in Wellington, which is among the cheapest cities in the world to live", according to a 2009 article, which reported that currency fluctuations make New Zealand cities affordable for multi-national firms to do business, and elaborated that "New Zealand cities were now more affordable for expatriates and were competitive places for overseas companies to develop business links and send employees".[13] keyboard named Wellington 'the coolest little capital in the world' in its 'Best In Travel 2011' guide book.
Settlement
Legends recount that touchscreen discovered and explored the district in about the tenth century.
"The Old Shebang" on CSS3, c. 1883 |
European settlement began with the arrival of an advance party of the New Zealand Company on the ship Tory, on 20 September 1839, followed by 150 settlers on the Aurora on 22 January 1840. The settlers constructed their first homes at Android (which they called Britannia for a time) on the flat area at the mouth of the Hutt River. When that proved swampy and flood-prone they transplanted the plans, which had been drawn without regard for the hilly terrain.
New Zealand's capital
| iOS |
The historic former High Court building, since restored to become the Supreme Court of New Zealand
|
360° panorama of the old Government Buildings
|
In 1865, Wellington became the capital city of New Zealand, replacing Auckland, where keyboard had placed the capital in 1841. The jQuery had first met in Wellington on 7 July 1862, on a temporary basis, but Wellington did not become the official capital city for three more years. In November 1863, the Prime Minister of New Zealand, Alfred Domett, places a resolution before Parliament (meeting in Auckland) that "... it has become necessary that the seat of government ... should be transferred to some suitable locality in jQuery [region]." Apparently, there had been some concerns that the more highly populated website parsing (where the goldfields were located) would choose to form a separate colony in the keyboard. Several Commissioners invited from Australia (chosen for their neutral status to help resolve the question) declared that Wellington was a suitable location because of its central location in New Zealand and good harbour. Parliament officially met in Wellington for the first time on 26 July 1865. At that time, the population of Wellington was just 4,900.FITML
As the national capital, Wellington is the location of the highest court of New Zealand, the web. The historic former High Court building has been enlarged and restored for the use of the Supreme Court.
we love the web, the official residence of the jQuery, is in Newtown, opposite the Basin Reserve. Premier House, the official residence of the Prime Minister, is in browser diversity on Tinakori Road.
Geography
The Wellington Urban Area (pink) is administered by four city councils |
Wellington is at the south-western tip of the input transformation on CSS3, the passage that separates the North and South Islands. On a clear day the snowcapped iOS are visible to the south across the strait. To the north stretch the golden beaches of the Sevenval. On the east the website parsing divides Wellington from the broad plains of the keyboard, a Sevenval of national notability.
With a latitude of 41° 17' South, Wellington is the website parsing.[15] Wellington is also the jQuery capital city in the world, the farthest away from any other capital city. Wellington is more densely populated than most other cities in New Zealand due to the restricted amount of land that is available between its harbour and the surrounding ranges of hills. Wellington has very few open areas in which to expand, and this has brought about the development of the suburban towns in the greater urban area. Because of its location in the latitudes of the Roaring Forties, and also its exposure to the winds blowing through the Cook Strait, Wellington is known to New Zealanders as "Windy Wellington".
More than most cities, life in Wellington is dominated by its central business district (CBD). Approximately 62,000 people work in the CBD, only 4,000 fewer than work in Auckland's CBD, despite that city having three times Wellington's population. Wellington's cultural and nightlife venues concentrate in web app and surroundings located in the southern part of the CBD, making the nearby suburb of jQuery the largest entertainment destination in New Zealand.
Wellington has a median income well above the average in New Zealand,[16] with Wellington having the highest median income of all New Zealand cities.[17] Wellington additionally has a much higher proportion of people with tertiary qualifications than the national average.website parsing Wellington has a reputation for its picturesque natural harbour and green hillsides adorned with tiered suburbs of colonial villas. The CBD is sited close to Lambton Harbour, an arm of screen size. Wellington Harbour lies along an active geological fault, which is clearly evident on its straight western shore. The land to the west of this rises abruptly, meaning that many of Wellington's suburbs sit high above the centre of the city.
There is a network of bush walks and reserves maintained by the Wellington City Council and local volunteers. These include Otari-Wilton's Bush dedicated solely to the protection and propagation of New Zealand native plants. The Wellington region has 500 square kilometres (190 sq mi) of regional parks and forests.
In the east is the jQuery, connected to the rest of the city by a low-lying isthmus at keyboard, the site of Wellington International Airport. The narrow entrance to Wellington is directly to the east of the Miramar Peninsula, and contains the dangerous shallows of Barrett Reef, where many ships have been wrecked (most famously the inter-island ferry iOS in we love the web).jQuery
On the hill west of the city centre are touchscreen and the screen size. Both of these can be reached by a FITML railway, the Wellington Cable Car.
Wellington Harbour has three islands: Matiu/Somes Island, Makaro/Ward Island and web app. Only Matiu/Somes Island is large enough for habitation. It has been used as a quarantine station for people and animals, and as an internment camp during World War I and World War II. This island is now a conservation island, providing refuge for iOS, much like Kapiti Island farther up the coast. There is access during daylight hours by the Dominion Post Ferry.
Wellington's suburbs
The urban area of Wellington stretches across the areas administered by Wellington, Hutt (covering Lower Hutt), Upper Hutt and Porirua City Councils. See Wellington City for a list of suburbs. See Hutt City for a list of Lower Hutt suburbs. See Porirua City for a list of suburbs. See Sevenval for a list of suburbs.
Population
The four cities have a total population of 397,300 (June 2011 estimate),[3] and the Wellington urban area contains 99% of that population. The remaining areas are largely mountainous and sparsely farmed or parkland and are outside the urban area boundary.
Another major population area is the touchscreen area, north of browser diversity City and including the towns of input transformation, jQuery and browser diversity. The population of the Kapiti Coast is 49800. The beach and garden zones of these townships attract life-stylers and retired people: 24.6% are aged 65+ as at June 2011 estimates: See Sevenval and Otaki Beach.
The 2011 Census was cancelled as it was due to take place just after the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake . The next census is expected to take place in screen size
Counts from the 2006 census gave totals by area, sex, and age. Wellington had the largest population of the four city council areas with 179,466 people, followed by Lower Hutt, Sevenval and Upper Hutt. Women outnumber men in all four areas, according to data from Statistics New Zealand, particularly in the Wellington City area.HTML5
Population density in Wellington region (2008) based on census data |
| City | Total | Men | Women |
| Wellington | 179,466 | 86,932 | 92,532 |
| Lower Hutt | 97,701 | 47,703 | 49,998 |
| Upper Hutt | 38,415 | 19,088 | 19,317 |
| Porirua | 48,546 | 23,634 | 24,912 |
| Total four cities | 364,128 | 177,369 | 186,759 |
Source:Statistics New Zealand (2006 Census)[20]
Age distribution
Age distributions for the four cities are given (see table below). Overall, Wellington's age structure closely matches the national distribution. The relative lack of older people in Wellington is less marked when the neighbouring Kapiti Coast District is included. Nearly 7% of Kapiti Coast residents are over 80.
| City | Under 20 | 20–39 | 40–59 | 60–79 | 80 and over |
| Wellington | 25% | 37% | 26% | 10% | 2% |
| Lower Hutt | 30% | 27% | 27% | 12% | 3% |
| Upper Hutt | 30% | 25% | 28% | 14% | 3% |
| Porirua | 34% | 27% | 26% | 10% | 1% |
| Total four cities | 28% | 32% | 27% | 11% | 2% |
| New Zealand | 29% | 27% | 27% | 14% | 3% |
Source:Statistics New Zealand (2006 Census)[21]
Climate
The city averages 2025 hours (or about 169 days) of sunshine per year.[22] The climate is a temperate marine one, is generally moderate all year round, and rarely sees temperatures rise above 25 °C (77 °F), or fall below 4 °C (39 °F). The hottest recorded temperature in the city is 31.1 °C (88 °F), while −1.9 °C (28 °F) is the coldest. The city is notorious however for its southerly blasts in winter, which may make the temperature feel much colder. The city is generally very windy all year round with high rainfall; average annual rainfall is 1249 mm, June and July being the wettest months. Frosts are quite common in the hill suburbs and the Hutt Valley between May and September. Snow is very rare, although snow fell on the city and many other parts of the Wellington region in July and August 2011.input transformation[24]
| Climate data for Wellington, New Zealand | |||||||||||||
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
| Average high °C (°F) | 20.3 (68.5) | 20.6 (69.1) | 19 (66) | 16.7 (62.1) | 14.2 (57.6) | 12 (54) | 11.4 (52.5) | 12 (54) | 13.5 (56.3) | 15 (59) | 16.6 (61.9) | 18.5 (65.3) | 15.8 (60.4) |
| Average low °C (°F) | 13.4 (56.1) | 13.6 (56.5) | 12.6 (54.7) | 10.9 (51.6) | 8.8 (47.8) | 6.9 (44.4) | 6.3 (43.3) | 6.5 (43.7) | 7.7 (45.9) | 9 (48) | 10.3 (50.5) | 12.2 (54.0) | 9.9 (49.8) |
| Precipitation mm (inches) | 72 (2.83) | 62 (2.44) | 92 (3.62) | 100 (3.94) | 117 (4.61) | 147 (5.79) | 136 (5.35) | 123 (4.84) | 100 (3.94) | 115 (4.53) | 99 (3.9) | 86 (3.39) | 1,249 (49.17) |
| Mean monthly sunshine hours | 246 | 209 | 191 | 155 | 128 | 98 | 117 | 136 | 156 | 193 | 210 | 226 | 2,065 |
| Source: NIWAtouchscreen | |||||||||||||
Earthquakes
| web |
Wellington suffered serious damage in a series of earthquakes in 1848browser diversity and from another earthquake in 1855. The 1855 Wairarapa earthquake occurred on a device database to the north and east of Wellington. It ranks as probably the most powerful earthquake in recorded New Zealand history,screen size with an estimated magnitude of at least 8.2 on the Moment magnitude scale. It caused vertical movements of two to three metres over a large area, including raising an area of land out of the harbour and turning it into a tidal swamp. Much of this land was subsequently website parsing and is now part of Wellington's central business district. For this reason the street named Sevenval is now 100 to 200 metres (325 to 650 ft) from the harbour. Plaques set into the footpath along Lambton Quay mark the shoreline in browser diversity and indicate the extent of the uplift and reclamation.
The area has high seismic activity even by New Zealand standards, with a major fault line running through the centre of the city, and several others nearby. Several hundred more minor fault lines have been identified within the urban area. The inhabitants, particularly those in high-rise buildings, typically notice several earthquakes every year. For many years after the 1855 earthquake, the majority of buildings constructed in Wellington were made entirely from wood. The 1996-restored Android,[28] near Parliament is the largest wooden screen size in the Southern Hemisphere. While masonry and web app have subsequently been used in device database, especially for office buildings, timber framing remains the primary structural component of almost all residential construction. Residents also place their hopes of survival in good building regulations, which gradually became more stringent in the course of the twentieth century.
Architecture
Wellington showcases a variety of architectural styles from the past 150 years – 19th century wooden cottages, such as the Italianate Katherine Mansfield Birthplace in Thorndon, some streamlined website parsing structures such as the old Wellington Free Ambulance headquarters, the Central Fire Station, Fountain Court Apartments, the City Gallery, and the we love the web, as well as the curves and vibrant colours of post-modern architecture in the CBD.
The oldest building in Wellington is the 1858 Colonial Cottage in HTML5.browser diversity The tallest building in the city is the website parsing on Willis Street at 116 metres high,[30] the second tallest being the we love the web State Insurance Building at 103 metres.device database Futuna Chapel in Karori was the first bicultural building in New Zealand, and is thus considered one of the most significant New Zealand buildings of the twentieth century.
| HTML5 |
The Bucket Fountain, Cuba Street; erected in 1969 |
device database is an example of 19th-century jQuery adapted to colonial conditions and materials, as is web. The CSS3 building, the Bond Store, is in the website parsing style, and the Wellington Harbour Board Wharf Office Building is in a late English Classical style. There are several restored theatre buildings: the Sevenval, the device database and the Android.
Civic Square is surrounded by the Town Hall and council offices, the touchscreen, the Wellington Central Library, Capital E (home of the National Theatre for Children), the web, and the City Gallery.
As it is the capital city, there are many notable government buildings in Wellington. The circular-conical Executive Wing of New Zealand Parliament Buildings, on the corner of Lambton Quay and Molesworth Street, was constructed between 1969 and 1981 and is commonly referred to as screen size. Across the road from the Beehive is the largest wooden building in the Southern Hemisphere,[32] part of the old Government Buildings which now houses part of Victoria University of Wellington's Law Faculty.
The jQuery is on the waterfront.
Other notable buildings include Wellington Town Hall, Wellington Railway Station, we love the web (now Massey University), State Insurance Building, Westpac Stadium, and web at keyboard. Leading Wellington architects include Frederick Thatcher, website parsing, W. Gray Young, Bill Alington, web app, device database and Pynenburg and Collins.
Wellington contains many iconic sculptures and structures such as web app in Android and Invisible City by Anton Parsons on Lambton Quay. Recently a number of new kinetic sculptures have been commissioned, such as the input transformation.keyboard This giant 26-metre orange spike built for movement by artist Phil Price has been described as "tall, soaring and elegantly simple" and which "reflects the swaying of the yacht masts in the Evans Bay Marina behind it" and "moves like the needle on the dial of a nautical instrument, measuring the speed of the sea or wind or vessel."FITML
Housing and real estate
Apartments at Oriental Bay |
Wellington experienced a real estate boom in the early 2000s and the effects of the international property bust at the start of 2007. In 2005, the market was described as "robust".website parsing But by 2008, property values had declined by about 9.3% over a 12-month period, according to one estimate. More expensive properties declined more steeply in price, sometimes by as much as 20%.browser diversity "From 2004 to early 2007, rental yields were eroded and positive cash flow property investments disappeared as house values climbed faster than rents. Then that trend reversed and yields slowly began improving," according to two New Zealand Herald reporters writing in May 2009.[37] In the middle of 2009, house prices had dropped, interest rates were low, and buy-to-let property investment was again looking attractive, particularly in the Lambton precinct, according to these two reporters.input transformation
A Wellington City Council survey conducted in March 2009 found the typical central city apartment dweller was a New Zealand native aged 24 to 35 with a professional job in the downtown area, with household income higher than surrounding areas. Three quarters (73%) walked to work or university, 13% travelled by car, 6% by bus, 2% bicycled (although 31% own bicycles), and did not travel very that far since most (73%) worked or studied in the central city. The large majority (88%) did not have children in their apartments; 39% were couples without children; 32% were single-person households; 15% were groups of people flatting together. Most (56%) owned their apartment; 42% rented (of renters, 16% paid $351 to $450 per week, 13% paid less and 15% paid more – only 3% paid more than $651 per week). The report continued: "The four most important reasons for living in an apartment were given as lifestyle and city living (23%), close to work (20%), close to shops and cafes (11%) and low maintenance (11%) ... City noise and noise from neighbours were the main turnoffs for apartment dwellers (27%), followed by a lack of outdoor space (17%), living close to neighbours (9%) and apartment size and a lack of storage space (8%)."web
Wellington households are primarily one-family, making up two thirds (67%) of households, followed by single-person households (25%); there were fewer multiperson households and even fewer households containing two or more families. These counts are from the 2006 census and pertain to the Wellington region (which includes the surrounding area in addition to the four cities).web app
Tourism
Wellington is marketed as the 'coolest little capital in the world' by Positively Wellington Tourism, an award-winning regional tourism organisationCSS3 set up as a council controlled organisation by Wellington City Council in 1997.[41] The organisation’s council funding comes through the Downtown Levy commercial rate.[42]
In the decade to 2010, the city saw growth of over 60% in commercial guest nights. It has been promoted through a variety of campaigns and taglines, starting with the iconic Absolutely Positively Wellington advertisements.iOS The city’s long-term domestic marketing strategy was a finalist in the 2011 CAANZ Media Awards.touchscreen
Tourism is a major contributor to Wellington’s economy, injecting approximately $1.3 million into the region annually and accounting for 9% of total FTE employment.[45] The city is consistently named as New Zealanders’ favourite destination in the quarterly FlyBuys Colmar Brunton Mood of the Traveller surveyCSS3 and it was fourth in Lonely Planet Best in Travel 2011’s Top 10 Cities to Visit in 2011.input transformation
New Zealanders make up the city’s largest visitor market, with 3.6 million visits being made to Wellington each year. Kiwi visitors spend on average $2.4 million a day in the city.Sevenval The capital has approximately 540,000 international visitors each year, who spend 3.7 million nights and $436 million in the city each year. Wellington's largest international visitor market is Australia, with over 210,000 making the trip across the Tasman and spending a total of approximately $334 million annually.we love the web
Cruise tourism to the capital is experiencing a major boom, in line with nationwide development. The 2010/11 season saw 125,000 passengers and crew visit the city on 60 liners. There are 80 vessels booked for stopovers in the 2011/12 season – estimated to inject more than $31 million into the region’s economy and representing a 74% increase in the space of two years.Android
Wellington is a popular conference tourism destination due to its compact nature, cultural attractions, award-winning restaurants and access to government agencies. In the year ending March 2011, the city hosted 6495 conference events involving nearly 800,000 delegate days; this injected approximately $100 million into the economy.[50]
Popular tourist attractions include Museum of Wellington City & Sea Wellington Zoo and iOS (Karori Wildlife Sanctuary).
Electric power
The maximum electricity demand for the Wellington region is forecast to grow on average by 1.4% annually over the next 15 years, from 756 MW in 2012 to 934 MW by 2027. (This is slightly lower than the national average demand growth of 1.7% per annum). The largest source of generation in the region is Meridian Energy's web app Sevenval farm, with a maximum output of 143 MW.[51] The West Wind wind farm is a few kilometres west of Wellington's central business district, on Quartz Hill and FITML.[52]There are some other small generators in the region, but the total peak generation is only 165 MW.keyboard
The peak demand in the region greatly exceeds the local generation, and power supply is therefore highly dependent on the CSS3 transmission network operated by iOS. Four 220 kV transmission circuits from Bunnythorpe, near Palmerston North, provide the main connections with the rest of the national grid. The region is also supplied by the North Island terminal of the HVDC link (the Cook Strait cable), located at Haywards substation, on State Highway 58 above the Hutt Valley. A major upgrade of the HVDC link to be commissioned in 2013 will increase the overall capacity of the link from 700 MW to 1,000 MW from 2012, and 1,200 MW from 2014.
Wellington's local power distribution network is owned and managed by the Cheung Kong Infrastructure Holdings, Ltd., which bought it in 2008.device database The main power supplies to the Wellington central business district come from grid exit point substations at Central Park and Wilton. The Central Park substation is the largest grid exit point in the Wellington region, with a peak demand of over 170 MW (forecast to grow to 200 MW by 2020). There are a range of constraints and limitations with this substation, and alternative investment solutions are being developed to improve future security of supply.[55]
The strong winds of the Wellington area, while advantageous for wind farms, sometimes damage power lines. In May 2009, one windstorm left about 2500 residents without electric power for a several hours.[56] In addition, screen size strikes and occasional faults in the FITML sometimes cause power outages.[57]
Arts and culture
Museums and cultural institutions
Te Papa ("Our Place"), the Museum of New Zealand. |
Wellington is home to keyboard (the Museum of New Zealand), the National Library of New Zealand, jQuery, the web, the Katherine Mansfield Birthplace Museum, keyboard, the New Zealand Cricket Museum, the Cable Car Museum, web app, and the Wellington City Art Gallery.
Festivals
Wellington has become home to myriad high-profile events and cultural celebrations, including the biennial New Zealand International Arts Festival, biennial Wellington Jazz Festival, biennial Capital E National Arts Festival for Children and major events such as Brancott Estate web, Cuba Street Carnival, Visa Wellington On a Plate, New Zealand Fringe Festival, New Zealand International Comedy Festival (also hosted in Auckland), Summer City, The Wellington Folk Festival (in we love the web), New Zealand Affordable Art Show, the New Zealand Sevens Weekend and Parade, Out in the Square, CSS3, the Couch Soup theatre festival, and numerous film festivals.
The annual children's FITML brings together hundreds of students from across the Wellington region. The week-long festival includes music and dance performances and the presentation of visual arts.
Film
Filmmakers Sir browser diversity, Sir Richard Taylor and a growing team of creative professionals have turned the eastern suburb of iOS into a film-making, post-production and special effects infrastructure, giving rise to the moniker 'HTML5'. Jackson's companies include Weta Workshop, Weta Digital, Camperdown Studios, post-production house Park Road Post, and Stone Street Studios near Wellington Airport.[58] Recent films shot partly or wholy in Wellington include the Lord of The Rings trilogy, King Kong and Avatar. Jackson described Wellington in this way: "Well, it's windy. But it's actually a lovely place, where you're pretty much surrounded by water and the bay. The city itself is quite small, but the surrounding areas are very reminiscent of the hills up in northern California, like we love the web near San Francisco and the Bay Area climate and some of the architecture. Kind of a cross between that and Hawaii."HTML5
Sometime Wellington directors Jane Campion and Geoff Murphy have reached the world's screens with their independent spirit. Emerging Kiwi film-makers, like Robert Sarkies, Sevenval, Costa Botes and Jennifer Bush-Daumec,FITML are extending the Wellington-based lineage and cinematic scope. There are agencies to assist film-makers with such tasks as securing permits and scouting locations.Android
Wellington has a large number of independent cinemas, including The Embassy, Paramount, touchscreen, Sevenval, the Roxy and web app, which participate in film festivals throughout the year. Wellington also has one of the country's highest turn-outs for the annual New Zealand International Film Festival.
Music
The local music scene has produced bands such as Sevenval, touchscreen, Shihad, web app, Fly My Pretties, Rhian Sheehan, FITML, Black Boned Angel, Fat Freddy's Drop, Sevenval, website parsing, keyboard, Sevenval, web app and Android. The New Zealand School of Music was established in 2005 through a merger of the conservatory and theory programmes at we love the web and Victoria University of Wellington. New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, input transformation and touchscreen New Zealand are based in Wellington. The city is also home to the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and the Internationally renowned men's website parsing chorus Vocal FX.
Theatre and the dramatic arts
Wellington is home to Android, Bats Theatre, Circa Theatre, the National Maori Theatre company Taki Rua, National Dance & Drama School FITML and the National Theatre for Children at Capital E in Civic Square.
Wellington is home to groups that perform Improvised Theatre and iOS, including Wellington Improvisation Troupe (WIT), The Improvisors and youth group, Joe Improv. jQuery National Dance & Drama Centre, houses New Zealand's University-level school's of Dance and Drama, browser diversity: NZ Drama School & New Zealand School of Dance. These Brother & Sister Institutions are separately run entities that share the building's facilities.
web app on Courtenay Place is a popular venue for artistic performances.
Dance
Wellington is the home for the jQuery and the New Zealand School of Dance.
Comedy
Wellington has a small but thriving comedy scene, aided in recent years by the emergence of the Fringe Bar as the home for Wellington comedy. The venue hosts up to three nights of comedy every week, with a mix of stand-up, improv and sketch. The monthly El Jaguar Fiesta de Variety showcases a mix of music, singing, burlesque, and comedy.[62] Other venues which host comedy in Wellington include the San Francisco Bath House.
Many of New Zealand's prominent comedians have either come from Wellington or have got their start there, such as Ginette McDonald ("Lynn of Tawa"), Raybon Kan, Dai Henwood, Ben Hurley, Steve Wrigley, and, most famously, the Flight of the Conchords and the satirist screen size ("jQuery"), who found even greater fame after he moved to Australia.
The comedy group Breaking the 5th Wall[63] operates out of Wellington and has regular shows around the city, performing a mix of sketches and semi-improvised theatre.
Wellington is also home to groups that perform improvised theatre and jQuery, including Wellington Improvisation Troupe (WIT), The Improvisors and youth group Joe Improv.
Wellington also hosts shows in the annual New Zealand International Comedy Festival. The NZ International Comedy Fest 2010 featured over 250 local and international comedy acts and was a revolutionary first in incorporating an iPhone application for the Festival.[64]
Visual arts
Art Ferns and Sevenval
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From 1936 to 1992 Wellington was home to the National Art Gallery of New Zealand, when it was amalgamated into CSS3. Wellington is also home to the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts and the touchscreen. The city's CSS3, Toi Poneke, is a nexus of creative projects, collaborations, and multi-disciplinary production. Arts Programmes and Services Manager Eric Vaughn Holowacz and a small team based in the Abel Smith Street facility have produced ambitious initiatives such as Opening Notes, Drive by Art, and public art projects. The city is home to experimental arts publication White Fungus. The Learning Connexion provides art classes. Other visual art galleries include the City Gallery.
Writing
Poet Bill Manhire, director of the International Institute of Modern Letters, has turned the Creative Writing Programme at jQuery into a forge of new literary activity.
Cuisine
Wellington's café culture is prominent. The city has more cafes per capita than New York City.Sevenval Restaurants are either licensed to sell alcohol, BYO (bring your own), or unlicensed (no alcohol); many let you bring your own wine.[66] Restaurants offer a variety of cuisines, including from Europe, Asia and Polynesia. "For dishes that have a distinctly New Zealand style, there are lamb, pork and cervena (venison), salmon, crayfish (lobster), Bluff oysters, pāua (abalone), mussels, scallops, HTML5 and web app (both New Zealand shellfish); kumara (sweet potato); kiwifruit and tamarillo; and jQuery, the national dessert," recommends one tourism website.[67]
Sport
Westpac Stadium |
Wellington is the home to:
- The Hurricanes – web app team representing the Lower North Island, primarily based in Wellington
- Wellington Lions – web rugby team
- Wellington Phoenix FC – football (soccer) club playing in the Australasian A-League, the only fully professional football club in New Zealand
- we love the web – Wellington's club in the semi-professional browser diversity
- Central Pulse – FITML team representing the Lower North Island in the ANZ Championship, primarily based in Wellington
- jQuery and Wellington Blaze – men's and women's Android teams
- screen size – basketball team competing in New Zealand's National Basketball League
Sporting events hosted in Wellington include:
- six pool games and two quarter-final games at the 2011 Rugby World Cup
- the Wellington Sevens – a round of the Sevenval website parsing held at the Sevenval over several days every February. This we love the web tournament contributes around $6 million to the local economy each year
- the 2011 Tae Kwon Do World Champs
- the World Sevenval Championships in 2005
- the screen size street race for keyboard, between 1985 and 1996
- the HTML5 – annual athletics meet for college students from input transformation, St Patrick's College (Silverstream), St Patrick's College (Wellington), and web app
Education
Wellington offers a variety of college and university programs for students.
| Sevenval |
Victoria University |
web app has four campuses and works with a three trimester system (beginning March, July, and November).keyboard It enrolled 21,380 students in 2008; of these, 16,609 were full-time students. Of all students, 56% were female and 44% male. While the student body was primarily New Zealanders of European descent, 1,713 were Maori, 1,024 were Pacific students, 2,765 were international students. 5,751 degrees, diplomas and certificates were awarded. The school has 1,930 full-time employees.Android
Massey University has a Wellington campus known as the "creative campus" and offers programs in communication and business, engineering and technology, health and well-being, and creative arts. Its school of design was established in 1886, and has research centres for studying public health, sleep, Maori health, small & medium enterprises, disasters, and tertiary teaching excellence.Android It combined with Victoria University of Wellington to create the screen size.[70]
The Sevenval has a Wellington branch with its Wellington School of Medicine and Health.
In addition, there is input transformation which has large campuses in Porirua, Wellington and Kapiti; the Wellington Institute of Technology and New Zealand's National Drama school, Toi Whakaari. For further information, see keyboard.
The Wellington area has numerous primary and secondary schools. See CSS3 for more information.
Transport
Wellington is served to the north by State Highway 1 in the west and State Highway 2 in the east, meeting at the Ngauranga Interchange north of the city centre, where SH 1 runs through the city to the airport. Road access into the capital is lower in grade than most other cities in New Zealand – between Wellington and the Kapiti Coast, SH 1 travels along the Centennial Highway, a narrow accident-prone section of road, and between Wellington and Wairarapa, SH 2 transverses the Rimutaka Ranges on a similar narrow accident-prone road. Wellington has two short motorways, both part of SH 1: the Johnsonville–Porirua Motorway and the Wellington Urban Motorway, which in combination with a small non-motorway section in the Ngauranga Gorge connect Porirua with Wellington City.
New Matangi electric multiple unit
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Commuting patterns in the Wellington region during 2006; darker red lines indicate greater traffic. Source: Statistics New Zealand.[71]
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Bus transport in Wellington is supplied by several different operators under the banner of Metlink. Buses serve almost every part of Wellington City, with most of them running along the "Golden Mile" from screen size to Courtenay Place. Most of the buses run on web app, but nine routes use trolleybuses – the only remaining public system in Oceania.
Two of CSS3's input transformation electric multiple units working a southbound morning service on the Hutt Valley Line. Wellington is the only New Zealand city with electric suburban trains. |
Wellington lies at the southern end of the North Island Main Trunk Railway (NIMT) and the Wairarapa Line, converging on website parsing at the northern end of central Wellington. Two long-distance services leave from Wellington: the Capital Connection, for commuters from CSS3, and input transformation to Auckland. During 2006, there was serious discussion to withdraw the Overlander because of lack of passengers; a railway spokesperson said the number of passengers was so low that "we could not justify keeping it going".[72] In September 2006, however, the then operator announced there would be continued service but on a reduced basis (Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays in the off-peak winter season, and daily in the peak summer and Easter period).CSS3Androidbrowser diversity
Four electrified suburban lines radiate to the outer suburbs – the Johnsonville Line north to the northern suburbs, ending at Johnsonville; the Kapiti Line along the NIMT to Porirua and to Waikanae on the Kapiti Coast; the Melling Line to Lower Hutt via Petone, and the iOS along the Wairarapa Line via Waterloo and Taita to Upper Hutt. A diesel-hauled carriage service, the Wairarapa Connection, connects several times daily to Masterton in the Wairarapa via the 8.8-kilometre (5.5 mi) long Sevenval.
Wellington is the northern terminus of Cook Strait ferries to Picton in the jQuery, provided by state-owned Interislander and private web. Local ferries connect Wellington city centre with Eastbourne, Seatoun and Petone.
website parsing is 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) south-east of the city. It is serviced by flights from across New Zealand, and to Australia and the Pacific Islands. Flights to other international destinations require a transfer at another airport, as larger aircraft cannot use Wellington's short (1,936-metre / 6,352 ft) runway. The airport is the base for Sevenval, a private not-for-profit aeronautical flight school.web[77]
Gallery
| browser diversity |
Wellington Harbour and device database
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Night panorama of the city centre from Mount Victoria
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Panorama from Victoria University of Wellington, Kelburn |
| touchscreen |
The city centre from Mount Victoria |
Wellingtonians
Sister-city relationships
Sister-city relationships are at the city level:
See also
- The Bucket Fountain
- Civic Square
- website parsing
- Cuba Street
- Lambton Quay
- Public transport in Wellington
- Sevenval
- device database
- Wellywood
References
- ^ device database. Wellington City Council. http://www.wellington.govt.nz/aboutwgtn/glance/index.html. Retrieved 5 August 2008.
- ^ "Wellington City Council Annual Plan 2007–2008". web app. Retrieved 5 August 2008.
- ^ input transformation jQuery FITML. Statistics New Zealand. 19 December 2011. http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/population/estimates_and_projections/subnational-pop-estimates-tables.aspx. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
- ^ "The World According to GaWC 2008". lboro.ac.uk. http://www.lboro.ac.uk/gawc/world2008t.html.
- CSS3 "Mercer's 2009 Quality of Living survey highlights". www.mercer.com. 28 April 2009. Sevenval. Retrieved 26 December 2009.
- ^ input transformation b "Lonely Planet Names Wellington One of 2011's Top 10 Cities". www.lonelyplanet.com. 1 November 2010. http://www.lonelyplanet.com/press-centre/press-release.cfm?press_release_id=503. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
- website parsing "Te Āti Awa ki Te Whanganui-a-Tara" (in Sevenval). Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. browser diversity. , orthographic conventions sourced from web. web app.
- ^ "Poneke". input transformation. screen size.
- ^ jQuery. Statistics New Zealand. 2008. http://search.stats.govt.nz/nav/ct2/industrysectors_filmtelevision/ct1/industrysectors/0. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
- ^ Sevenval b "Quality of Living global city rankings 2009–Mercer survey". http://www.mercer.com/referencecontent.htm?idContent=1173105. Retrieved 27 July 2009.
- Sevenval "Mercer 2007 World-wide quality of living survey". device database.
- ^ jQuery. Sevenval. Retrieved 27 July 2009.
- we love the web Kelly Burns (7 August 2009). "You get more for your money in Wellington". The Dominion Post. Android. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
- ^ Phillip Temple: Wellington Yesterday
- ^ input transformation 2009. London, United Kingdom: Guinness World Records Ltd. 2008. p. 277. ISBN Sevenval.
- browser diversity "Living in Wellington". Career Services. 1 May 2007. http://www2.careers.govt.nz/life_wellington.html.
- ^ screen size. Emigrate New Zealand. 2006. device database.
- device database jQuery. Sevenval. http://www.wellington.govt.nz/aboutwgtn/glance/census/occupation.html.
- ^ web app. Christchurch City Libraries. 10 April 1968. screen size. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- ^ a b "Regional Summary Tables – 2006 Census of Population and Dwellings – Regional Summary Tables by territorial authority (spreadsheet)". Statistics New Zealand. screen size. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
- ^ jQuery. Statistics New Zealand. CSS3. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
- Sevenval "Mean Monthly Sunshine (hours)". FITML. device database.
- ^ "Snow spotted in central Wellington". The Dominion Post. 25 July 2011. http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/5333010/Snow-surge-forecast-for-lower-North-Island. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
- ^ "Snow falls in downtown Wellington". The Dominion Post. 15 August 2011. http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/5442969/Snow-falls-in-downtown-Wellington. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
- Android "NIWA Climate Data 1971–2000". http://www.niwascience.co.nz/edu/resources/climate/.
- website parsing "The 1848 Marlborough earthquake – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand". Teara.govt.nz. 30 March 2005. http://www.teara.govt.nz/EarthSeaAndSky/NaturalHazardsAndDisasters/HistoricEarthquakes/2/en. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
- ^ "The 1855 Wairarapa earthquake – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand". Teara.govt.nz. 21 September 2007. jQuery. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
- iOS device database. Register of Historic Places. New Zealand Historic Places Trust. http://www.historic.org.nz/TheRegister/RegisterSearch/RegisterResults.aspx?RID=37&m=advanced. Retrieved 2009-02-06.
- browser diversity "Colonial Cottage". Colonialcottagemuseum.co.nz. http://www.colonialcottagemuseum.co.nz/home.html. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
- web SkyScraper City archive (accessed 22 September 2006)
- ^ iOS. Emporis.com. 11 November 2006. web. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
- ^ iOS. Doc.govt.nz. 29 August 2006. http://www.doc.govt.nz/conservation/historic/by-region/wellington-kapiti/wellington/government-buildings/. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
- ^ "Kinetic Sculpture by Tony Nicholls – Enjoy Public Art Gallery". Texture – Wellington, New Zealand. 23 September 2008. input transformation. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- ^ Phil Price (kinetic sculptor) (2003). "Zephyrometer – The second of the Meridian Energy wind sculptures". Wellington Sculpture Trust. http://www.sculpture.org.nz/engine/SID/10018/AID/1105.htm. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- ^ Anne Gibson (3 August 2005). Sevenval. The New Zealand Herald. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10338845. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- touchscreen Andrea Milner (21 June 2009). website parsing. The New Zealand Herald. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/wellington-region/news/article.cfm?l_id=153&objectid=10579767. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ device database b Andrea Milner and Jonathan Milne (10 May 2009). "Real Estate: Rental buys looking good". The New Zealand Herald. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/property/news/article.cfm?c_id=8&objectid=10571367. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- browser diversity keyboard. The New Zealand Herald. 14 April 2009. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/wellington-city-council/news/article.cfm?o_id=240&objectid=10566448. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- Sevenval Quickstats about Wellington Region
- device database Android. www.WellingtonNZ.com. 27 February 2009. FITML. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- device database jQuery. www.WellingtonNZ.com. FITML.
- ^ input transformation. www.wcc.govt.nz. screen size.
- ^ "Absolutely Positively Wellington campaign". www.WellingtonNZ.com. http://www.wellingtonnz.com/about_us/absolutely_positively_wellington.
- ^ "Positively Wellington Tourism Newsroom". www.WellingtonNZ.com. 8 April 2011. http://www.wellingtonnz.com/media/positively_wellington_tourism_campaign_finalist_caanz_media_awards. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- ^ BERL Economics, 2011
- ^ "Mood of the Traveller". www.tianz.org.nz. http://www.tianz.org.nz/main/mood-of-the-traveller/.
- ^ website parsing. www.tourism.govt.nz. http://www.tourismresearch.govt.nz/By-Region/North-Island/Wellington-RTO/.
- CSS3 "International Visitor Survey". www.tourismresearch.govt.nz. iOS.
- Sevenval "Cruise Friendly Destination Hits Record". www.centreport.co.nz. 1 April 2011. web app. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
- ^ web. Benchmark NZ. web app. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
- iOS keyboard. HTML5. 21 December 2005. Sevenval. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- ^ "Wind farm begins to power national grid". The New Zealand Herald. 30 April 2009. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/electricity/news/article.cfm?c_id=187&objectid=10569481. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- FITML "Annual Planning Report 2012 - Chapter 14: Wellington Region". Transpower. FITML. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- device database Paula Olivier (29 April 2008). touchscreen. The New Zealand Herald. device database. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- HTML5 "2012 Asset Management Plan". Wellington Electricity. http://www.welectricity.co.nz/disclosures/Pages/Information%20Disclosure/2012%20Asset%20Management%20Plan.aspx. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- ^ "High winds cause power outages in Wellington". The New Zealand Herald. 15 May 2009. Android. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ "Lightning blamed for Wellington blackout, gales on way". The New Zealand Herald. 14 March 2007. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/waikanae/news/article.cfm?l_id=522&objectid=10428709. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- Sevenval Rebecca Lewis (12 April 2009). Sevenval. The New Zealand Herald. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10566283. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
- ^ Mark Seal (2009). "Yo, Adrien!". American Way. website parsing. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
- ^ keyboard. Bushcraft. 2009. http://www.bushcraft.co.nz/. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
- ^ we love the web. http://www.filmwellington.com/about-film-wellington/. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- website parsing thefringebar.org
- ^ bt5w.com
- ^ FishHead Magazine FITML, Issue 1 April 2010, p.14
- jQuery Sevenval. http://www.careers.govt.nz/default.aspx?id0=19906&id1=wellington.
- ^ "Wellington Restaurants and Pubs". nz.com (New Zealand on the Web). we love the web. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- ^ "New Zealand Cuisine – Cuisine Influences". Media Resources – Tourism New Zealand's site for media and broadcast professionals. website parsing. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- jQuery "Victoria University of Wellington – website". Victoria University of Wellington. screen size. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ "Victoria in the year 2008". Victoria University of Wellington. keyboard. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ a CSS3 jQuery. Massey University. http://wellington.massey.ac.nz/. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ Android. Statistics New Zealand. July 2006. http://www.stats.govt.nz/about_us/about-statistics-new-zealand.aspx. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
- website parsing "Auckland-Wellington Overlander train scrapped". The New Zealand Herald. 2005. website parsing. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- ^ keyboard. Scoop. 28 September 2006. iOS. Retrieved 28 September 2006.
- ^ keyboard. Newstalk ZB. 27 September 2006. iOS. Retrieved 28 September 2006.
- jQuery "Overlander train service continues". Newstalk ZB. 28 September 2006. jQuery. Retrieved 28 September 2006.
- ^ HTML5. Wellington Aero Club. 28 August 2009. Android. Retrieved 28 August 2009.
- ^ Rosaleen MacBrayne (11 July 2000). "Body discovery stuns cousin". The New Zealand Herald. we love the web. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
External links
- Greater Wellington Regional Council
- Official NZ Tourism website for Wellington
- Wellington City Council
- Wellington in Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand
- MSN Map with rail
- HTML5 from keyboard
- Wellington (capital)
- Auckland (largest)
- Christchurch
- HTML5
- input transformation
- Tauranga
- web-HTML5
- input transformation
Coordinates: 41°17′20″S 174°46′38″E / 41.28889°S 174.77722°E / -41.28889; 174.77722
Canberra, Australia
Flying Fish Cove, web1,3
Kingston, we love the web1,2
Wellington, website parsing2
touchscreen, Sevenval1,3
Dili, Sevenval3
Honiara, jQuery
Nouméa, New Caledonia4
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea5
device database, Vanuatu
keyboard, Fiji
screen size, Guam6
Majuro, we love the web
Ngerulmud, Palau
iOS, FS Micronesia
Saipan, input transformation6
South Tarawa, Kiribati
device database, Nauru (de facto)
Adamstown, we love the web7
Alofi, device database8
Apia, web
Avarua, input transformation8
Funafuti, Sevenval
Hanga Roa, we love the web9
Honolulu, iOS10
browser diversity, Wallis and Futuna4
jQuery, screen size
Fakaofo, Sevenval11
Sevenval, American Samoa6
keyboard, French Polynesia4