Tauranga, Bay of Plenty Region, North Island, New Zealand

History | New Zealand Wars–Tauranga Campaign | Modern era | Geography | Economy | Religion | Culture : Music | Events | Sport | City facilities and attractions | Hospitals | Utilities | Transport : Air : Rail : Bus | Education

🇳🇿 Tauranga is a coastal metropolitan city in the Bay of Plenty region and the fifth most populous city of New Zealand. It was settled by Māori late in the 13th century, colonised by Europeans in the early 19th century, and was constituted as a city in 1963.

The city lies in the north-western corner of the Bay of Plenty, on the south-eastern edge of Tauranga Harbour. The city extends over an area of 141.91 square km (54.79 sq mi), and encompasses the communities of Bethlehem, on the south-western outskirts of the city; Greerton, on the southern outskirts of the city; Matua, west of the central city overlooking Tauranga Harbour; Maungatapu; Mount Maunganui, located north of the central city across the harbour facing the Bay of Plenty; Otūmoetai; Papamoa, Tauranga's largest suburb, located on the Bay of Plenty; Tauranga City; Tauranga South; and Welcome Bay.

Tauranga is one of New Zealand's main centres for business, international trade, culture, fashion and horticultural science. The Port of Tauranga is New Zealand's largest port in terms of gross export tonnage and efficiency. Tauranga is one of New Zealand's fastest-growing cities, with an 11% increase in population between the 2006 census and the 2013 census, and 19% between the 2013 and 2018 census. Due to its rapid population growth, Tauranga has become New Zealand's fifth-largest city, overtaking Dunedin and the Napier-Hastings urban areas.

History The earliest known settlers were Māori, who arrived in the 13th century at Tauranga in the Tākitimu and the Mātaatua waka.

At 9 am on Friday, 23 June 1826, Herald was the first European ship to enter Tauranga Harbour. The Revd. Henry Williams conducted a Christian service at Otamataha Pā.

In December 1826 and again in March 1827, the Herald travelled to Tauranga from the Bay of Islands to obtain supplies of potatoes, pigs and flax. In 1835 a Church Missionary Society mission station was established at Tauranga by William Wade. Rev. Alfred N. Brown arrived at the CMS mission station in 1838. John Morgan also visited the mission in 1838.

Europeans trading in flax were active in the Bay of Plenty during the 1830s; some were transient, others married local women and settled permanently. The first permanent non-Maori trader was James Farrow, who travelled to Tauranga in 1829, obtaining flax fibre for Australian merchants in exchange for muskets and gunpowder. Farrow acquired a land area of 2,000 square metres (1⁄2 acre) on 10 January 1838 at Otūmoetai Pā from the chiefs Tupaea, Tangimoana and Te Omanu, the earliest authenticated land purchase in the Bay of Plenty.

In 1840, a Catholic mission station was established. Bishop Pompallier was given land within the palisades of Otūmoetai Pā for a church and a presbytery. The mission station closed in 1863 due to land wars in the Waikato district.

New Zealand Wars–Tauranga Campaign The Tauranga Campaign took place in and around Tauranga from 21 January to 21 June 1864, during the New Zealand Wars. The Battle of Gate Pa is the best known.

The Battle of Gate Pā was an attack on the well fortified Pā and its Māori defenders on 29 April 1864 by British forces made up of approximately 300 men of the 43rd Regiment and a naval contingent. The British casualties were 31 dead (including 10 officers), and 80 wounded - the single most devastating loss of life suffered by the British military in the whole of the New Zealand Wars. The Māori defenders abandoned the Pā during the night with casualties estimated at 25 dead and an unknown number of wounded.

Modern era Under the Local Government (Tauranga City Council) Order 2003, Tauranga became legally a city for a second time, from 1 March 2004.

In August 2011, Tauranga received Ultra-Fast Broadband as part of the New Zealand Government's rollout.

Geography Tauranga is located around a large harbour that extends along the western Bay of Plenty, and is protected by Matakana Island and the extinct volcano of Mauao (Mount Maunganui). Ngamuwahine River is located 19 km south-west of Tauranga.

View down The Strand from the intersection of Harington St in 1924, including Tauranga Hotel and the Farmers' Union Trading Company buildings

Tauranga and the Bay of Plenty are situated along a faultline and so experience (infrequent) seismic activity. There are a few volcanoes around the area (mainly dormant). The most notable of these are White Island and Mauao, nicknamed "The Mount" by locals.

Tauranga is roughly the antipode of Jaén, Spain.

Here is a list of suburbs by electoral ward: Te Papa / Welcome Bay: • Gate Pa • Greerton • Hairini • Maungatapu • Merivale • Poike • Tauranga CBD • Tauranga South • Welcome Bay.

Otumoetai / Pyes Pa: • Bellevue • Bethlehem • Brookfield • Judea • Matua • Omanawa • Otūmoetai • Pyes Pa • Tauriko • The Lakes Village.

Mount Maunganui / Papamoa: • Arataki • Kairua • Matapihi • Mount Maunganui • Moturiki Island • Omanu • Papamoa Beach • Waitao.

Others: • Motuopuhi Island (Rat Island) • Motuotau Island • Ohauiti • Waikareao Estuary.

Economy Much of the countryside surrounding Tauranga is horticultural land, used to grow a wide range of fresh produce for both domestic consumption and export. There are many kiwifruit and avocados orchards as well as other crops.

The Port of Tauranga is New Zealand's largest export port. It is a regular stop for both container ships and luxury cruise liners.

Tauranga's main shopping malls are Bayfair, in Mount Maunganui and Tauranga Crossing in Tauriko. Most of the city's shopping centres are located in the suburbs. They include Fraser Cove, Tauranga Crossing, Bethlehem Town Centre, Papamoa Plaza, Fashion Island, Bayfair Shopping Centre, Bay Central and Greerton Village.

Tauranga has the following business innovation centres • The Kollective • Newnham Park

The following companies have their head office in Tauranga: • Ballance Agri-Nutrients • Brother NZ • C3 Limited • Craigs Investment Partners Ltd • Dominion Salt • Genera Biosecurity • Kiwi Bus Builders • Port of Tauranga • Shuzi New Zealand Limited • Tidy International • Trimax Mowing Systems • TrustPower • UNO. Magazine • Zespri International.

Religion A wide variety of faiths are practised, including Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Sikhism, Taoism and Judaism. There are many denominations of Christianity including Pentecostal, Methodist, Presbyterian, Roman Catholic, Exclusive Brethren, Baptist, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and Jacobite Syrian Christian Church.

Culture: Music The National Jazz Festival takes place in Tauranga every Easter.

Events New Year celebrations at the Mount in Mount Maunganui are one of Tauranga's main events, bringing people from all around the country.

In 2014 Tauranga City Council granted permission for an annual Sikh parade to celebrate Guru Gobind Singh's birthday. 2500 people took part in 2014, while in 2015, the number increased to 3500.

Sport Tauranga has a large stadium complex in the Mount Manganui suburb, Baypark Stadium, rebuilt in 2001 after a similar complex closed in 1995. It hosts Speedway events during summer and rugby matches in winter.

Tauranga is also the home of football (soccer) club Tauranga City United who compete in the Lotto Sport Italia NRFL Division 2.

Tauranga is the home to two rowing clubs – Tauranga Rowing Club in Memorial Park and Bay of Plenty Coast Rowing Club at the picturesque Wairoa River. Both clubs have had successful NZ representation over the years.

Tauranga has an all weather outdoor athletics ground at Tauranga Domain.

City facilities and attractions Greater Tauranga is a very popular lifestyle and tourism destination. It features many natural attractions and scenery ranging from popular beaches and harbour environments to lush bush-clad mountains with waterfalls and lakes.

Cultural attractions include the Tauranga Art Gallery, which opened in October 2007 and showcases local, national and international exhibitions in a range of media. On the 17th Avenue, the "Historic Village on 17th", recreates a historic setting with original and replica buildings from early Tauranga housing arts and gift shops.

Aviation interests are well served with the Classic Flyers Museum and the Gyrate Flying Club where you can experience flying a modern gyroplane; the "motorbike of the sky".

Tauranga has many parks: one of the largest is Memorial Park, and others include Yatton Park, Kulim Park, Fergusson Park and the large Tauranga Domain. The Te Puna Quarry Park has become a regional attraction, known for being converted from a disused quarry into a community park.

Due to the temperate climate, outdoor activities are very popular, including golf, tramping (hiking), mountain biking and white water rafting. The Bay of Plenty coastline has miles of golden sandy beaches, and watersports are very popular, including swimming, surfing, fishing, diving, kayaking and kitesurfing. Tourists also enjoy dolphin-watching on specially run boat trips.

The coastal suburb Papamoa and neighbouring town Mount Maunganui are some of the more affluent areas around Tauranga. The region's beaches attract swimmers, surfers, kayakers and kitesurfers throughout the year.

Tauranga has many outlying islands and reefs that make it a notable tourist destination point for travelling scuba divers and marine enthusiasts. Extensive marine life diversity is available to scuba divers all year round. Water temperatures range from 12 degrees Celsius in winter to 22–24 degrees Celsius in summer. Tauranga houses two professional dive instructor training centres, training NAUI, PADI and SSI dive leader systems.

Hospitals Tauranga Hospital is a public secondary regional hospital located in Tauranga South, with 360 beds including neonatal, geriatric, surgical, maternity and mental health care. It provides elective and emergency healthcare across medical, surgical, paediatric, obstetric, gynaecological and psychiatric services. The main tertiary referral centre for Tauranga Hospital is Waikato Hospital, located in Hamilton. As the site of the Bay of Plenty Clinical School, Tauranga Hospital provides training to medical students from the University of Auckland, as well as selective and elective placements for nursing and midwifery students.

Grace Hospital is Tauranga's only private specialist surgical hospital, located in Oropi. It accommodates 6 operating theatres, 48 impatient beds, a two-bed HDU, a procedure room for minor surgery and two procedure rooms for endoscopy.

Utilities Powerco operates the local distribution network in the city, with electricity supplied from Transpower's national grid at three substations: Tauranga (Greerton), Kaitemako and Mount Maunganui (Matapihi).

Natural gas arrived in Tauranga in 1982, following the completion of the high-pressure pipeline from the Maui pipeline near Te Awamutu to the city, now operated by First Gas. First Gas also operates the gas distribution network within the city.

Transport Tauranga City Council is currently responsible for approximately 530 km of roads, 700 km of footpaths, cycle ways and access ways.

Tauranga City Council also has a bit of work under way with their Transportation and Roads strategy. Their aim for the future to change current travel behaviour from a focus on private cars to more sustainable modes such as buses, cycling and walking.

Transport: Air Tauranga Airport is served by Air New Zealand with flights to Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch. Sunair is based in Tauranga, operating a fleet of light aircraft. Sunair operates from Tauranga Airport to Whangarei, Claris, Whitanga and Motiti Island. Barrier Air also operates from Tauranga to Great Barrier Island.

Transport: Rail Tauranga is located on the East Coast Main Trunk Railway.

Transport: Bus Main transportation in the city is provided by the BayBus, with twelve routes servicing the city's population. Bay Hopper buses depart the central stops in Tauranga's CBD, Ohauiti, Mount Maunganui and Bayfair every 15 minutes, with the routes to Papamoa and Greerton half-hourly. Bee cards were introduced for fares on 27 July 2020.

The city is also a waypoint for bus travel between cities, with the Bay Hopper, and Intercity having a daily schedule.

Education Tauranga is home to the Bay of Plenty Tertiary Education Partnership, made up of: • Toi Ohomai Institute of Technology, Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi • The University of Waikato • Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi

The organisations currently share two main campuses, but are planning a new central campus. Stage 1 is expected to be open in 2017, catering for 500 but with capacity for 700, which will cost $67.3 Million.

Tauranga, Bay of Plenty 
Tauranga, Bay of Plenty
Image: Adobe Stock steheap #266200832

Tauranga has a population of over 136,713 people. Tauranga also forms one of the centres of the wider Bay of Plenty region which has a population of over 343,400 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Tauranga see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Twin Towns, Sister Cities Tauranga has links with:

🇯🇵 Hitachi, Japan 🇺🇸 San Bernardino, USA 🇨🇳 Yantai, China
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

South of: -37.7

🇦🇺 Moreland -37.733

🇦🇺 Darebin -37.733

🇦🇺 Doncaster -37.787

🇳🇿 Hamilton -37.788

🇦🇺 Melbourne -37.8

🇦🇺 Footscray -37.8

🇦🇺 Maroondah -37.807

🇦🇺 Ringwood -37.811

🇦🇺 Nunawading -37.817

🇦🇺 Box Hill -37.822

East of: 176.154

🇳🇿 Rotorua 176.25

🇳🇿 Hastings 176.843

🇳🇿 Napier 176.9

🇫🇯 Lautoka 177.456

🇳🇿 Gisborne 178.016

🇫🇯 Suva 178.427

🇫🇯 Nausori 178.534

🇬🇭 Ga West 314299

West of: 176.154

🇳🇿 Taupō 176.072

🇳🇿 Masterton 175.664

🇳🇿 Palmerston North 175.61

🇳🇿 Cambridge 175.467

🇳🇿 Hamilton 175.28

🇳🇿 Whanganui 175.05

🇳🇿 Upper Hutt 175.05

🇳🇿 Hutt 174.917

🇳🇿 Lower Hutt 174.917

🇳🇿 Manukau 174.883

Antipodal to Tauranga is: -3.846,37.7

Locations Near: Tauranga 176.154,-37.6995

🇳🇿 Rotorua 176.25,-38.133 d: 49  

🇳🇿 Cambridge 175.467,-37.883 d: 63.7  

🇳🇿 Hamilton 175.28,-37.788 d: 77.5  

🇳🇿 Taupō 176.072,-38.687 d: 110  

🇳🇿 Auckland 174.763,-36.853 d: 154.9  

🇳🇿 North Shore City 174.75,-36.8 d: 159.5  

🇳🇿 Hibiscus Coast 174.698,-36.606 d: 177.3  

🇳🇿 Napier 176.9,-39.505 d: 211  

🇳🇿 Hastings 176.843,-39.645 d: 224.4  

🇳🇿 Gisborne 178.016,-38.659 d: 194.6  

Antipodal to: Tauranga -3.846,37.7

🇪🇸 Jaén -3.771,37.767 d: 20005.1  

🇪🇸 Linares -3.63,38.098 d: 19966.9  

🇪🇸 Granada -3.6,37.167 d: 19952  

🇪🇸 Lucena -4.483,37.4 d: 19949.8  

🇪🇸 Montilla -4.633,37.583 d: 19944.6  

🇪🇸 Córdoba -4.767,37.883 d: 19931.6  

🇪🇸 Cordova -4.767,37.883 d: 19931.6  

🇪🇸 Vélez-Málaga -4.1,36.778 d: 19910.2  

🇪🇸 Antequera -4.563,37.019 d: 19916.4  

🇪🇸 Motril -3.517,36.75 d: 19905.6  

Bing Map

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