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Second and concluding leg of Academy Series on Saturday
- Wellington Club Weekly
- The second and concluding leg of the Hurricanes region Academy Series is at Massey University tomorrow, with the winner winning the third annual Sam Doyle Memorial Trophy. The games tomorrow are scheduled as: 12.30pm, Game 1: Hawke’s Bay v Manawatu 1.15pm, Game 2: Manawatu v Wellington 2.00pm, Game 3: Hawke’s Bay v Wellington Heading into...
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All welcome to roll-up on Saturday 24 September
- Victoria Bowling Club
- Come along to the club this Saturday for an early season roll-up: Date: Saturday 24 SeptemberTime: 12.30pmCost: No entry feeTeams:…
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Victoria Bowling Club, Rixon Grove, Mount Victoria, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Have your say on Wellington's open and recreation spaces!
- Hataitai Community Website
- The Wellington City Council is reviewing there approaches to open space and recreation to ensure they work for Wellingtonians over the next 30 years.
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Research on Māori clothing dyes could reveal garments' origin
- Victoria University of Wellington
- New findings help to trace origins of treasured garments stored in museums.
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Higgins signs on with Hurricanes for next two seasons
- Wellington Club Weekly
- Riley Higgins scoring one of his two tries in this year’s Jubilee Cup final. Norths beat Petone 23-20. PHOTO: Car Earlier this season, Riley Higgins joined a select group by making his Super Rugby debut before his National Provincial Championship one. Higgins came off the bench against the Fijian Drua in Wellington, also becoming one...
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Petone, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Reflections on parking, risk, and how we make decisions
- Councillor Jenny Condie
- The Innovating Streets paper was hotly anticipated. My Twitter feed had been full of discussion about how cities around the world were...
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Wins for Ories, Petone and Tawa on Finals Day
- Wellington Club Weekly
- Oriental-Rongotai – Jubilee Cup winners 2023. Photo: Andy McArt By Steven White & Adam Julian Oriental-Rongotai won the Jubilee Cup and Premier 2, Division 2 HD Morgan Memorial Finals today, while Petone annexed the Hardham Cup and Tawa won the Premier 2, Division 1 Ed Chaney Cup. An extended round-up of Finals Day matches at...
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Tawa, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Adam Art Gallery autumn exhibition focuses on the voice
- Victoria University of Wellington
- Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery will open its autumn season with Peal the Bells.
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Tentative comeback for Central Region 7s tournament on Saturday
- Wellington Club Weekly
- After a four-year hiatus, the Central Region 7s tournament returns this Saturday at Massey University at Palmerston North, albeit in an abbreviated format from last time. For several years this tournament was held at Playford Park, Levin, and constituted qualification for the National Provincial 7s tournament formerly in Queenstown and most recently at Mt Maunganui....
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Wellington City Council spends $1.7 million on experts then rejects their findings
- Live Wellington - a liveable city by design
- MEDIA RELEASE 22 April 2024 The Wellington City Council spent over $1.7 million on a set of experts to hear submissions on the District Plan, and then went on to ignore their key findings.
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Public Transport in Wellington: Are We On Track? Wednesday 2 December
- Save the Basin Reserve!
- Image from FIT Wellington This very timely event has been organised by FIT Wellington, who collaborated with Save the Basin on our Pizza and Panel Evening in 2014.
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Social scientist awarded for research on intersectional identities of Muslim converts
- Victoria University of Wellington
- Dr Ayca Arkilic, has won the Royal Society of New Zealand Early Career Research Excellence Award for Social Sciences for her research on women converts to Islam in Aotearoa.
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Key match for Firebirds against Canterbury at the Basin on Thursday
- Cricket Wellington
- The Wellington Firebirds host the Canterbury Wizards in the Men’s domestic One-Day competition at the Basin Reserve on Thursday from 11.00am, in a key match for both teams.
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Plenty of runs, wickets and wickets in club cricket on Saturday
- Cricket Wellington
- Karori and Upper are the two frontrunners in the Wilkinson Pearce Cups and Hazlett Trophies with one round to play, after an exciting day of club cricket on Saturday
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Karori, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Plenty of runs, wickets and records in club cricket on Saturday
- Cricket Wellington
- Karori and Upper are the two frontrunners in the Wilkinson Pearce Cups and Hazlett Trophies with one round to play, after an exciting day of club cricket on Saturday
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Karori, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Inaugural Wilkinson Pearce Cup Twenty20 final at the Basin on Wednesday
- Cricket Wellington
- The inaugural Wilkinson Pearce Cup Wellington club cricket Twenty20 final between HRV Karori and Naenae Old Boys is being played at the Hawkins Basin Reserve on Wednesday 11 January.
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Karori, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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One more U18s match to come, Hurricanes U16s tournament starts on Monday
- Wellington Club Weekly
- The two Wellington teams meet Manawatu and Hawke’s Bay on Monday and Tuesday in the first two days of the Hurricanes U16 tournament, both vying for a place in the Don Broughton Shield final on Wednesday. More on their tournament below. By Steven White & Scott MacLean Including the international match on Saturday night, this...
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Curators Talk: Rockpools: Life in the Most Extreme Environment on Earth
- Friends of Te Papa
- What is the most extreme environment on the planet? It probably isn’t where you think! Rockpools are places of extreme and rapid changes in temperature, where the living environment can […]
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Celebrate Summer on Cuba Street with the Cuba Street Summer Series!
- Cubadupa
- Celebrate Summer on Cuba Street with the Cuba Street Summer Series! Get ready, Wellington! The iconic Cuba Street (between Ghuznee and Vivian St) is coming alive over three weekends this...
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Cuba Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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RA submission to Porirua City Council on its 10-year plan
- Pukerua Bay Residents Association
- The Residents Association made the following submission to Porirua City Council on its 10-year plan up to 2023. The increased costs ratepayers are now expected to pay for necessary work […]
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Porirua, Wellington Region, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Partners aligned on refreshed programme priorities for Let’s Get Wellington Moving
- Let's Get Wellington Moving
- A greater focus on climate change and reducing carbon emissions is just one of the changes to emerge from an update to the objectives of the Let’s Get Wellington Moving programme.
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Partners aligned on refreshed programme priorities for Let’s Get Wellington Moving
- Let's Get Wellington Moving
- A greater focus on climate change and reducing carbon emissions is just one of the changes to emerge from an update to the objectives of the Let’s Get Wellington Moving programme.
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HRV Cup Fan Day with the Hell Wellington Firebirds on Friday
- Cricket Wellington
- The Hell Wellington Firebirds are holding a HRV Cup Fan Day at the Hawkins Basin Reserve for junior players and Wellington’s wider cricket community between 2.00pm and 4.00pm on Friday 23 December.
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Submission to the Wellington City Council on the Long Term Plan
- Newtown Residents' Association
- The NRA President and Secretary – Claire Pettigrew and Rhona Carson – made an oral submission to the Council on 5th May 2015, to back up the written submission the Association put in earlier.
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Councils back Government decision on Wellington’s Mass Rapid Transport future
- Greater Wellington Regional Council
- Greater Wellington and Wellington City Council today approved the preferred Mass Rapid Transport option for the Let’s Get Wellington Moving (LGWM) programme, the same option endorsed by Government last week. The preferred option, known as option 1, introduces Mass Rapid Transit to the South Coast and continuous bus priority to the East, and focuses on a new Mt Victoria tunnel with dedicated provision for public transport, walking and cycling, as well as upgrades at the Basin Reserve to improve flows and physically separate movements and extend the Arras tunnel. As a package this option moves the most people possible from the southern and eastern suburbs, supports the most housing and urban development of all the options, and makes city streets better for everyone.
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Women’s, Senior 1 and Senior 2 club rugby finals on Saturday
- Wellington Club Weekly
- Finals football continues around the club rugby fields of Wellington on Saturday, with the Victoria Tavern Trophy Women's, Ed Chaney Cup Senior 1 and HD Morgan Memorial Cup Senior 2 finals being played.
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REBLOG Croaking Cassandra: Further thoughts on the airport Part 1
- Guardians of the Bays
- Shortly after the release of the cost-benefit analysis of the proposed Wellington airport runway extension, prepared by Sapere for Wellington International Airport Limited (WIAL) I wrote a post in which I posed the question “If they build it, what if no one comes?” Since that post, I’ve been to one of the open day/public consultation meetings, have read and thought about the documents more thoroughly, and have read various pieces written by others, including the new one by Ian Harrison that I linked to yesterday. I have also had some engagement with Sapere and WIAL, which has helped to sharpen my sense of what the issues really are. The cost-benefit analysis is not a business case document. It has been prepared in support of a resource consent application. What I hadn’t known when I wrote earlier (and was advised of by Sapere) is that under the RMA the applicants will need to be able to demonstrate national benefits to get permission to fill in some more of Lyall Bay, to extend the runway. I’m sure that the cost-benefit analysis is not serving as a business case for Infratil, the major shareholder in WIAL. But since this project is generally accepted to be viable only if there is significant public funding, and any such funding can only be defended if there would be material net public benefits , the Sapere cost-benefit analysis is by default serving as something of a business case at present. If the numbers don’t stack up, neither the Wellington region councils nor central government should be putting any money into the project (beyond WIAL’s resources, and of course Wellington City Council is a 34 per cent shareholder in WIAL). In this post, I will offer a few thoughts on the plausibility of the assumed increase in international passenger traffic to/from New Zealand as a result of the extension. Extending the runway at Wellington airport could materially reduce the cost of some forms of international travel in and out of Wellington. If long-haul flights were offered, lower costs could result by reducing the time taken (eg. by eliminating the one hour flight to Auckland and the stopover time in Auckland, it might reduce the total time for a trip to Singapore (and onward points) by perhaps 2.5 hours). For those travelling anyway, those gains could be material – time has an opportunity cost. In addition, by allowing long-haul aircraft to fly into Wellington, the direct cost of international airfares in and out of Wellington could also be expected to fall – quite materially, if the numbers Sapere quotes are correct. Those gains apply not just to long haul routes themselves – a Wellington-Singapore direct fare should be materially cheaper than the current options via Auckland, Christchurch or Sydney – but also to trans-Tasman flights, as the longer runway would also facilitate used of wide-bodied aircraft on trans-Tasman routes (as for examples, the Emirates flights between Christchurch and Australia). Of course, simply building the runway extension does not bring about any of these savings. They depend on airlines finding it profitable to run additional services. And although international air travel has increased enormously to and from New Zealand in recent decades, provincial New Zealand is littered with the dreams of local authorities (airport owners) with aspirations to have an international airport. New Zealand has plenty of attractive places, but one main international airport. Wellington, of course, has a significant business market, and business travel is typically much more profitable for airlines than leisure travel. And unlike the predominantly leisure travel into Christchurch, the Wellington business travel probably isn’t very seasonal. So the idea the long haul flights into Wellington could be viable isn’t self-evidently absurd. But, on the other hand, the economic cost of making such flights technically feasible – lengthening the runway – is far higher than in many other places. At $1m a metre, it is considerably more costly than putting some asphalt on some more grassy fields in Christchurch. Wellington isn’t a natural place for a long-haul international airport. The WIAL proposal uses modelling by international consultants to estimate likely growth in traffic and passenger numbers with and without the extension. There are some questions about the baseline forecast, including for example around the potential future impact of climate change mitigation policies. But my main interest is the difference between these two – the increase in traffic that would result from the runway extension itself. It is hard to pick one’s way through all the numbers, but the bottom line appears to be that the cost-benefit analysis is done on the basis that by 2060 there will be an additional 400000 foreign international passengers per annum arriving in Wellington, and an additional 200000 New Zealand international departures per annum through Wellington[1]. Many of these are people who would otherwise have travelled via Auckland or Christchurch, so that the net gain in international travel numbers to New Zealand is around 200000, with an additional 100000 or so New Zealanders travelling abroad. Many of the gains are forecast to occur early in the period. Thus, by 2035, the analysis assumes an annual net gain to New Zealand of around 125000 international visitors (relative to the no-extension baseline). How plausible is this? The various reports highlight the phenomenon of “market stimulation” – putting on new air services tends to stimulate total passenger numbers. That shouldn’t be surprising. Not only do point-to-point services lower the cost of visiting a particular place, but marketing expenditure raises awareness of the destinations concerned. On the other hand, one can’t just take for granted that such market stimulation will render long haul flights into and out of Wellington viable. After all, there are plenty of cities around the world with few or no long haul flights. Closer to home, Rotorua is an attractive tourist destination and can’t sustain direct flights even to Sydney. What of Wellington? The modelling exercise involves lowering the cost of foreigners visiting Wellington – to some extent artificially, because the costs of providing the longer runway are not passed back in additional charges to those using long haul flights – but not the cost of them visiting New Zealand (since Auckland and Christchurch fares would stay largely unchanged). Any long-haul flights into Wellington will almost certainly be from cities that already have flights to Auckland (and possibly to Christchurch). Is it really plausible that an additional 200000 people per annum (or even 125000 by 2035) will visit New Zealand simply because they can fly direct to Wellington, or (in respect of trans-Tasman traffic) fly into Wellington more cheaply than previously? Perhaps I’m excessively negative on Wellington. I reckon it is a nice place for a weekend, but not a destination that many long haul leisure travellers would choose. What is there to do after the first two days? And there is little or nothing else in the rest of the bottom of the North Island. So it is plausible that lower fares resulting from additional competition would attract more weekend visitors from Australia. But no one is going to come for a weekend in Wellington all the way from China or Los Angeles. And since the principal attractions of New Zealand are either in the upper North Island or the South Island, how many more people are likely to come to New Zealand just because they can choose Wellington as the gateway for their New Zealand holiday? And what of New Zealanders travelling abroad? Since the costs of Wellingtonians (and others in the nearby areas) getting to desirable destinations abroad would be cheaper if there were direct flights from Wellington, it is credible that the total number of New Zealand overseas travellers would increase. In fact, whereas the modelling suggests twice as many new foreign visitors as new New Zealand international travellers (and in total there are twice as many international visitors to New Zealand as travelling New Zealanders), in this case I wonder if the putative new routes would not be more attractive to New Zealanders than to foreigners? One can illustrate the point with a deliberately absurd example: put on long haul international flights to Palmerston North, and they would be quite attractive to people in Manawatu (much easier/cheaper to get to desirable places like New York or London) but not very attractive at all to foreigners (for whom Manawatu has few attractions). But even if wide-bodied aircraft flights from Wellington did make overseas travel more attractive to New Zealanders, is the effect really large enough to be equivalent to one more trip every year for every 10 people in Wellington and its hinterland? And would the effect still be remotely that large if passengers (users) had to cover the cost of providing the longer runway (which should really be the default option)? Reasonable people can differ on these issues. In my discussions, a lot seems to turn on just how attractive people think Wellington is. I’m pretty sceptical that long haul tourists will ever come to New Zealand to see cities. Perhaps if one is thinking of visiting New Zealand cities, Wellington is more attractive than our other cities, but even if so Wellington still has the feel of being a logical gateway to nowhere much. It isn’t an obvious starting point for a “whole of New Zealand” trip, or a North Island one (given that most of the attractions are further north), or a South Island one. So I’m left (a) sceptical that the net addition to visitor numbers to New Zealand will be as large as the analysis assumes even if the users don’t bear the costs, and (b) suspecting that the boost to the demand for New Zealanders to travel abroad might be greater than the boost to the demand for foreigners to visit New Zealand. On that latter point, the experts point out that they assume that the new long haul services will be provided by foreign airlines, and that the evidence of recent new air services to New Zealand provided by foreign airlines is that they disproportionately boost the number of foreigners travelling. I have no reason to doubt the numbers, but I still wonder if the same result would apply to routes into Wellington. New flights into Auckland are often the first direct flights offered into New Zealand (as a whole) from that city or country. My impression is that “New Zealand” is the destination marketed to long haul passengers. But direct flights to/from Wellington do more to open up the world (more cheaply) to Wellingtonians than they do to open New Zealand to foreigners. And if so, would the foreign airlines be keen to offer the Wellington services at all? This post has been about the sort of increased passenger numbers that might be expected if the runway was extended. In some sense, that should be largely an issue for WIAL. If they can extend their capacity and attract sufficient users at a price that covers the cost of capital of WIAL and its shareholders, the rest of us might not care much (I’m not much bothered about environmental issues, although my family enjoys the waves at Lyall Bay beach). But the cost-benefit analysis being used to lure ratepayers and taxpayers into funding much of the proposed expansion suggests that there are very large economic benefits to New Zealand which cannot be captured directly by airlines or airports. I think they are wrong, and my next post will explain why. [1] From tables 5.11 and 5.12 in the InterVISTAS report.
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Lyall Bay, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, New Zealand/Aotearoa (OpenStreetMap)
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Wellington SPCA to feature on TV1′s Close Up at 7pm tonight!
- Wellington SPCA
- Be sure to watch Close Up on TV1 at 7pm tonight – Wellington SPCA will be featuring on the show, after reporter Matty McLean visited our Newtown Centre last Thursday to film a story on the flow of animals into/out of our care. In addition Wellington SPCA will also be featured on TV1 news tonight, following today’s successful ‘Rehome SPCA’ rally at Civic Square.
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Newtown, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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CWC 22 Eden Park and Semi-Final tickets back on sale now
- Basin Reserve Trust
- Tickets for both ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2022 semi-finals and two Eden Park matches on 19 and 20 March are back on sale, giving fans across New Zealand more chances to see the world’s best cricketers. The permitted attendance at matches under the government’s... The post CWC 22 Eden Park and Semi-Final tickets back on sale now appeared first on Wellington Basin Reserve.
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Basin Reserve, Dufferin Street, Mount Victoria, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Zephyr Rovers FC
- Zephyr Rovers FC is a Division 3 indoor football team playing in the Wellington Indoor Sports lunch time competition. In a previous incarnation as Land Rovers we have twice won Division 7 and we aim to be the best indoor football team in Wellington by 30 June 2030.
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Petone FC
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The Free Store
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The Free Store, 211, Willis Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Predator Free Mt Cook Newtown and Berhampore
- We are a backyard trapping community group working towards Predator Free Mt Cook, Newtown, and Berhampore in Wellington, NZ. Contact us for a free rat trap for your place and help to bring native birds back.
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Free online market appraisal of your home
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Classical on Cuba
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Trois On Allen
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Visa Wellington On a Plate
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- restaurants
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St Peters on Willis
- Submitted by tonytw1
- Tagged as:
- religious-groups
St Peter's on Willis Anglican Church, 211, Willis Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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St Andrews on the Terrace Presbyterian Church
- St Andrew's on The Terrace is a progressive Presbyterian congregation in the heart of Wellington. St Andrew's congregation stands at the liberal to radical end of the theological spectrum. We are supportive of theological and biblical scholarship and our ministers have reflected this in their preaching.
- Tagged as:
- crossways
- religious-groups
St Andrew's on the Terrace, 30, The Terrace, Paekākā, Wellington Central, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Gadot - Guard Against Destruction On Te Rae Kai Hau Point
- GADOT is a group of mostly Wellington South Coast residents formed to assist promoting the natural features of the area, and to provide balanced discussion about the future use of the natural resources of the area. The group is currently focussed on protecting Te Rae Kai Hau Point from development, believing that the majority of residents are opposed.
- Tagged as:
- lobby-groups
- marine-education-centre
- wcn-hosted
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Save the Mangaroa Valley
- Submissions must be received by 5pm on Friday 26 November 2004.
- Tagged as:
- lobby-groups
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Ammi Floral Design Ltd
- Poriruas premier florist. Free same day delivery on local orders. We cover all of North Wellington and Kapati.
- Tagged as:
- business
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Car Dealers
- Automarket.com.au is a free car dealership advertising website provides a free car dealership advertising service for new or used car dealers, car yards in Australia. Browse site, register your car dealership and advertise your car for free.
- Tagged as:
- automotive
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Wellington Music Week
- Celebrating and championing the wealth of music in our nation's capital 19-26 October 2003
- Tagged as:
- events
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Paraparaumu Volunteer Fire Brigade
- The Paraparaumu Volunteer Fire Brigade was formed on 26 June 1948 and its inaugural meeting was held in the picture theatre at Paraparaumu and at that time was commanded by a Superintendent.
- Tagged as:
- emergency-services
- paraparaumu
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Andrew Duncan - Wellington's Northern Suburbs Real Estate Specialist
- Are you looking to buy or sell property in Wellington's Northern Suburbs? Check out this website for a number of useful resources like free home evaluations, free email updates of new listings, free recent sales info, and much more.
- Tagged as:
- estate-agents
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The Performance Arcade
- Founded in 2011, The Performance Arcade is a free, award-winning festival of live art, music and performance on the Wellington Waterfront.
- Submitted by tonytw1
- Tagged as:
- events
- waterfront
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Sea Cat Ferries
- 2day.com - Free domain name registration and name parking
- Tagged as:
- ferry
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Smart Newtown
- Free Community Based Computing. Welcome to Smart Newtown, where residents of Newtown and the wider Wellington community can learn computer skills, use computers and access the Internet for free.
- Tagged as:
- community-groups
- newtown
- wcn-hosted
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Regional Wines & Spirits
- Wine, beer and spirits, large organic range. Free advice, wine education and instore tastings. Functions, glass hire, free delivery in CBD, online shop or bricks & mortar. NZ wide and International delivery.
- Tagged as:
- retail
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YWCA of Wellington & Hutt Valley
- The YWCA of Wellington and Hutt Valley focuses on providing education, training and support. We offer most services free, and have a particular emphasis on helping women on low incomes, young women, and those women with least access to resources
- Tagged as:
- womens
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