Everything about Waiheke Island totally explained
Waiheke Island is in the
Hauraki Gulf of
New Zealand and is located about 17.7 km (about 35 minutes by ferry) from
Auckland. The second-largest (after
Great Barrier Island) of all the gulf islands, is also the most populated and the most accessible due to regular ferry and air services. Waiheke is the third most populated island in New Zealand, after the
North and
South Islands.
Geography
Overview
The island is 19.3 km long from west to east and varies in width from 0.64 km to 9.65 km, with an area of 92 km². The coastline is 133.5 km including 40 km of beaches. The port of
Matiatia at the western end of the island is 17.7 km from Auckland and the eastern end is 21.4 km from
Coromandel. The climate is slightly warmer than Auckland with less humidity and rain and more sunshine hours.
Demographics
Population
Waiheke has a usually resident population of 7,689 people (2006 Census) with most of the population living close to the western end of the island, or near the isthmus between
Huruhi Bay and
Oneroa Bay which, at its narrowest, is only 600 metres wide. The settlements of
Oneroa and
Blackpool are the furthest west, followed by
Palm Beach,
Surfdale, and
Ostend. Further east lies
Onetangi, which is located on the northern coast on the wide
Onetangi Bay. To the south of this on the opposing coast is
Whakanewha Regional Park,
Whakanewha and
Omiha, or Rocky Bay. Much of the eastern half of the island is privately owned farmland and vineyards.
Waiheke Island is a popular holiday spot, and during the main Summer season, especially around Christmas and Easter, the population on the island increases substantially due to the number of holiday homes being rented out, corporate functions and dance parties at vineyards and restaurants, the Wine Festival and the Jazz Festival and weekend trippers from around the country and the world. It is safe to say the population increases significantly, rents go up, almost all homes and
baches are full and a festive atmosphere exists.
Social composition
Waiheke Island has a higher proportion of 'Europeans' (92.8%) compared to 65.7% for Auckland City and 80.1% for New Zealand as a whole (2001 Census). The proportion of Pacific Islanders and Asians is much lower than in the rest of the city.
Socially the island is highly diverse, with the creative sector, such as artists, musicians, scientists, writers and poets, actors and eccentrics strongly represented. New Zealand council rates are based on land and building valuations, which take into account potential value for redevelopment even if the owners live on the property and have no intention to sell or redevelop.
The income distribution at the time of the 2001 Census was found to show a higher proportion of lower income groups and a lower proportion of higher income groups, compared to the whole of Auckland City. This is partially due to a higher number of pensioners and single parent families who are usually on fixed incomes and poorer. In 2001, the median income for those older than 15 was $15,600 compared to $23,500 in 2006. Waiheke is now edging towards the national median of $24,400, with the median income having increased 51 per cent over five years. The increase in wealth on Waiheke is also reflected in the number of families earning more than $100,000 per year, which has more than doubled since 2001.
Māori relations
Race relations are unusually supportive, even for New Zealand standards. The local
marae wasn't ancestral
Māori land held in Māori title but belonged to the Waiheke County Council. Its citizens, both
Pākehā and Māori, got together, arranged for a long-term lease of council owned land, and built the marae. Also one of the earliest Māori land claims was driven by Waiheke citizens, who at the time didn't know who the
Tangata Whenua Māori were for the island. A detailed narrative of this history is available on the
Waitangi Tribunal website in PDF form.
Government and infrastructure
Waiheke Island is part of the territorial authority of
Auckland City. From 1970 until its amalgamation with Auckland City in 1989, it was administered by the Waiheke County Council. It now has a locally elected community board with limited, mainly representational powers, in line with other neighbourhoods in Auckland City. There is one member on the City Council representing all the inhabited Hauraki Gulf Islands, for example Waiheke, Great Barrier and Rakino.
The island has less infrastructure than mainland Auckland City. The roads are mainly narrow and in many places unsealed and unlit, especially on the eastern half of the island.
The Waiheke Bus Company (owned by Fullers / Stagecoach / Infratil) services most inhabited parts of the island, linking to the ferry sailings from Matiatia.
Each house must maintain its own water supply, most collecting rainwater in cisterns, and must install a septic tank and septic field to handle sewerage. This is a requirement in every building consent.
The community established a charitable trust which bid on the City's contract for solid waste disposal. After winning the bid, it was implemented with such success that the recycling centre soon had to be expanded to handle the volumes.
The island has a lively press, with three weekly newspapers vying for attention: the long-established Gulf News, the Waiheke Week and the Waiheke Marketplace. It also has its own radio station, Beach FM, broadcasting on 99.4 FM and 107 FM.
There is a privately operated airport,
Waiheke Island Aerodrome, near
Onetangi Bay.
Significant events
Stony Batter WWII fortifications
World War II, three gun emplacements were built on the eastern edge of Waiheke to protect Allied shipping in
Waitemata Harbour, in the fear that Japanese ships might reach all the way to New Zealand. This mirrored developments at
North Head and
Rangitoto Island. The guns were never fired in anger. The empty emplacements and the extensive tunnels below them can now be visited (on those days when a volunteer organisation opens them to public access).
Amalgamation with Auckland City
In 1989, the former Waiheke County Council was forcibly amalgamated with Auckland City Council as part of Local Government restructuring of that year. Pundits predicted a stormy relationship.
In 1990 the Waiheke Community Board formally requested the right to deamalgamate from the City. A 'Deamalgamation Committee' was established by Council to facilitate the Board's wish. However, this proved not to be to the liking of most of the new Auckland citizenry. In 1991, the city responded to a campaign run by a pro-union group, the Waiheke Island Residents & Ratepayers Association (Inc) by holding a democratic referendum. The deamalgamation proposal sponsored by the Community Board was defeated.
Nuclear and GE free zone
Waiheke Island was the first community in New Zealand to vote for a
nuclear free zone and this action is said to have contributed to the national decision to become nuclear-free under
David Lange's government. This assertion was made by a prior community board member, and requires further confirmation.
In 1999 Waiheke's community board voted Waiheke as a '
genetic engineering free zone', but this is a matter of principle rather than fact, as only national government controls exist over genetically engineered foods and grains.
Matiatia redevelopment
The Gateway to Waiheke Island where the primary pedestrian ferry lands over 1 million passengers per year is a valley and harbour called
Matiatia. In 2000 it was purchased by three investors in a company called Waitemata Infrastructure Ltd (WIL). In 2002 WIL proposed to change the Operative District Plan rules for their land to build a major shopping and hotel complex with 29,000 m² of gross floor area on buildable land of approximately 3 hectares. This united the residents of the island in opposition. Over 1,500 adult residents of the island (out of perhaps 3,000) joined together in an incorporated society, the
Community and People of Waiheke Island (CAPOW), to oppose the private plan change in court.
In 2004, they won an interlocutory judgement in which the environment court ruled that
Auckland City Council had erred in the rules, and the current rules limited controlled development to 5,000 m² in what was called the Visitor Facility Precinct. In 2005, CAPOW won an interim judgement by the court which reduced the proposed redevelopment to about 1/3rd of what the investors had originally sought.
This set the stage for confidential negotiations between Auckland's mayor
Dick Hubbard and the investors, who on
31 August 2005 (now known as 'Matiatia Day' on the island) sold 100% of the stock in WIL to the city for $12.5 million. The unanimous vote on
30 June 2005 of the City Council to approve the purchase was said to have come about because of the unity of the people of Waiheke Island. The court case finally was concluded with permitted development set at 10,000 m2 of mixed use gross floor development. The Court also found Auckland City Council and WIL liable for costs in relationship to the interlocutory judgement. Since WIL was now owned by Council, it had to write a cheque for to CAPOW for $18,000, representing 75% of CAPOW's costs on that matter. This final cheque allowed CAPOW to pay all its debts and balance its books.
The Council organised a design competition in 2006 to find a suitable development plan and project for the Matiatia gateway. The competition winner's design (scheme 201) is available for comment on the Council website. It has already attracted much criticism for the lack of car parking close to the ferry terminal, the transport hub function used by all islanders regularly and almost daily by around 850 commuters to Auckland.
Foot and mouth disease
In
May 2005, in a suspected
capping stunt, a letter was sent to the New Zealand Prime Minister claiming that
foot and mouth disease had been released on Waiheke Island and would be released elsewhere unless money was paid and tax reforms made. A full agricultural exotic disease response was initiated. No livestock were allowed to enter or leave the island. Stock on Waiheke Island was tested every 48 hours for symptoms of the virus, which would devastate New Zealand's agricultural exports. After three weeks of testing, no infected animals were detected and the response staff were stood down.
Wine
Waiheke's climate has proven to be well suited to growing
Bordeaux wine-type grapes, though some
Chardonnay and
Sauvignon Blanc varieties are also considered to be good. The local wines are relatively pricey due to the limited size of many vineyards.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Waiheke Island'.
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