Everything about Western Springs totally explained
Western Springs is a residential
suburb and
park in the west of the city of
Auckland in the north of
New Zealand. It is located four kilometres to the west of the city centre, situated to the north of
State Highway 16.
The suburb is dominated by the large park (featuring a lake with a variety of birdlife), within which are situated
Auckland Zoo,
Western Springs Stadium and M.O.T.A.T. (the
Museum of Transport and Technology). The park is the location of the annual
Pasifika Festival, one of Auckland's most popular public events.
Across the road from the Zoo is the school of
Western Springs College, with a student population of around 1050.
History
Māori valued
Waiorea (Western Springs) for the clean, clear spring water and the
eels that lived in the stream. After colonisation, the area was part of a block of land farmed by a
Scottish settler called William Motions.
The area was called Western Springs to differentiate it from the Springs in the
Auckland Domain to the east of town. Rain falling on the slopes of the far off volcanoes of
Three Kings,
Mount Albert and
Mount Eden runs underground for several miles through the lava flows. It emerges from the ground at a constant rate and is well filtered through miles of scoria rocks, this is the source of the water that feeds the Lake at Western Springs.
As the city of
Auckland grew it found that well water wasn't sufficient. In the 1860s a pipe from the Domain Springs was constructed but in 1874 the city bought William Motions' mill and 120 acres (486,000 m²) of land including the spring. A brick pumphouse was built and fitted with a steam engine. It pumped water up to the new reservoirs constructed on
Mount Eden and at the corner of
Ponsonby Road and
Karangahape Road from where it was gravity fed down to the city.
The cost of maintaining the pump was high however and by the end of the 19th century, Auckland's growth required a much greater and more reliable source of fresh water. This coincided with pressure to safeguard the remaining native forests of the
Waitakere Ranges to the west of the city. Auckland City purchased land for large reservoirs in this fairly secluded area thus safeguarding both the water quality and the flora & fauna of the area. The height of the reservoirs above sealevel meant pumping was kept to a minimium as the water could be gravity fed down to town.
This left the Western Springs area with no specific use. The fairly rough and
uneven land was unsuitable for housing as apart from the Lake itself it contained large stretches of boggy ground. Unable to divest itself of the land the Auckland City Council was at a loss what to do with it. Some light industry and market gardens were developed along Great North Road and Chinamans hill [so-calledbecause of the Chinese market gardeners] and an attempt was made to convert the boggy land around the lake into a park. However over the next thirty years or so most of the land deteriorated as it became overgrown and used for illegal rubbish dumping.
From the early 1920s onwards various developments took place; The Auckland City Council Zoological Gardens were established to the north of the lake. To the east a camping ground was set up (During
World War II it was converted into a camp for American servicemen, and later became the site of the
Western Springs Stadium). To the south of the lake was established a golf club (Chamberlain Park ) and to the west, land was set aside for Primary, Intermediate and Secondary Schools to service the growing suburbs of
Westmere and
Point Chevalier.
In 1953 a plan was put forward to use the area around the lake as an amusement park with a scenic railway, fairground and rollercoasters etc but this was soon discovered to be beyond the financial capabilities of the Auckland City Council.
In 1962
MOTAT (The
Museum of Transport and Technology) was established to the south east of the lake, the old pumphouse forming its centrepiece.
The council used some of the more usable land to construct council housing in the 1920s and in the 1930s sold much of the land previously used for market gardens to the government for state housing. To the north of the Zoo was an area of mangrove swamp where the Western Springs creek reached the sea just by the
Meola Reef Lava outcrop. This was utilised as a
landfill dump and hence reclaimed during the 1950s and 1960s and developed as playing fields and an additional area for the MOTAT Airfield; the
Sir Keith Park Memorial Airfield (Motat 2) and is also the site of the Westpoint Performing Arts Center. In the 2000s the landfill was found to be emitting methane gas and was subsequently capped with clay.
After the war the population of the surrounding suburbs grew markedly and it became obvious that the untidy state of Western Springs was a definite embarrassment. As a wilderness of bogs full of rubbish, rats and mosquitos, it wasn't only unattractive but a potential health hazard. In
1961 the
Auckland City Council embarked on developing the
park in earnest. The lake, which had become completely choked by introduced waterweed was reclaimed and the overgrown landscape was carefully cleared of weeds and rubbish.
By the 1980s major landscaping work had transformed the area from an eyesore to being one of Auckland's most attractive parks. New plantings were introduced to complement the mature trees from the 19th century and careful planting of the islands of the lake and the wetlands surrounding it have made it a successful breeding grounds for a large variety of waterfowl both native and exotic. Artworks by several New Zealand sculptors were sited in the park during 1980s & 1990s.
Further Information
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