Rotorua

New Zealand

Oct 9, 2023 - 16:25
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Rotorua Museum of Art and History, in the former government bathhouse, Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand.

Rotorua, city (“district”), north-central North Island, New Zealand. It lies at the southwestern end of Lake Rotorua, for which it is named, between the Bay of Plenty to the northeast and Lake Taupo to the southwest. Founded in the early 1870s, it was constituted a special town district in 1881 (amended 1883), a borough in 1922, and a city in 1962.

Wai-O-Tapu geothermal area, Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand.

Geysers at Wai-O-Tapu, an active geothermal area, Rotorua, New Zealand.

Rotorua is situated on the northeastern part of the Volcanic Plateau in the heart of the geothermal belt of North Island, and it is the centre of a remarkable array of hot springs, boiling mud pools, and spouting geysers. Notable are two areas south of the city centre: Waimangu, which was formed by the eruption of Mount Tarawera southeast of the city in 1886; and Wai-O-Tapu, featuring the Lady Knox Geyser, which erupts daily. Those and other geothermal features—along with a spa that offers a selection of mineral-water pools—long have made Rotorua a popular tourist destination. Other attractions include the Rotorua Museum of Art and History in the former government bathhouse on the lakeshore and its adjacent gardens and the remains of Te Wairoa, a village near Mount Tarawera that was buried in the 1886 eruption and is now preserved as a museum.

Māori meetinghouse, New ZealandMāori meetinghouse, New Zealand

Maori carving at Rotorua, New Zealand.

The Rotorua region long has been one of the principal bases of Maori culture and traditions in the country, and Maori still constitute a large minority of the city and regional population. A major institution preserving and promoting Maori culture is the government-operated New Zealand Maori Arts and Crafts Institute (Te Puia). The village of Whakarewarewa, situated in a geothermal area, offers demonstrations to visitors of how the Maori traditionally used the thermal waters in everyday life, and the Ohinemutu area, on the shore of Lake Rotorua, has several historic buildings, including a traditional Maori meetinghouse.

Rotorua has remained the chief resort and convention centre of the region. The city is linked to Auckland and Wellington by road and has air connections with those and other major cities in New Zealand and with Sydney, Australia. Although tourism constitutes the major component of the local economy, the city also has expanded as the commercial focus of a livestock and dairy farming area that has undergone intensive land development since the 1970s. Other local industries provide concrete and building products, prefabricated metal structures, machinery and engineering goods, and beer. There are extensive tree plantations, begun in the 1920s, which supply large sawmills and pulp and paper plants. Scion, founded at Rotorua in 1947 as the Forest Research Institute, is a Crown Research Institute operated by the government to coordinate research on forest products and other biological material. There is a branch of the Royal Society of New Zealand in the city. Pop. (2006) 53,766; (2010 est.) 55,900.

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