Key features of the landscape plan:
- Planting of lower growing native species to support established plants
- Inclusion of more native trees, surrounded by low-level planting to provide shade for people and wildlife
- Enhancing the regeneration of natural wetland resulting in improvements to water quality, the ecology of the area, and the biodiversity of the stream
- Building shared paths, bridges, and boardwalks giving cyclists and walkers’ better access to the reserve and improving links to the surrounding community
- Creating seating and planting shady trees for people to rest and enjoy the space
- Installing signage to share stories cultural significance with local iwi and hapū
- Educating visitors about the role of a stormwater reserve and ecology of the area
May 2022 - Media release - Te Ara o Wairākei Planting to Go Ahead
How did we come up with this plan?
Riparian planting (planting on the water edge) of this stormwater corridor is taking place as part of a national policy driving improved quality of fresh water in New Zealand.
Te Ara o Wairākei landscape plan was developed after meetings with project partners, local iwi Waitaha and Ngā Pōtiki, resident representatives, and people who regularly use the reserve.
The revised planting plan reflects feedback from residents and mana whenua while still aligning with Bay of Plenty Regional Council Landscape and Cultural Management Plans.
What’s happening now?
The planting is taking place in stages and is scheduled to be completed in 2025.
- Area 1 - Pacific View Road to Domain Road
- Area 2 - Domain Road to Parton Road
- Area 3 - Palm Beach West
- Area 4 - Mandalay Key to Golden Sands Drive
- Area 5 - Golden Sands Drive to Te Tumu
Planting in Areas 4 and 5 commenced during the 2023 winter season. Planting will continue during the winter of 2024 and 2025.
You will have noticed the planting of a variety of native wetland riparian species including grasses, reeds and sedges. You may also have noticed the natural regenerative regrowth of grasses amongst the new planting. Several species of wetland birds have already been observed including mallard ducks, white faced herons, blag shags and scaup.
Further works in Area 1 are continuing to balance ecological improvements with stormwater flows through the area.
Culvert upgrades are underway along the channel as per our resource consent to ensure adequate flow during peak rain events. These include upgrades at Longview Drive, Evans Road and Palm Beach Boulevard.
What’s next?
Planting finished for the season in August 2023, with native riparian species as well as some native specimen trees such as Puka, Pohutukawa and Pūriri. At this stage 15,000 plants will have been planted. We look forward to seeing further improvements in the bird life and reductions in pest populations as planting continues. Eventually, you can also expect to see new signage and amenities to complement the renewed landscape.
When will it be completed?
Stage 1 of the Landscape Plan is due to be completed at the end of 2025.
History of Te Ara O Wairākei
Long time Pāpāmoa residents might remember this waterway was once known as the Pāpāmoa Main Drain. In 2004 the original name of the stream, Wairākei, was reinstated and in recognition, more recently, the reserve was named Te Ara O Wairākei - the path of the Wairākei.
The stormwater function of the corridor has a history that pre-dates residential development by many decades and has been maintained by successive Boards and Council organisations.
Until 1910, the Wairākei Stream headwaters flowed down from Pāpāmoa Hills and Otawa. The headwaters merged with the dune wetlands of Omanu and Pāpāmoa, west of Domain Road. The Omanu and Pāpāmoa wetlands (low lying swamps between dune ridges, still visible today on undeveloped land) extended for kilometres between Omanu and the Kaituna River. The Wairākei Stream flowed east towards the Kaituna River, before turning west again and flowing out to sea at the Taylor Reserve estuary.
The Wairākei was a tidal river and navigable, with people travelling by waka to and from pā in the vast wetlands and dune plains. The Wairākei river was fringed with raupo and manuka and contained an abundance of fish, which could be seen from the banks in the clear water.
By the early 1800s flax became a commodity for trade. Land was drained and large-scale planting and harvesting supplied at least two flax mills near the Wairākei Stream and Kaituna River. Later that century swampland was converted to farmland.
From the late 1800s, the wetlands were managed by Land Drainage Boards. When the East Coast Main Trunk railway line was constructed in 1910, the Wairākei Stream’s headwaters were diverted and the stream mouth silted up causing flooding. To drain the wetlands and lower groundwater, Harrisons Cut artificial outlet was excavated in the early 1940s. By the 1960s, the Wairākei Stream estuary was filled in and a second artificial outlet installed (Grant Place weir) to continue to maintain lower groundwater levels and drain stormwater.