Manukau City
Manukau City was a territorial authority district in Auckland, New Zealand, that was governed by the Manukau City Council. The area is sometimes referred to as "South Auckland", although this term never possessed official recognition and does not encompass areas such as East Auckland, which was within the city boundary. It was a relatively young city, both in terms of legal status and large-scale settlement – though in June 2010, it was the third largest in New Zealand, and the fastest growing. In the same year, the entire Auckland Region was amalgamated under a single city authority, Auckland Council.
The name Manukau, originating from the Manukau Harbour west of the city, is of Māori origin, and means "wading birds", although it has been suggested that the original name of the harbour was Mānuka, meaning a marker post with which an early chief is said to have claimed the area.
History
Manukau City was formed by the amalgamation of Manukau County and Manurewa Borough in 1965. The city expanded in a 1989 New Zealand-wide re-organisation of local government, absorbing Papatoetoe City and Howick Borough, but losing some land to the newly formed Papakura District. On 1 November 2010, Manukau City Council was abolished, and the governed area was amalgamated into the Manukau, Howick, Manurewa-Papakura, and Franklin wards of the new Auckland "super city".Geography
The Manukau City area is concentrated immediately to the south of the Otahuhu isthmus, the narrowest connection between Auckland City and the Northland region and the rest of the North Island. At its narrowest, between the Otahuhu Creek arm of the Tamaki River in the east and the Mangere Inlet to the west, the isthmus is only some 1500 metres across.The area to the south of the isthmus contains the heart of Manukau, sprawled on either side of state highways 1 and 20, the latter of which approaches from the west after crossing Mangere Bridge. The area known as Manukau Central is located close to the junction of these two highways, some 20 kilometres southeast of the centre of Auckland city.
Considerable rural and semi-rural land to the east of Manukau Central was within the city council district. This extended towards the Hunua Ranges close to the Firth of Thames, and took in such communities as Clevedon and Maraetai.
Beyond Manukau City to the south is Papakura and the Franklin District, which are less urban, but still part of the Auckland Region, and to some extent regarded as an integral part of Auckland's urban area.
Auckland Airport is located in Mangere, in the west of Manukau, close to the waters of the Manukau Harbour. Manukau City includes the theme park Rainbow's End, and one of the oldest shopping malls in the country, now called Westfield Manukau City.
Transport
In 2009, work started on the Manukau Branch passenger railway line from the North Island Main Trunk at Puhinui. The branch line opened on 15 April 2012 with Manukau railway station as the terminus for Eastern Line services. The Manukau Institute of Technology university campus building is built over the top of the station, which serves the Manukau city centre. On 7 April 2018, a 23-bay bus station was opened on a lot adjacent to the train station to create a transport hub serving most of the southern Auckland Region.Population
For some years before the 1989 re-organisation of local government, Manukau City had the highest population of any city or district in the country.Like most of the rest of the region, Manukau is ethnically diverse, and is home to many peoples, especially Māori and members of Polynesian ethnicities, with a recent concentration of Asians in and near Howick. It is densely populated by New Zealand standards, despite having very few apartments.
As of the late 2000s, slightly less than 50% of the city's population identifies as European, with 17% as Māori, 27% as Pacific, and 15% as Asian, with the balance made up of other groups.
Schools
Wards and populated places
Manukau City was divided into seven wards; each of them consisting of the following suburbs, towns, localities, settlements and communities:Botany-Clevedon Ward
- Ardmore
- Whitford
- Alfriston
- Tuscany Estates
- Brookby
- Orere Point
- Chapel Downs
- Clevedon
- Beachlands
- Dannemora
- Maraetai
- Botany Downs
- Kawakawa Bay
- North Park
- Somerville
- Greenmeadows
- Howick
- Eastern Beach
- Highland Park
- Meadowlands
- Mellons Bay
- Cockle Bay
- Shelly Park
- Airport Oaks
- Mangere Bridge
- Māngere East
- Māngere
- Middlemore
- Favona
- Manurewa
- Manurewa East
- Clendon
- Wiri
- Manukau*
- Manukau Heights
- Weymouth
- Waimahia Landing
- Wattle Cove
- Wattle Downs
- Silkwood Heights
- The Gardens
- Totara Heights
- Randwick Park
- Redoubt Park
- Heron Point
- Murphy's Heights
- Mahia Park
- Hill Park
- Goodwood Heights
- Porchester Park
- Settlers Cove
Pakuranga Ward
- Pakuranga
- Pakuranga Heights
- Half Moon Bay
- Bucklands Beach
- Papatoetoe
- Puhinui
Prominent people
- Len Brown, former Mayor, and former Mayor of Auckland
- Jim Anderton, former city councillor, who rose to be the country's Deputy Prime Minister
- Sir Barry Curtis, former long-serving Mayor, from 1983 to 2007
- David Lange, former Prime Minister of New Zealand and Member of Parliament for Mangere
- Award-winning rapper and former member of The Deceptikonz, Savage
Local government
Manukau City had an elected Youth Council which primarily acted as an advisory committee and advocate for youth in the city.
Sister cities
- Utsunomiya, Tochigi, Japan