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Aro Valley

Aro Valley
SIF-AroValley-1-Cropped.jpg
Houses along Aro St
Aro Valley is located in New Zealand Wellington
Aro Valley
Aro Valley
Basic information
Local authority Wellington City
Electoral ward Lambton Ward
Land area 126 ha (0.49 sq mi)
Coordinates 41°17′43″S 174°46′3″E / 41.29528°S 174.76750°E / -41.29528; 174.76750Coordinates: 41°17′43″S 174°46′3″E / 41.29528°S 174.76750°E / -41.29528; 174.76750
Population 3,621(2013)
Surrounds
North Kelburn
East Te Aro
South Brooklyn
West Mitchelltown, Taitville, Mount Pleasant

The Aro Valley forms a small inner-city suburb of Wellington in New Zealand. It takes its name from the Stream which originally flowed where modern Epuni Street is. The stream's Maori name was originally Wai-Mapihi, but it was commonly called Te Aro due to it running through the Te Aro flat.

The Aro Valley is 126 hectares running between the hills of Brooklyn to the south Kelburn to the north, with the area of Karori to the west and the city centre of Te Aro to the east.

Much of Wellington consists of the remnants of an old peneplain, a flat expanse that rose from the sea about 20 million years ago. This land was heavily dissected by watercourses from that time and today the tops of the hills around Wellington indicate the general height of that eroded peneplain. During this time massive faults appeared that are still active today. To the immediate west of Aro Valley is the Wellington Fault running north-east along the foot of the Tinakori Hills and beyond.

A series of splinter faults branch off from the Wellington Fault. Activity along these faults over millions of years caused tilting of the land to create valleys, including Aro Valley, south-east of the main fault. Aro Valley, and its tributary valleys, are well sheltered from the wind and have soil enriched by past alluvial deposits. The valley walls are steep in places and house sites are correspondingly uneven, in typical Wellington fashion.

The Valley comprises part of the bed of the Wai-Mapihi Stream. Aro Street runs through the whole valley, from Willis Street in the east to Raroa Road in the west; major side-streets include Devon Street, Epuni Street, Adams Terrace, Mitchelltown's Holloway Road and Taitville's Norway Street.

A prominent feature of Aro Valley is Aro Park, which is the site of the former Matauranga School. The Park was formerly known as Seed's Hill after an early (1864) resident, Mr. Wm. Seed. The Park has been extended and landscaped in recent years and is a focus for community recreation, especially on summer nights and weekends; the Aro Valley Community Centre stands on part of the park.

Aro Valley is almost surrounded by parkland the Polhill Gully Recreation Reserve to the Northwest and Southwest the Tenera Reserve & Central Park to the Southeast. Polhill Reserve on the western end of Aro Street, which is meant to have been named for an early Cornish (Cornwall in the UK) surveyor. In the mid-1840s a garrison of British troops was stationed on the upper ridges of this Gully, to protect the southern flank of the settlement from hostile Maori. The force grew to some 200 officers and men by 1845/6. By 1870 British troops had left the country, to encourage colonial 'self reliance'. By the 1960s Victoria university’s were considering Polhill Gully and Holloway Road as potential sites for its own expansion and began buying houses but by the 1970s the plans were being actively challenged by a new generation of Mitchelltown residents who felt the houses and the neighbourhood were worth saving, and by others who envisaged the restoration of Polhill Gully for wildlife habitat and recreational use. Discussion, disagreement and protest went on for years, and the university finally abandoned its plans in the early 1980s. Polhill Gully became a City Council Recreation Reserve in 1989. Today the reserve is an attractive amenity used by more than a thousand cyclists, runners and walkers a week. It is also frequented by birds, including—thanks to the proximity of the Zealandia wildlife sanctuary—many tui and kaka, and the occasional bellbird, grey warbler, North Island robin and saddleback.


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Wikipedia

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