List of cities in New Zealand
Encyclopedia : L : LI : LIS : List of cities in New Zealand
Usage of the term 'city' in New Zealand
After the local government reforms of 1989, the term "city" began to take on two meanings. Before 1989, a borough council with more than 20,000 people could be proclaimed a city. The boundaries of councils tended to follow the edge of the built-up area, so little distinction was made between the urban area and the local government area.
In 1989 the local government structure was significantly rationalised. The new district and city councils were generally much larger and covered both urban and rural land. Many places that once had a city council were now being administered by a district council.
The word "city" began to be used in a less formal sense to describe major urban areas independent of local body boundaries. This informal usage is jealously guarded. Gisborne, for example, adamantly described itself as the first city in the world to see the new millennium. Gisborne is administered by a district council, but its status as a city is not generally disputed.
City Councils
The populations given are the Statistics New Zealand usually resident population estimates for 30 June 2005. They are listed in order from most northern to southern.
| City Council | Population (2003) | First Proclaimed |
|---|---|---|
| North Shore | 212,200 | 1989 |
| Waitakere | 191,900 | 1989 |
| Auckland | 425,400 | 1871 |
| Manukau | 332,900 | 1965 |
| Hamilton | 131,400 | 1936 |
| Tauranga | 103,800 | 1963 |
| Napier | 56,400 | 1950 |
| Palmerston North | 78,400 | 1930 |
| Porirua | 50,500 | 1965 |
| Upper Hutt | 37,900 | 1966 |
| Lower Hutt | 100,500 | 1941 |
| Wellington | 185,100 | 1870 |
| Nelson | 45,700 | 1874 |
| Christchurch | 347,600 | 1868 |
| Dunedin | 122,400 | 1865 |
| Invercargill | 51,300 | 1991 |
Many cities were reorganised into districts by the Local Government Commission in 1989 under the Local Government Act 1974, for example, Timaru. The most recently proclaimed city is Tauranga, which became a city, for the second time, from 1 March 2004. Another former city is Rotorua. Some present cities, such as Christchurch (1862 and 1868) and Invercargill (1930 and 1991), have been cities more than once.
Under Section 27 of the Local Government Act 2002, a district may become a city by either a reorganisation scheme with the Local Government Commission, or under Section 27(1) it may apply for a change in status under Schedule 3, Clause 7. Either way, the new city must have 'a population of not less than 50,000 persons', be 'predominantly urban' and 'a distinct entity and a major centre of activity within the region' (or regions) which it is encompassed by. Existing cities are grandfathered under Schedule 2, Part 2 of the Act. The only new city council so far under this section is the Tauranga City Council, from 1 March 2004.
Previously, under Section 37L of the Local Government Act 1974, new cities could only be formed from a reorganisation scheme. The same criteria were used. The last city to be constituted under this section was Invercargill, which was re-reorganised into a city in 1991.
In 1991, the Lower Hutt City Council became the Hutt City Council by a special Act of Parliament [link], which specifically did not change the name [link] of its city, Lower Hutt; as a result, the city's coat of arms still refer to a City of Lower Hutt.
Cities during provincialism, 1852 to 1876
During provincialism in New Zealand -- from 1852 until abolition in 1876 -- there was no uniform system of local authorities in New Zealand. There is thus some argument over which of the following cities were the first.
- Christchurch (November 1862, revoked June 1868, both by provincial ordinance and restored October 1868, by Act of Parliament)
- Nelson (1858, by Letters Patent)
- Otago (later Dunedin) (July 1865)
- Christchurch (28 May, 1868)
- Wellington (16 September, 1870)
- Auckland (24 April, 1871)
- Nelson (30 March, 1874)
- Dunedin (4 July, 1865)
Cities, 1877 to 1989
Up to October 1989, the Local Government Commission undertook a major reorganisation of local government. As a result, some cities were reorganised into other cities or changed to districts, and to this day some of these areas are still considered cities by many New Zealanders. This is a list as at circa 1986.
- North Island
- * Whangarei (1964)
- * Auckland
- ** Auckland (1871)
- ** East Coast Bays
- ** Takapuna
- ** Birkenhead
- ** Waitemata (1974)
- ** Mt Albert
- ** Papatoetoe
- ** Manukau (1965)
- ** Papakura
- ** Tamaki
- * Hamilton (1936)
- * New Plymouth (1949)
- * Tauranga (1963)
- * Rotorua (1962, merged into Rotorua District, 1979)
- * Gisborne (1955)
- * Napier (1950)
- * Hastings (1956)
- * Wanganui (1924)
- * Palmerston North (1930)
- * Wellington
- ** Wellington (1870)
- ** Upper Hutt (1966)
- ** Lower Hutt (1941)
- ** Porirua (1965)
- South Island
- * Nelson (1874)
- * Christchurch (1868)
- * Timaru (1948)
- * Dunedin (1865)
- * Invercargill (1930)
See also
- City status in the United Kingdom
- Territorial Authorities of New Zealand
- List of towns in New Zealand
- List of main streets of New Zealand cities
- List of cities in the Cook Islands
- List of cities in Niue
- List of cities in Tokelau
References
- Gordon McLauchlan (Editor), Illustrated Encyclopedia of New Zealand, The, Auckland: David Bateman, 1989 (second edition) (ISBN 1869530071) - confirmation, pre-1989 dates
External links
- [Statistics New Zealand Subnational Population Estimates]
- Tauranga status change, 2003 - specific details
- * [Local Government (Tauranga City Council) Order 2003] (Governor-General's Order-in-Council, 2 October 2003)
- * [Local Government Commission press release] (PDF)
- * [Local Government Commission decision full text] (PDF)
- * Tauranga's city status returns (New Zealand Herald, August 12, 2003)
- [Local Government Online Limited site] - confirmation, post-1989 council names
- [Map]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
