Maori Hill

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Māori Hill is located in New Zealand Dunedin
Māori Hill
Māori Hill
Location of Māori Hill within Dunedin's main urban area
Marinoto, part of the complex, is one of Māori hill's major landmarks.

Māori Hill is a residential suburb of the New Zealand city of Dunedin. It is located at the northern end of the ridge which runs in a crescent around the central city's western edge, 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) to the northwest of the city centre, immediately above and within the Town Belt.[1] It is connected to Dunedin North, which lies to the east, via Drivers Road, the suburbs of Roslyn and Kaikorai to the southwest via Highgate, and the suburb of Wakari to the northwest via Balmacewen Road. Māori Hill's 2001 population was 1,956.

In the northeast of the suburb lies the recreational ground of Prospect Park, and this part of Māori Hill is also often known by this name. From Prospect Park, views across the lower Leith Valley can be obtained, as the park sits close to the edge of cliffs which rise above the broad canyon at Woodhaugh. A steep walking track, the Bullock Track, links the two suburbs.

Māori Hill is regarded as one of the city's wealthier and more exclusive suburbs, and contains many fine houses, especially in the maze of winding streets which run through the bush-clad slopes of the Town Belt. These houses include the historic manor Olveston, which has been owned by the city and open to the public since the 1960s. Unlike neighbouring hill suburbs like Roslyn, Māori Hill was not served by a cable car, possibly underlying its greater degree of exclusivity.

Notable features of Māori Hill include the , home of the , in the suburb's northwest. This is one of New Zealand's oldest and finest courses. A state integrated Presbyterian boys' secondary school, John McGlashan College, is located close to the golf course. To the southeast of the course lies a recreation ground, Bishopscourt, and nearby is Balmacewen Intermediate School. As with Prospect Park, this area is often referred to as a separate suburb, Balmacewen, named after the residence of early settler John McGlashan, whose wife's maiden name was McEwen.[2] To the northwest of the golf course is an area of scenic reserve which surrounds the Ross Creek Reservoir in Glenleith. Several popular walking tracks lead down to the reservoir from Cannington Road, which marks the northern edge of Māori Hill.

Other schools in Māori Hill include , a state primary school. On the Roslyn/Kaikorai/Māori Hill border is Columba College, a state integrated Presbyterian girls secondary school, with a coeducational Junior (primary) school.

Māori Hill contains the city's largest private hospitals. Formerly known as the Mater Misericordiae, it is now the , and contains as part of its complex the Marinoto Clinic. This is located on Newington Avenue, one of several streets which wind down into the Town Belt from Highgate. The hospital is built around Marinoto, the former home of the Sargood family and now one of the hospital's major buildings.

Further reading[]

  • Smallfield, Jane; Heenan, Brian (2006). Above the Belt: A History of the Suburb of Maori Hill. Maori Hill History Charitable Trust. ISBN 9781877139987.

References[]

Coordinates: 45°51′31″S 170°30′01″E / 45.8585°S 170.5003°E / -45.8585; 170.5003

  1. ^ Taonga, New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu. "Northern Dunedin". teara.govt.nz. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  2. ^ James Herries Beattie (2006). Otago Place Names: Names Bestowed by European Explorers and Settlers in Otago and Southland. Christchurch: Cadsonbury. ISBN 1-877151-59-9. Wikidata Q106913704.
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