Barry Curtis Park is a park named after Barry Curtis in Flat Bush, Manukau City of which the first stage was opened in April 2009.[1] At 94 hectares (230 acres), it is one of New Zealand's largest parks, of a size as has not been established since the Auckland Domain in the 1840s.[2]

Barry Curtis Park
View of Barry Curtis Park pointing towards Ormiston Town Centre
Map
LocationFlat Bush, Auckland
Coordinates36°57′50″S 174°54′34″E / 36.963889°S 174.909333°E / -36.963889; 174.909333
Area94 hectares (230 acres)
Operated byAuckland Council
OpenApril 2009
StatusOpen
Looking over south over new planting onto the Ormiston Road Bridge, the gateway feature for Flat Bush. The road that the bridge carries over the creek also marks the boundary between the northern and southern halves of the park, with the southern half still unfinished as of 2010.

The park was created from a part of a large parcel of dairy farming land the Manukau City Council bought from the Anglican Church Trust Board, at $2.9 million for 290 hectares (720 acres) total.[1]

The park is the central piece of a 'Green fingers' network of parks that is being established (mostly aligned along around 45 km of streams and creeks draining the Flat Bush catchment). The ecological system involved consultation with groups such as Forest & Bird and the Auckland Regional Council. The water systems also work as stormwater ponds, and have been fitted with fish ladders to ensure connected water habitats.[2]

The park (in the already established section) also includes event spaces[1] and large playgrounds for children, with a multi-sports centre, playing fields to be added in the future. The park is to establish a network of educational trails in addition to the main routes.[2]

The park received an 'Outstanding Award' from the New Zealand Recreation Association,[2] as well as three awards from the New Zealand Institute of Landscape Architects (Gold: Barry Curtis Park Wetland Playground (at Stancombe Road), Silver: Barry Curtis Park Signature Areas design, Silver: Barry Curtis Park Project Management).[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Thompson, Wayne (6 April 2009). "Urban park gets multicultural start". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d Magnusson, Kirsten; New Zealand Recreational Association (January 2010). "Green fingers create award-winning space for Manukau". Local Government New Zealand magazine. pp. 15–16.
  3. ^ "Barry Curtis Park". Council website. Manukau City Council. Archived from the original on 30 March 2010. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
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