11 Best Sights in City Center and Parnell, Auckland

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We've compiled the best of the best in City Center and Parnell - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki

City Center Fodor's Choice

Adjacent to Albert Park, the gallery has some 15,000 items dating from the 12th century but also shows innovative and challenging contemporary art that draws big crowds. Its modernist addition has breathed life and light into a structure built in the 1880s. The soaring glass, wood, and stone addition, which some say looks like stylized trees, both complements and contrasts with the formal, château-like main gallery. A courtyard and fountain space at the front is home to ever-changing works. In the museum, historic portraits of Māori chiefs by well-known New Zealand painters C.F. Goldie and Gottfried Lindauer offer an ethnocentric view of people once seen as fiercely martial. Goldie often used the same subject repeatedly—odd, considering his desire to document what he considered a dying race. New Zealand artists Frances Hodgkins, Doris Lusk, and Colin McCahon are also represented here, and there are shows and performances. The gallery has made a tilt to offering more international exhibitions, so check the website for the latest show. Free collection tours are given at 11:30 and 1:30. The hip, busy café offers views of the central city from its deck. The gift shop offers a range of books, original artworks, and keepsakes.

Auckland War Memorial Museum

Parnell Fodor's Choice

The Māori artifact collection here is one of the largest in the world, housed in a Greek Revival building in one of the city's finest parks, Auckland Domain, with views to match. Must-sees include a fine example of a pātaka (storehouse), a fixture in Māori villages, and Te Toki a Tapiri, a superb Māori waka (canoe). Made of a single log and measuring 85 feet long, it could carry 100 warriors, and its figurehead shows tremendous carving. To learn more about Māori culture, attend one of the performances, held twice a day, that demonstrate Māori song, dance, weaponry, and the haka (a ceremonial dance adopted by the All Blacks rugby team as an intimidating pregame warm-up). The museum also holds an exceptional collection of Pacific artifacts and hosts high-quality visiting or issue-specific exhibitions; it also has two cafés. On Anzac Day (April 25), thousands gather in front of the museum in a dawn service to recognize the gallantry of the country's servicemen and -women.

One Tree Hill

Parnell Fodor's Choice

The largest of Auckland's extinct volcanoes and one of the city's best lookout points, One Tree Hill, or Maungakiekie, was the site of three Māori (fortifications). It had a single pine tree on its summit, but that was attacked by activists who saw it as a symbol of colonialism, and in 2000 it was taken down. Sir John Logan Campbell, the European founding father of the city, is buried on the summit. There is fantastic walking and running in the surrounding acreage known as Cornwall Park, with avenues of oaks, a kauri plantation, an old olive grove, and magnificent seasonal flower plantings. Or just take a mat and read under an old tree. Free electric barbecue sites are also available.  Because the park is a working farm of sheep and cattle, you'll need to be wary of cows with their calves along the paths. There's also a cricket club with old-style seating, where you can watch a game in summer, and a pavilion that sells refreshments.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Parnell Village

Parnell Fodor's Choice

The lovely Victorian wooden villas along the upper slope of Parnell Road have been transformed into antiques shops, designer boutiques, cafés, and restaurants. Parnell Village is the creation of developer Les Harvey, who saw the potential of the old, rundown shops and houses and almost single-handedly snatched them from the jaws of the bulldozers in the early 1960s by buying them, renovating them, and leasing them out. Today, this village of trim pink-and-white wooden facades is one of the most delightful parts of the city. At night, the area's restaurants and bars attract Auckland's well-heeled set.

SEA LIFE Kelly Tarlton's

Fodor's Choice

The harborside marine park—the creation of New Zealand's most celebrated undersea explorer and treasure hunter—offers a fish's-eye view of the sea. A transparent tunnel, 120 yards long, makes a bewitching circuit past moray eels, lobsters, sharks, and stingrays. You can also have an encounter with king and gentoo penguins and their keepers in their icy abode, and take home photos to prove it.  The penguin attraction is popular and limited to four people per session, so book ahead.

Albert Park

City Center

These 15 acres of formal gardens contain a mix of established and seasonal plantings, a fountain, and statue- and sculpture-studded lawns. They are a favorite of Aucklanders, who pour out of nearby office buildings and two adjacent universities to eat lunch and lounge under trees on sunny days. Good cafés at both universities serve well-priced takeout food and coffee. The park is built on the site of an 1840s–50s garrison, which kept settlers apart from neighboring Māori tribes. On the park's east side, behind Auckland University's general library, are remnants of stone walls with rifle slits. The park is home to festivals throughout the summer, and the Auckland Art Gallery is on its edge.

Bounded by Wellesley St. W, Kitchener St., Waterloo Quad, Auckland, 1010, New Zealand
Sight Details
Free

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Auckland Domain

Parnell

Saturday cricketers, Sunday picnickers, and any-day runners are some of the Aucklanders who enjoy this rolling, 340-acre park—not to mention loads of walkers, often with dogs. Running trails range from easy to challenging, and 10-km (6-mile) runs occur throughout the year, organized by the YMCA. The Domain contains some magnificent sculpture as well as the domed Wintergardens (open daily 10–4), two conservatories that house tropical and seasonally displayed hothouse plants. In summer, watch the local paper for free weekend-evening concerts, which usually include opera and fireworks. There are superb views of the city and harbor from the top of the park. Take a bottle of wine and a basket of goodies and join the locals—up to 300,000 per show.  While the Domain is safe during the day, it is not a place to be at night unless you're attending a concert with a big crowd.

Entrances at Stanley St., Park Rd., Carlton Gore Rd., and Maunsell Rd., Auckland, 1052, New Zealand
Sight Details
Free

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Ferry Building

City Center

This magnificent 1912 Edwardian building is the anchor for the busy ferry terminal where boats depart for the Hauraki Gulf Islands as well as suburban routes. Its interior now houses bars and restaurants.

New Zealand Maritime Museum

City Center

New Zealand's rich seafaring history is on display at this marina-as-museum on Auckland Harbour. The collection includes Pacific and Māori oceangoing canoes as well as European sailing boats. There are detailed exhibits on early whaling and a superb collection of heritage yachts and ship models, including KZ1, the 133-foot racing sloop built for the America's Cup challenge in 1988. A scow conducts short harbor trips twice a day on Tuesday, Thursday, and weekends, and there are several wharf-side eateries.

Sky Tower

City Center

The first place many Aucklanders take visiting friends to give them a view of the city is this 1,082-foot beacon. Up at the main observation level, glass floor panels let you look past your feet to the street hundreds of yards below. Adults step gingerly onto the glass, while kids delight in jumping up and down on it. Through glass panels in the floor of the elevator you can see the counterweight of the Sky Jump, a controlled leap off the 630-foot observation deck that provides an adrenaline rush.

Victoria and Federal Sts., Auckland, 1010, New Zealand
09-912–6000
Sight Details
NZ$37

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St. Mary's in Holy Trinity

Parnell

Early Anglican missionary Bishop Selwyn built this Gothic Revival wooden church in 1886. The craftsmanship inside the kauri church is remarkable, down to the hand-finished columns. One of the carpenters left his trademark, an owl, sitting in the beams to the right of the pulpit. If you stand in the pulpit and clasp the lectern, you'll feel something lumpy under your left hand—a mouse, the trademark of another craftsman who made the lectern, the so-called Mouse Man of Kilburn. St. Mary's originally stood on the other side of Parnell Road, and in 1982 the entire structure was moved across the street to be next to the new church, the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity.

446 Parnell Rd., Auckland, 1052, New Zealand
Sight Details
Free

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