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Delve into Fenton Park
The district Fenton Park of Rotorua in Rotorua District (Bay of Plenty) is a subburb in New Zealand about 230 mi north of Wellington, the country's capital town.
If you need a hotel, we compiled a list of available hotels close to the map centre further down the page.
While being here, you might want to pay a visit to some of the following locations: Tauranga, Whakatane, Opotiki, Hamilton and Napier. To further explore this place, just scroll down and browse the available info.
Local weather forecast
Todays Local Weather Conditions & Forecast: 20°C / 68 °F
Morning Temperature | 6°C / 43 °F |
Evening Temperature | 16°C / 60 °F |
Night Temperature | 8°C / 46 °F |
Chance of rainfall | 0% |
Air Humidity | 26% |
Air Pressure | 1026 hPa |
Wind Speed | Light breeze with 5 km/h (3 mph) from South-West |
Cloud Conditions | Clear sky, covering 1% of sky |
General Conditions | Sky is clear |
Tuesday, 19th of November 2024
23°C (73 °F)
11°C (52 °F)
Few clouds, gentle breeze.
Wednesday, 20th of November 2024
16°C (61 °F)
11°C (51 °F)
Light rain, gentle breeze, overcast clouds.
Thursday, 21st of November 2024
17°C (63 °F)
8°C (47 °F)
Light rain, gentle breeze, broken clouds.
Hotels and Places to Stay
Aywon Motel
Arista Capri Motel
Brylin Motel
Birchwood Spa Motel
Emerald Spa Motor Inn
Tuscany Villas Rotorua - Heritage Collection
DISTINCTION ROTORUA HOTEL AND CONFERENCE
Geneva Motor Lodge
Silver Fern Accommodation & Spa
RYDGES ROTORUA
Videos from this area
These are videos related to the place based on their proximity to this place.
Challenge Trail, Rotorua, New Zealand
Could there be a faster way down Challenge Trail, other than following Lisa 'turbo' Horlor? When this track opened only a few months prior to us arriving, there were queues up the top just...
Rotorua, New Zealand
The town is called Sulphur City, and you´ll smell why when you´re there... Rotorua is located in a geothermical very active area. There are a lot of places, where hot water bubbles out of...
Boulderdash Trail, Rotorua, New Zealand
Bryce Shapley, all limbs and raw speed on his dialled Specialized Enduro 29 led Chris Southwood and Mick Ross through his favourite trail with ball-tearing pace. On a track like this, you...
Whakarewarewa Living Thermal Village, Rotorua
Whakarewarewa (short for Te Whakarewarewatanga O Te Ope Taua A Wahiao) is home to the people of Tuhourangi Ngati Wahiao. Welcoming visitors since the early 1800's, the villagers' homes are...
Distinction Rotorua Hotel - Your home of adventure
Distinction Rotorua Hotel is your home of adventure. Located adjacent to the Whakarewarewa Forest; Rotorua's world class mountain biking adventure playground, the 4 star hotel offers 132 modern...
Beautiful NZ Rotorua (Part 8)
Rotorua (from Māori: Te Rotorua-nui-a-Kahumatamomoe, "The second great lake of Kahumatamomoe") is a city on the southern shores of the lake of the same name, in the Bay of Plenty area of the...
D-DAY08 @ ADRENALIN PAINTBALL ROTORUA
Adrenalin Paintball ROTORUA, New Zealand Compilation video of D-DAY 2008. visit www.adrenalinpaintball.co.nz.
Mountain Bike Rotorua, NZ - Huckleberry Hound
Just a quick clip of our warm up run down Huckleberry Hound at The Redwoods in Rotovegas. Me in front riding a 2014 Giant Trance and Nick with the GoPro on a 2015 Giant Glory.
Rydges Rotorua, New Zealand
Rydges Rotorua offers guests this city's most spacious and luxurious accommodation.
Videos provided by Youtube are under the copyright of their owners.
Attractions and noteworthy things
Distances are based on the centre of the city/town and sightseeing location. This list contains brief abstracts about monuments, holiday activities, national parcs, museums, organisations and more from the area as well as interesting facts about the region itself. Where available, you'll find the corresponding homepage. Otherwise the related wikipedia article.
Rotorua Caldera
The Rotorua Caldera is one of several large volcanoes located in the Taupo Volcanic Zone on the North Island of New Zealand. Its last major eruption was about 240,000 years ago. At this time, the Mamaku ignimbrite, covering about 4000 square km, was deposited. After the eruption, the magma chamber underneath the volcano collapsed. The circular depression left behind is the current caldera, about 22 km in diameter and now occupied by Lake Rotorua.
Lake Tikitapu
Lake Tikitapu or Blue Lake, is the smallest of four small lakes lying between Lake Rotorua and Lake Tarawera in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. The others are Lake Rotokakahi (Green Lake), Lake Okareka, and Lake Okataina. Along with the others, Lake Tikitapu lies within a volcanic caldera formed within the last 300,000 years. The blue colour of the lake can be attributed to rhyolite and pumice on the lake bed.
Mokoia Island
Mokoia Island is located in Lake Rotorua in New Zealand. It has an area of 1.35 square kilometres. The island is a rhyolite lava dome, rising to 180 metres above the lake surface. It was formed after the Rotorua caldera collapsed and rhyolitic magma was pushed through the cracks. One of the cracks was below where Mokoia island is today. The foreshores of the island have geothermal springs with hot spring water forming the Hinemoa pool, known to locals as Waikimihia.
Te Wairoa
Te Wairoa, also known as The Buried Village is located close to the shore of Lake Tarawera in New Zealand's North Island. It was a Māori and European settlement where visitors would stay on their way to visit the Pink and White Terraces. The village was destroyed by the eruption of the volcano Mount Tarawera on June 10, 1886. 120 people died in the eruption, many of them in other villages closer to the volcano.
Lake Rotokakahi
Lake Rotokakahi or Green Lake, is one of four small lakes lying between Lake Rotorua and Lake Tarawera in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. The others are Lake Tikitapu (Blue Lake), Lake Okareka, and Lake Okataina. All lie within the Okataina caldera, along its western edge. Named for its abundance of kakahi (freshwater mussels), it flows to Lake Tarawera via the Te Wairoa waterfalls. From the air the lake looks emerald green due to its shallow, sandy bottom.
Lake Okareka
Lake Rotorua
Lake Rotorua is the second largest lake in the North Island of New Zealand by surface area, and covers 79.8km. With a mean depth of only 10 metres it is considerably smaller than nearby Lake Tarawera in terms of volume of water. It is located in the Bay of Plenty region. The city of Rotorua is sited on its southern shore, and the town of Ngongotaha is at the western edge of the lake. The lake was formed from the crater of a large volcano in the Taupo Volcanic Zone.
Ngongotaha
Ngongotaha is a town on the western shores of Lake Rotorua in New Zealand's North Island. It is located 10 kilometers northwest of Rotorua city, and is often regarded as an outer suburb of the larger centre. However, most locals would be adamant that Ngongotaha is an independent village in its own right. Its population is 4000. Its name is derived from a legend of Ihenga, the famous Māori explorer.
Whakarewarewa
Whakarewarewa (reduced version of Te Whakarewarewatanga O Te Ope Taua A Wahiao, meaning The gathering place for the war parties of Wahiao, often abbreviated to Whaka by locals) is a geothermal area within Rotorua city in the Taupo Volcanic Zone of New Zealand. This was the site of the Māori fortress of Te Puia, first occupied around 1325, and known as an impenetrable stronghold never taken in battle.
Rotorua International Stadium
Rotorua International Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium located on Devon Street West in Westbrook suburb of Rotorua, New Zealand. It is currently used mostly for rugby union and rugby league matches, being one of two home stadiums for the Bay of Plenty Rugby Union. In addition, a softball field is sited at the northern end. The stadium has a capacity of 34,000 people. The stadium was originally built in 1911, and renovated several times since.
Hamurana Spring
Hamurana Spring is the deepest natural fresh water spring on the North Island of New Zealand. Located to the north east of Lake Rotorua, the spring emerges from a rocky area within a Department of Conservation reserve. The spring is 920 feet (280 m) above sea level and is approximately 15 metres (50 ft) deep. It produces an estimated 4 million litres of crystal clear water per hour at a fairly constant temperature of 10 degrees Celsius.
Western Heights High School
Western Heights High School (commonly referred to as Heights) is the largest co-ed school in Rotorua, New Zealand. WHHS offers both Cambridge International Examinations as well as NCEA. Within Rotorua, WHHS has had top scholarship and CIE results. In 2005, WHHS was the 7th school in NCEA for all of New Zealand. 2005 - 14 students achieved NCEA Scholarship including three year 12 students for English, and one year 11 student for Maori.
Rotorua Boys' High School
Rotorua Boys' High School is a state school educating boys from Year 9 to Year 13. It is situated just outside of the Rotorua CBD at the intersection of Old Taupo Road and Pukuatua Street in Rotorua, New Zealand. It is notable for considerable sporting success, having won on several occasions the New Zealand and World secondary school championships in rugby and the world secondary school golf championship in consecutive years.
John Paul College, Rotorua
John Paul College is a secondary school in Rotorua, New Zealand. It caters for year 7 to 13 boys and girls and offers a Catholic education to its students. It was opened in 1987 and combined two existing schools, Edmund Rice College (for boys) and MacKillop College (for girls). The school was founded to serve the Catholic families of Rotorua. John Paul College incorporates strong Catholic values, being named after the late Pope John Paul II.
Kaharoa
Kaharoa is a rural area of New Zealand approximately 20 km from Rotorua and 45 km from Tauranga on the North Island. At its highest point the area is approx. 500m above sea level, with some areas able to see towards the coastline of the eastern Bay of Plenty. In the main the area is used for farming, formerly dry stock, but increasingly this is being converted to dairy.
Energy Events Centre
The Energy Events Centre is a sports complex in Rotorua, New Zealand. The centre can hold up to 3,500 people and was finished in February 2007. The main court is the current alternate home for the Waikato/Bay of Plenty Magic netball team in the ANZ Championship. The franchise uses Mystery Creek Events Centre in Hamilton as their main home venue, with Queen Elizabeth Youth Centre in Tauranga as another alternate home.
Rotorua Girls' High School
Rotorua Girls' High School is a state school educating girls from Year 9 to Year 13, located in Rotorua, New Zealand.
Rotorua Seventh-day Adventist School
Rotorua Seventh-day Adventist School is a primary school in Glenholme suburb of Rotorua, New Zealand. It is owned by the Seventh-day Adventist church.
Pohutu Geyser
Pohutu Geyser is a geyser in the Whakarewarewa Thermal Valley, Rotorua. Pohutu means "big splash" or "explosion. " The main geyser of the area, it spurts up to twenty times per day and can reach heights of up to 30 metres (100 feet) It is possible to access Pohutu Geyser via the New Zealand Māori Arts and Crafts Institute.
Tikitere
Tikitere, also known as "Hell's Gate", is Rotorua's most active geothermal area on State Highway 30, between Lake Rotorua and Lake Rotoiti in the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. It includes many geothermal features including steaming lakes, mudpools, fumaroles, a mud volcano and Kakahi, the largest hot waterfall in the Southern Hemisphere.
Shweeb
Shweeb is a proposed personal rapid transit network based on human-powered monorail cars. The project prototype was originally designed and implemented in Rotorua, New Zealand as a leisure attraction. {{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:-38.0902|176.1952|region:NZ_scale:10000|||||| | |name= }}. In September, 2010, a proposal for development of an expanded network was chosen to receive funding from Google as part of project 10.
Rotorua Museum
The Rotorua Museum of Art and History is a local museum and art gallery located in Rotorua, Bay of Plenty, North Island, New Zealand. The museum is housed in the old Bath House building at the spa town of Rotorua, located in the Government Gardens. Rotorua Museum opened in the south wing of the Bath House in 1969; Rotorua Art Gallery opened in the north wing in 1977. In 1988, the museum and gallery combined to form the Rotorua Museum of Art and History.
Government Gardens
Government Gardens (originally known as Paepaekumana) is a public park, partly laid out as gardens, located by Lake Rotorua in central Rotorua, Bay of Plenty, North Island, New Zealand.
Smallbone Park
Smallbone Park is a cricket ground in Rotorua, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. The first recorded match held on the ground came in 1921 when Rotorua played the touring Australians. The ground later held its first first-class match during the 1968/69 Plunket Shield when Northern Districts played Otago. Between the 1968/69 and 1995/96 season's, seventeen first-class matches were held there, the last of which saw Northern Districts play Central Districts in the 1995/96 Shell Trophy.
Ohinemutu
Ohinemutu is a suburb in Rotorua, New Zealand. It was originally a Māori village. In the 2006 Census, there were 282 people living in Ohinemutu.