Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gisborne is a city in northeastern New Zealand and the largest settlement in the Gisborne District (or Gisborne Region). It has a population of 38,800 (June 2024). [ 2 ] Gisborne District Council has its headquarters in the central city.
Gisborne District or the Gisborne Region [5] (Māori: Te Tairāwhiti or Te Tai Rāwhiti) is a local government area of northeastern New Zealand. It is governed by Gisborne District Council, a unitary authority (with the combined powers of a district and regional council). It is named after its largest settlement, the city of Gisborne.
This informal usage is jealously guarded. The district government of the town of Gisborne, for example, adamantly described itself as the first "city" in the world to see the new millennium. Gisborne is governed by a "district council", though its status as a city is not generally disputed in New Zealand. Similarly, there is no "city council ...
English: Location of region Gisborne in New Zealand. Date: 5 October 2011: Source: Own work . This SVG map includes elements that have been taken or adapted from this ...
2004–05 New Zealand Football Championship; 2005–06 New Zealand Football Championship; 2011 Rugby World Cup; 2015 Cricket World Cup; Auckland Airport; Banks Peninsula; Beaumont, New Zealand; Berwick, New Zealand; Berwick Forest, New Zealand; Birdlings Flat; Blackpool, New Zealand; Blenheim, New Zealand; Bream Head; Cape Campbell; Cape ...
Mangapapa is a suburb of the New Zealand city of Gisborne. It is located in the north of the city. Whataupoko lies to the southeast and Te Hapara to the south, separated from Mangapapa by the Taruheru River. Gisborne Hospital is located in Mangapapa, as was the former Cook Hospital. [3] The population was estimated to be 5,160 in June 2024. [2]
Wharekahika or Hicks Bay (officially Wharekahika / Hicks Bay) is a bay and coastal area in the Gisborne District of the North Island of New Zealand. It is situated 150 km east of Ōpōtiki and 186 km north of Gisborne city, along State Highway 35 between Potaka and Te Araroa.
Before the 2023 census, Gisborne Central had a larger boundary, covering 1.59 km 2 (0.61 sq mi). [1] Using that boundary, Gisborne Central had a population of 300 at the 2018 New Zealand census, a decrease of 6 people (−2.0%) since the 2013 census, and an increase of 33 people (12.4%) since the 2006 census.