Английская Википедия:Aotea Lagoon
Aotea Lagoon is an artificial lagoon surrounded by a Шаблон:Convert public park in the Papakowhai suburb of Porirua, North Island, New Zealand. Aotea and two nearby lagoons were created when major transport links were realigned from the natural coastline to land reclaimed from Porirua Harbour.
Hydrology
The lagoon is Шаблон:Convert of seawater, connected to Porirua Harbour by a culvert under the model windmill. Stormwater drains empty into the lagoon: two in the east bank and a third in the south-east. Swimming is prohibited because the lagoon's "...Шаблон:Nbspwater body receives limited flushing and aerationШаблон:Nbsp..." and "...Шаблон:Nbsplittle can be done to improve water quality without extensive engineering works."[1]
History
The North Island Main Trunk railway and State Highway 1 used to run round three bays between Porirua and Paremata. In the early 1960s, the railway was realigned to a causeway built between promontories at the mouth of Porirua Stream, Gear Homestead, present-day Thurso Grove and Brora Crescent. Cut off from the sea, the bays became lagoons.[2]
To realign the highway, inland of the railway, the lagoons were partly filled in with material from the Ministry of Works and Development's nearby earthworks. The Ministry, Porirua City Council, Project Employment Programme and local service clubs turned the area around the middle lagoon into a public aquatic park that opened as Aotea Lagoon in 1980. Originally leased from the Crown, the park was taken over by the City Council in 1994.[2]
In 2021, State Highway 1 running along the western edge of all three lagoons was redesignated State Highway 59.
Facilities
The park's centrepiece is a path around the lagoon. It also has lawns north, east and south-west of the lagoon, some with barbecues. Other facilities, clockwise from the north to south-west, are Butterfly Walkway Porirua, adventure and toddlers's playgrounds, splash pad, island reached by bridge, Pétanque court and a rose garden.[3]
The Lions Club run a ¼ scale ridable miniature railway with an Шаблон:Convert track. The train runs Sunday afternoon, weather and maintenance permitting, from a station south of the lagoon.[4]
Most people visit Aotea Lagoon for exercise or relaxation while children enjoy the playgrounds, riding bicycles and the train.[5]
References
External links
- Aotea Lagoon on Porirua City website
- Английская Википедия
- Страницы с неработающими файловыми ссылками
- Lagoons of New Zealand
- Porirua
- Landforms of the Wellington Region
- Parks in the Wellington Region
- Страницы, где используется шаблон "Навигационная таблица/Телепорт"
- Страницы с телепортом
- Википедия
- Статья из Википедии
- Статья из Английской Википедии