'''Porirua''' [http://poriruacity.com] is a city in the Wellington urban area at the south end of the North Island of New Zealand. The central business district is about 20km north of Wellington. Population about 50,000, and mean household income fourth-highest among cities and districts in New Zealand. The central business district is near the southern boundary, south-west of the less picturesque of the two landlocked arms of the Porirua Harbour.
Get in
By car
From Wellington or Petone, take State Highway 1 up the Ngauranga Gorge and glide down the motorway to the Porirua offramp. The alternative route (compulsory for cyclists) from Johnsonville follows Middleton Road then goes through Tawa.
From Wairarapa and most of the Hutt Valley, take State Highway 58 over the Haywards Hill to Pauatahanui; then
*go straight ahead at the roundabout to go to most parts of the city (or turn right for the most northerly suburbs).
**The quick way to the CBD is to follow the State highway along the south shore of the Pauatahanui Inlet to State Highway 1 at the occasionally congested Paremata Roundabout and turn left to drive south-west to the Porirua offramp;
**To take a little longer but see more housing and lakes close up, turn left just past the roundabout to go through Whitby and eastern suburbs.
From Manawatu, Horowhenua, or Kapiti Coast, follow the signs that say "Porirua" and/or "Wellington" and you will be in Porirua's northern suburbs 10-15 minutes after leaving Paekakariki: first is Pukerua Bay, where [http://lotr.wikia.com/wiki/Peter_Jackson Peter Jackson] first made movies and where poets Alistair and Meg Campbell live; next is Plimmerton, about which Denis Glover wrote a poem.
By train
Catch a suburban unit on the Paraparaumu line from Wellington railway station: about $5 to Porirua, $6 to Paremata or Plimmerton (but discounts from 9am to 3pm). Units leave about every half hour. There are express units at peak times, so check the stations that the unit stops at before boarding. All stop at Porirua, but not all go further, and for some the next stop is Plimmerton.
Or from Paraparaumu or Paekakariki stations in the north, not quite as frequent.
At Porirua the main shopping centre is just across the stream from the main railway station, and buses depart for numerous suburbs. Other stations are Kenepuru in the south (within walking distance of the Kenepuru Hospital and parts of Linden), then north from the city centre in order Paremata (where buses leave for Whitby), Mana, Plimmerton, Pukerua Bay, and Muri.
Suburban trains carry bicycles (in the compartment at the south end of each pair of units) for an extra adult fare. Wheelchair travel is OK, with train crew happy to get the ramp in place and help you in and out (also at the south end of each pair of units).
By bus
Interprovincial buses generally stop at Plimmerton, Paremata, and central Porirua. Regular services link Porirua with Wellington's northern suburbs from Johnsonville (a suburban train terminus) to Tawa/Linden. There are no direct local buses to Wellington, however service N6 runs to Porirua and Plimmerton from central Wellington on Friday and Saturday nights at 1am, 2am and 3am. The one-way fare is $10
Get around
Local buses service the suburbs from the Porirua and Paremata railway stations, and there is a city centre circular service for much of the day.
See
'''Colonial Knob''', to the west, may get snow in winter but at other times is a rewarding few hours' walk for great views of Cook Strait and beyond.
'''Pauatahanui Inlet''', with its eastern end a wildlife sanctuary having one of the highest densities of copepods in the world.
'''Battle Hill Farm Park''' is a regional park combining farming with public recreation. See the site of one of the "Hutt Valley Campaign" skirmishes of 1846.
The '''New Zealand Police Museum''' at '''The Royal New Zealand Police College''' campus, Papakowhai Road, Papakowhai, Porirua. Take the Aotea Lagoon/Papakowhai (Whitford Brown) highway exit from State Highway 1, about 2 km north of Porirua (on the right travelling north) or 1 km south of the Paremata roundabout (on the left travelling south). Turn left at the the foot of the hill into Papakowhai Road and look out for the signs. Opening hours: Wednesday to Sunday, 10 am to 4 pm (or by appointment). Admission Charges: adults $5, children $3, family group $10 Phone: +64 4 238 3141, fax: +64 4 237 0129 http://www.police.govt.nz/service/museum/
Do
Visit '''Pataka''', the museum and art gallery that shares an entrance with the Public Library. See the Japanese Garden (contributed by sister city Nishio). Check one of the North Island's best genealogical collections at the library.
'''Takapuwahia Marae''' is the headquarters of the Ngati Toa tribe, who immigrated from the Waikato in the 1820s under Te Rauparaha; across the harbour, see the small historic reserve in Plimmerton where the Government captured him in 1846, and which seems to be in better condition than the ruins of the stone fort that was built in the same year at "Parramatta" (now the Ngatitoa Domain) but dismembered by an earthquake very soon after.
Enjoy '''Plimmerton Beach''' (one minute from the railway station) and maybe watch yet another future world champion windsurfer or boardsailor beating the breezes. One of the city's oldest settlements, dating from the nineteenth century when Plimmer and others pushed the Wellington and Manawatu Railway through.
Admire '''Gear Homestead''' in Okowai, originally built for a meat magnate, now the home of a pottery group and highly sought after for wedding receptions.
Learn
Fast-growing tertiary institution, '''Whitireia Polytechnic''', has headquarters just north of central business district and several campuses in other cities.
Buy
A major attraction of central Porirua is its shops and mall, with the 12-storey Wrightson Building (linking with New Zealand's earliest pastoral service companies) overlooking most. Saturday morning early-birds may pick up fresh cheap produce at the central city open-air market.
Eat
Closest shop to the Porirua Railway Station is a supermarket, open till 11pm. Buy something and sit in the adjacent mall to eat it or be tempted by the Foodcourt in the mall. Cheaper supermarkets are 5 minutes' walk to the north. New Zealand's first appearance of certain world-famous Golden Arches was in a disused recreation building in Porirua, where the business continues to thrive, but a well-known Colonel arrived first and is still finger-lickin'.
Then there's Plimmerton's great range of eateries or takeaways (one with "Taj" in its name, one with a photo of the Acropolis, one with Italian origins) close to the beach; most open in weekends but a couple take Monday off.
Rural Pauatahanui has a popular restaurant right next to the wildlife refuge, so you can talk to the occasional blue heron or pukeko on the lawn while finishing that wine.
Drink
No problem. But few if any drinking fountains, so if you want plain water a public toilet handbasin will have to do (do so at your own risk).
Sleep
You cannot taste all the city's delights in one day, so a motel or the beachfront award-winning '''Moana Lodge World Traveller Accommodation''' (20 min walk from Plimmerton railway station) may appeal, or one of several bed-and-breakfast establishments.
Get out
The Kapiti Coast, north up State Highway 1, or via the Paekakariki Hill road from Pauatahanui, has several good beaches. Paekakariki Hill offers an excellent view and a hang-gliding ridge.