Harbourside transformation at working port in Tahiti worth considering as option to copy.
When casting around for a model for Auckland's waterfront development, the authorities would do well to consider the transformation of the harbourside of Papeete, the capital town of Tahiti.
Like Auckland, the capital of French Polynesia is a working South Pacific port, but that's about as far as the resemblance goes. Over the past decade the waterfront of central Papeete has been turned into a melange of paved walkway, tropical gardens, boat moorings, a cruise ship dock, craft stalls, cafes, restaurants, art and cultural performance centres and a Visitor Bureau.
Papeete's main waterfront vehicle thoroughfare, Boulevard Pomare, is the equivalent of Auckland's Quay Street in that it separates the harbour from downtown Papeete's shops. Traffic on the boulevard is also dense. However, alongside Boulevard Pomare, from Place To'a Ta at one end to Place Vaiete and the Moorea ferry terminal at the other, comprises a delightful, 3km harbourside promenade. It's easy to disregard the boulevard traffic because the views of the adjacent harbour and its waterborne activities - yachts, outrigger canoe teams, ferries and cruise ships - are a constant source of interest.
By day the restaurants at the Place To'a Ta are busy as the locals enjoy their protracted, French-style, alfresco midday meals. But it's at night at the other end of the waterfront, at Place Vaiete, a broad paved and planted area, that the harbourside bursts into life. Here, from early evening onwards, Papeete's dozens of family-run roulottes trundle down on to the waterfront and open up for business.