Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/streets-in-auckland

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Dominion Road

Arterial road in central Auckland, New Zealand

Dominion Road

Arterial road in central Auckland, New Zealand

FieldValue
nameDominion Road
imageOnto Ian McKinnon Drive Flyover I.jpg
image_map
captionThe southern end of Ian McKinnon Drive, where it becomes Dominion Road
length_km7.3
postal_code1024 (north of Balmoral Road)
1041 (south of Balmoral Road)
locationAuckland, New Zealand
direction_aNorth
terminus_aIan McKinnon Drive, New North Road
direction_bSouth
terminus_bHillsborough Road
junction[[File:State Highway 20 NZ.svg20px]] SH 20 Southwestern Motorway
inauguration_date
website

1041 (south of Balmoral Road)

Dominion Road is an arterial road in Auckland, New Zealand, running north–south across most of the Auckland isthmus. It is a major public transport route that carries 50,000 bus passengers each week.

The road, which passes through mostly suburban areas (and several town centres), has a mix of shops.

Many Asian restaurants line the road between Valley Road and Kensington Avenue. A "Dumplings on Dominion" Festival was held in 2020 to celebrate one aspect of Chinese cuisine, with 37 businesses taking part. A sculpture of noodles being pulled by chopsticks from underground was exhibited in two places on Dominion Road between 2015 and 2021.

Route

accessdate=5 January 2011}}</ref>

The road is the longest stretch of straight road on the Auckland isthmus, stretching from the northern part of Mount Eden to the Manukau Harbour.

History

The road was created in the late 1840s by Cornish settler John Walters, who made the path to better connect his farm (at modern-day Bellevue Road) to Eden Terrace in the north. The road was developed in the 1860s, and for much of its early life was known as Mt Roskill Road. The road's name was changed in 1907, to celebrate the proclamation of New Zealand becoming a Dominion. In the 1910s, the road stopped at Landscape Road (then known as Boundary Road), as further to the south, a series of small hills known to early Aucklanders as the Kopjes hindered travel.

The road was extended to the south in the 1920s, and in 1929 the road to the south which met Hillsborough Road, Arkell Road, was renamed as Dominion Road Extension.

Around the late 1920s more than 15,000 people used the road for either travel or commerce.

1960s motorway proposal

Dominion Road was proposed as a new motorway route south from the CBD in the 1960s. In the early 1960s, a flyover was constructed at the intersection of Dominion Road and New North Road, removing many houses and commercial buildings. With the exception of the interchange, this proposal never came to pass. In 2014 a proposal was made to demolish the interchange.

2010s public transport upgrade proposal

In late 2010, a proposed Council upgrade to the road, which was to focus on improving public transport and cycling links (via 24/7 bus lanes and cycle lanes), created substantial public debate. Conflicting views existed on whether the necessary removal of parking (a good part of which was to be reinstated in side roads as extra angle parking) would significantly harm the road, reducing amenity for locals, and endangering the street's shops. Further heavily criticised was the concurrent proposal by the Citizens & Ratepayers-dominated Council to remove the bus lanes and replace them with transit lanes allowing cars.

The proposed upgrade was eventually tabled to be revisited only after the elections creating the first unified Auckland Council. The new Council decided in 2011 to proceed with a less extensive plan that would provide only some extensions and upgrades of bus lanes and cycling facilities, and would retain parking in the bus lanes outside of peak hours, a move that was applauded by some local business owners. Road widening designations, and previous Council land purchases worth about $20 million, that would have allowed for the more extensive works will partially be lifted / sold around 2012, as soon as the extent of the new scheme is known.

Rapid transit plans

In January 2015 Auckland Transport initiated a study of building new rapid transit routes to replace buses on some of its most heavily used bus routes. Dominion Road was one of the six rapid transit routes being studied that had originally been routes on Auckland's old tram network.

Mutton Birds song

Unofficial Plaque marking halfway point along Dominion Road

Dominion Road was mentioned in a 1992 song by The Mutton Birds.

The song's music video suggests that halfway down Dominion Road is the intersection of Peary Road and Dominion Road, and much of the video's footage shows the area between the road's Balmoral shops and Mt. Roskill shops. In 2013 a brass plaque was placed in the footpath by an anonymous artist to mark the halfway point along the road.

Major intersections

Local BoardSuburbkmjctDestinationsNotes
WaitemataEden Terrace0.0Ian McKinnon DriveDominion Road begins
0.2[[File:Australia GE2-3.svg25px]]New North Road (east)Northbound exit and southbound entrance only
Albert–EdenMount Eden0.5[[File:NZ road sign W10-4.svg25px]]View Road
[[File:NZ road sign W10-4.svg25px]]George Street
0.9[[File:NZ road sign W10-4.svg25px]]Valley Road
Walters Road
2.2[[File:NZ road sign W10-4.svg25px]]Balmoral Road (east) – Remuera
Balmoral Road (west) – Western Springs
3.2[[File:NZ road sign W11-4-L.svg25px]]Landscape Road
PuketapapaMount Roskill
4.2[[File:NZ road sign W10-4.svg25px]]Mount Albert Road (east) – Three Kings, Royal Oak
Mount Albert Road (west) – Mount Albert
4.8[[File:New Zealand road sign W11-1.svg25px]]Denbigh Avenue
4.9[[File:NZ road sign W10-4.svg25px]]– Manukau, Airport
5.0[[File:NZ road sign W10-4.svg25px]]– Waitākere, Auckland
6.0[[File:New Zealand road sign W11-1.svg25px]]Richardson Road (east) – Hillsborough
Richardson Road (west) – New Lynn
7.3[[File:New Zealand road sign R2-2.svg25px]]Hillsborough Road (east) – Hillsborough
Hillsborough Road (west) – Lynfield, Blockhouse BayDominion Road ends

References

|archive-date = 20 April 2015 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150420100437/http://www.3news.co.nz/nznews/light-rail-gets-thumbs-up-from-opposition-2015012412#axzz3Pl1koi2S |url-status = dead

References

  1. "Dominion Road 2016". Auckland City Council.
  2. Tan, Lincoln. (12 November 2020). "Dumplings to star at first-ever Dumplings on Dominion Festival". New Zealand Herald.
  3. (1 March 2024). "OnDo". Satellites.
  4. "Dominion Road". Ministry for Culture and Heritage / Te Manatū Taonga.
  5. (1 May 2019). "The History of Mt Eden - The District and its People". Epsom & Eden District Historical Society.
  6. {{cite Q. Q116775081
  7. Mees, Paul. (1 February 2001). "The American Heresy: Half a century of transport planning in Auckland". Presentation to joint conference of New Zealand Geographical Society / Australian Institute of Geographers conference, University of Otago, Dunedin.
  8. {{cite Q. Q117189974
  9. Dearnaley, Mathew. (1 December 2014). "Proposal to clear Auckland flyover for housing". The New Zealand Herald.
  10. (28 July 2011). "The Big D". Aucklander.
  11. Dearnaley, Mathew. (22 December 2010). "Push for bus lanes in centre of road". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  12. Whittaker, Emma. (10 April 2013). "Dominion Rd plaque lauded". Central Leader.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Dominion Road — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report