Zealandia – The Ecosanctuary
Adresse
53 Waiapu Road, Karori, Wellington 6012, New Zealand
Pays
new zealand
Site web
https://visitzealandia.comHoraires d'ouverture
Open daily 9:00am–5:00pm (gate); Night tours by booking
Popularité
**🏆 The World's First Urban Ecosanctuary** - **225-hectare** predator-free haven minutes from Wellington CBD - Global model for urban wildlife conservation – replicated worldwide - **Wild kiwi encounters** on nightly guided tours - Over **40 threatened species** now thriving and naturally recolonising Wellington - Tuatara encountered **freely roaming** on walkways throughout the sanctuary
The World's First Urban Ecosanctuary
Zealandia is one of the world's most ambitious and successful urban wildlife conservation projects, located just minutes from Wellington city centre in the Karori valley. Enclosed by a 8.6-kilometre predator-proof fence, Zealandia has created a 225-hectare safe haven where New Zealand's native species can thrive free from introduced predators like rats, stoats, and possums — many for the first time in hundreds of years.
🥝 Wildlife Encounters
Species Now Thriving Inside Zealandia:
- Tuatara – Over 100 tuatara roam freely throughout the sanctuary; visitors regularly encounter them on paths
- Kākā – Forest parrots now so numerous they are recolonising Wellington's suburbs naturally
- Tīeke (Saddleback) – Once nearly extinct, now thriving in the sanctuary
- Hihi (Stitchbird) – Exquisitely beautiful honeyeater, found only in NZ
- Little Blue Penguin – Wild penguins nest in the sanctuary
- Wētā – Giant native insects in abundance
- Native ducks, eels, and freshwater fish – Crystal-clear streams throughout
🌙 Night Tours
Zealandia's famous guided night tours offer the chance to spot kiwi in the wild — a bucket-list New Zealand experience. Kiwi are regularly encountered on these tours as they forage naturally through the sanctuary after dark.
🏆 Conservation Achievement
Zealandia has become a global model for urban conservation, with its predator-proof fence technology and species recovery methods now being applied in projects worldwide. It has directly enabled the natural rewilding of Wellington's suburbs — kākā, tūī, and kererū are now common in Wellington gardens thanks to the sanctuary.