Christchurch
Rehua Marae
Web: http://www.rehuamarae.co.nz
79 Springfield Rd,
Richmond,
Christchurch 8014
Google Map – here
Ngā Hau e wha
Web: http://maatawaka.org.nz/nga-hau-e-wha-national-marae/
Ko Aoraki te wharenui.
250 Pages Rd,
Aranui,
Christchurch 8062
Google Map – here
Te Puna Wānaka
6 Coventry Street,
Christchurch Central City,
Christchurch 8011
Google Map – here
Te Whakaruruhau Marae/ Te Whare o Tumuki
290 Ferry Road,
Linwood,
Christchurch.
Was once part of the now-closed Te Waipounamu Maori Girls’ College, and Anglican initiative that was established in 1909 in the old St Alban’s Vicarage in Mill Road, Ohoka. Now used as a Church and renamed .
Okains Bay
Whaakata marae was built on site at Okains Bay , using original materials and taonga from other whare. Most of the new carving were undertaken by master carver John Rua (Ngāi Tūhoe). The interior features whakairo , tukutuku and kowhaiwhai panels.
The floor is a traditional earth floor. The windows and entrance have no glass or door, just some wooden planks that can be moved across.
Maheno Honotapu (Ngāti Porou) of the Taiapa family produced, most of the tukutuku panel work.
The heke came from an old meeting house in Tokomaru Bay, gifted from the Potae whānau.
Also at Okains Bay is Tini Arapata marae. This marae is under Te Rūnanga o Koukourarata. It was named by Aunty Jane Manahi for her mum Tini Arapata Horau.
Ashburton
Hākatere Marae http://hakateremarae.weebly.com/hakatere.html
Rakaia Highway,
Fairton, Ashburton 7772
Google Map here
Timaru
Te Aitarakihi Centre
Ko Whakapiripiri Tuhono A Iwi te whare.
50 Bridge Road
Washdyke
Timaru
(03) 684 7906
(027) 684 7906
admin@teaitarakihi.co.nz
URL: https://teaitarakihi.co.nz/
Mataura
Te Hono o Te Ika a Māui ki Ngāi Tahu Blampied Street, Mataura
Ohai
Te Oruanui on Hastings Street, Ōhai
Dunedin
Araiteuru Marae
24 Shetland St,Wakari,
Dunedin.
PO Box 2224, South Dunedin.
Phone: 03 466 7919
https://sites.google.com/site/araiteuru/
Google Map here
Invercargill
Te Tomairangi Marae
54 eye street
Appleby,
Invercargill
Southland 9812
Ph: 03 214 1076
Hui-a-Rau – Kitchen
Google Map here
Catholic Maori Community of Invercargill Marae.
Te Wharepuni O Anehana
91 Mcivor Road,
Waikiwi,
Invercargill
Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga Invercargill’s Te Wharepuni o Anehana to the New Zealand Heritage List as a Wāhi Tūpuna.
The wharepuni was constructed in 1925 and was one of only three carved whare in the South Island in 1972, and the first whare in Te Wai Pounamu to be given wāhi tūpuna status.
Commissioned by wealthy landowner Sir Robert Anderson in the 1920s as a fashionable ‘Māori house in the garden’ to complement their new stately neo-Georgian home, the carvings – a central part of the wharepuni – were created by master carver Tene Waitere – before being attached to a purpose-built frame.
“Tene Waitere was born in Mangamuka around 1853 and was trained by tohunga whakairo Wero Taroi in the Ngāti Tarāwhai carving style, becoming part of the special Ngāti Tarawhai lineage of carvers whose prolific works had such a significant impact on the Māori tradition of wood carving in New Zealand and overseas,” says James Schuster, one of Tene’s descendants and a carver in his own right.
“Tene Waitere worked on several meeting houses around Taupō and Rotorua along with other expert carvers like Anaha Te Rahui and Neke Kapua. Some of these share very similar whakairo figures to those at Te Wharepuni o Anehana.
“Many meeting houses were used to manaaki visitors to the region – including Hinemihi o te Ao Tawhito at Te Wairoa, which withstood the 1886 Tarawera eruption and sheltered many, including Tene Waitere and his whānau.”
Ngā Hau e Whā
193 Conon Street
Appleby
Invercargill 9812
Ph: 03-218 7773