Waikato Herald

Virtual tour of Kiwiana Town

O¯ torohanga launches a new tourism tool

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Anew and engaging way to check out the icons, heroes and traditions that have formed our national identity — and even get a little bit nostalgic — has been launched in Ō torohanga, which styles itself as the official Kiwiana Town of New Zealand.

For two decades, the Waikato town has entertaine­d and fascinated New Zealanders and overseas visitors with its displays of Kiwiana, including the Sir Ed Hillary Walkway, where just about everything quintessen­tially Kiwi is on display.

Hamilton & Waikato Tourism (HWT) has partnered with Ō torohanga District Council and the Ō torohanga Community Board to create a virtual tour of the Sir Ed Hillary Walkway for people who are not able to visit in person, or those who want to get a taste before they go.

HWT chief executive Nicola Greenwell says the virtual tour of the 26 interactiv­e exhibits in the walkway is the first of several digital experience­s being developed in the Waikato.

“Like other destinatio­ns around the world, we see great value in leveraging technology to share our experience­s with the global online community and create additional interest in the mighty Waikato.

“Travel and photograph­y have always been closely linked, whether it’s a selfie posted on social media, or maybe a TV travel show or magazine — this virtual experience is designed to intrigue the viewer, to make them want to come to visit the real thing in Ō torohanga,” she says.

The virtual tour gives viewers a taste of Kiwiana and showcases Ō torohanga to those who may never be able to travel to New Zealand, or are not able to visit in person, making the Sir Ed Hillary Walkway globally accessible to all.

Greenwell says the Sir Ed Hillary Walkway on the main street is just one of the Kiwiana displays around the town of Ō torohanga for visitors to explore — those others include corrugated iron kiwi sculptures, and even Kiwiana-themed public toilets.

“There’s everything Kiwi there, from the Buzzy Bee kids’ toy, pavlova, gumboots, and school milk to the haka, honouring the fact that New Zealand gave women the right to vote in 1893 — the first country in the world to do so — and more.

“Ō torohanga is the perfect place for Kiwis to feel sentimenta­l, and for our overseas manuhiri/visitors [to learn] about the quintessen­tial characters and things that are intrinsic to our way of life.”

The Sir Ed Walkway is one of Waikato’s free attraction­s, and it is always open.

 ?? Photo / Hamilton and Waikato Tourism ?? Kiwiana capital of New Zealand is Otorohanga ¯ which proudly celebrates many of the things dad was probably brought up with — from gumboots and No 8 wire to pavlovas and the buzzy bee.
Photo / Hamilton and Waikato Tourism Kiwiana capital of New Zealand is Otorohanga ¯ which proudly celebrates many of the things dad was probably brought up with — from gumboots and No 8 wire to pavlovas and the buzzy bee.
 ?? Photo / Hamilton and Waikato Tourism ?? Everything Kiwi can be seen in the Sir Edmund Hillary Walkway. The interactiv­e display is free, always open and provides fascinatin­g insights into our popular culture.
Photo / Hamilton and Waikato Tourism Everything Kiwi can be seen in the Sir Edmund Hillary Walkway. The interactiv­e display is free, always open and provides fascinatin­g insights into our popular culture.

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