Bangkok Post

Maori hall becomes a hotel as tourists swarm New Zealand

- By Tracy Withers and Matthew Brockett

When their flight home to the United States from Auckland was delayed last month, a group of 53 elderly American tourists was put up in a traditiona­l Maori meeting house for the night because all the city’s hotels were full.

The visitors were welcomed by an elder, given biscuits and tea before being shown to their sleeping quarters — mattresses on the floor of the tennis court-sized hall adorned with Maori wood carvings.

“We were joking with them that it was a bit like being young again at an American holiday camp,” said Jenny Nuku, treasurer of the Maori community centre, called Te Puea Marae. “They all were laughing.”

While the alternativ­e accommodat­ion made for a unique cultural experience, it illustrate­s how New Zealand’s tourism boom is stretching infrastruc­ture to breaking point. With 3.5 million short-term arrivals last year — 480,000 more than had been projected only two years earlier — a lack of capacity may end up harming the country’s biggest foreign-exchange earner.

Scenic walks across volcanic plateaus and through snow-capped alpine valleys are becoming congested, while small towns servicing adventure activities like jet-boat rides down surging rivers or guided walks across 7,000-year-old glaciers are finding their sewage systems overloaded.

“If we don’t fix these things and look to the long term, we’ll be putting a cap on our own growth,” said Quinton Hall, chief executive officer of Ngai Tahu Tourism, one of the country’s biggest adventure tourism operators. “We’ve got a natural cap on our peak period right now because we just don’t have the accommodat­ion in New Zealand. Even if they wanted to come, they couldn’t find anywhere to sleep.”

Tourist numbers jumped 12% in 2016 and are forecast to reach 4.5 million by 2022 — almost matching the country’s current population of 4.7 million. Government research last year identified a likely shortage of more than 4,500 hotel rooms by 2025, after taking into account existing constructi­on plans for 5,200 new rooms.

Hotel occupancy in Auckland averages 94% in February and 86% over the year, with all accommodat­ion in the country’s largest city frequently full.

“If immediate solutions aren’t found, it is unlikely we will continue to grow at current levels,” said Dean Humphries, national director of hotels at the real estate services group Colliers Internatio­nal. “If we are going to continue to see more tourists come into the country, where do they go?”

In the regions, the influx is causing different problems, with infrastruc­ture such as car parks and toilets straining under the load.

At the 19.4-kilometre Tongariro Alpine Crossing, a track through a World Heritage Area on the central North Island volcanic plateau, thousands of tourists are overwhelmi­ng facilities designed to be used by a few hundred people a day.

In Glenorchy, near Queenstown, where Ngai Tahu offers jet-boating, canoeing and horseback trail rides, the company is forced to bring in chemical toilets during peak season because the town’s waste-water facilities are insufficie­nt.

There’s a similar issue at Franz Josef, the South Island township near the spectacula­r glacier of the same name, where untreated sewage was pumped into a nearby river after a surge in tourist numbers.

The overloadin­g is fuelling concern that a bad tourist experience will harm New Zealand’s clean-green image and dent an industry that earned NZ$14.5 billion (US$10 billion) from foreign visitors last year — a fifth of all export receipts.

Funding the infrastruc­ture that is required is now sparking debate. Many of New Zealand’s natural attraction­s are remote, and the nearest towns don’t generate enough local taxes to pay for the car parks and rest stops visitors need.

Regional councils estimate that NZ$1.4 billion needs to be spent on tourism infrastruc­ture to keep pace with demand. The government, which disputed that figure, has allocated NZ$17.5 million. The associatio­n representi­ng tourism operators wants more, noting that foreign tourists contribute NZ$1.15 billion annually to the government’s coffers in sales taxes alone.

Christophe­r Luxon, the CEO of Air New Zealand, said last year that he supported a national bed tax and a border levy on visitors to help fund tourism investment.

There are also growing calls for visitors to pay to enter national parks.

“We provide all sorts of things free of entry, but not free of costs,” said David Simmons, a professor of tourism at Lincoln University in Christchur­ch. “We need an informed discussion about user pays.”

Solving the accommodat­ion shortage will be in the hands of private investors such as Auckland Internatio­nal Airport Ltd and Tainui Group Holdings. They are building a 250-room, five-star hotel near the internatio­nal terminal under the Pullman brand, due to open in late 2019.

Until then, Jenny Nuku can expect more calls for emergency lodging at Te Puea Marae, where the hall can be rented for NZ$500 a day. That’s less than NZ$10 per person for the 53 American tourists who bedded down there last month, and got the added bonus of an authentic encounter with Maori culture.

“They said they’d travelled around New Zealand, and this was the first real cultural experience they’d had,” Nuku said with a chuckle. “They had their phones and iPads out, taking selfies. We were just happy to be of assistance.”

 ??  ?? Travellers enjoy the scenery along one of the more than 20 New Zealand Cycle Trail routes.
Travellers enjoy the scenery along one of the more than 20 New Zealand Cycle Trail routes.
 ??  ?? One of the best ways to see the Tasman Glacier in the Southern Alps is on a dinghy.
One of the best ways to see the Tasman Glacier in the Southern Alps is on a dinghy.

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