Stories
National War Memorial proposed as a National Historic Landmark
February 01, 2023 | Stories

By Adrienne Hannan 

Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga is proposing that the National War Memorial be recognised as a National Historic Landmark to conserve it for generations to come, and you get to have a say.

National War Memorial

The National Historic Landmarks/Ngā Manawhenua o Aotearoa me ōna Kōrero Tūturu programme has been established to better recognise and protect this country’s most outstanding heritage places that are cornerstones of our identity as New Zealanders. The programme was introduced by the Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga Act 2014 to help prioritise the government’s heritage conservation efforts.

“National Historic Landmarks are significant and meaningful places that shape our national identity,” says Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga Chief Executive Andrew Coleman.

 “They are the places most important to us, places that symbolise what it means to be a New Zealander. Following the inclusion of the Waitangi Treaty Grounds as the first National Historic Landmark, the National War Memorial is a most fitting place to be put forward for inclusion as the second.”

The public consultation phase runs from 1 February to 1 March, 2023, after which Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga will formalise their recommendation for inclusion to the Associate Minister for Arts, Culture and Heritage to make the final decision.

“The aim of National Historic Landmarks is to protect those heritage places most important to New Zealanders through long-term risk planning and management, including from natural disaster,” says Mr Coleman. “Our most cherished places are taonga that deserve strategic conservation and enduring protection.”

The National War Memorial represents those who have served and fallen in overseas wars and peacekeeping operations. Set in a landscape of great cultural and historical significance, the Memorial reflects our national identity through its architecture and the events it commemorates.

“The National War Memorial is a special place for New Zealanders and without it we would lose something very important. It is the country’s foremost symbol of national and personal remembrance and reflection, the focal point of generations of memory. This programme identifies those places that we have such a strong association with or connection to,” says Mr Coleman.

Submissions on the National War Memorial proposal close on 1 March 2023. For more information, and to make a submission, please visit www.landmarks.nz.


Adrienne Hannan | Kaiwhakahaere Whakapā, Whakatairanga hoki – Manager Communications and Marketing
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