Best Things to Do in Christchurch, New Zealand

Christchurch is the largest city in New Zealand's South Island, a city that has rebuilt from devastating 2010-2011 earthquakes into a more open, architecturally experimental version of its former self. The city's botanical gardens, the gondola over Port Hills, and proximity to the Banks Peninsula and Akaroa make it both a destination and the primary gateway to the South Island.

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The unmissable in Christchurch

These are the staple sights โ€” don't leave Christchurch without seeing them.

1
Air Force Museum of New Zealand
#1 must-see

Air Force Museum of New Zealand

๐Ÿ“ 45 Harvard Ave., Wigram, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8042
๐Ÿ• Monโ€“Sun 9:30-16:30
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2
Akaroa Harbour
#2 must-see

Akaroa Harbour

๐Ÿ“ Canterbury
๐Ÿ• Monโ€“Sun Open 24h
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3
Akaroa Port
#3 must-see

Akaroa Port

๐Ÿ“ Canterbury
๐Ÿ• Monโ€“Sun Open 24h
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Attractions in Christchurch

More attractions in Christchurch

Air Force Museum of New Zealand 1
#1 must-see

Air Force Museum of New Zealand

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๐Ÿ“ 45 Harvard Ave., Wigram, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8042

The Air Force Museum of New Zealand in Wigram, Christchurch, traces the history of the Royal New Zealand Air Force from its origins in the early twentieth century through contemporary operations, using a collection of aircraft, uniforms, equipment, and personal accounts to document the service’s role in both world wars and subsequent decades of peacetime and operational activity.

The museum is housed at Wigram, which served as one of New Zealand’s primary air force bases for most of the twentieth century before closing and being converted to a residential and commercial development. The heritage precinct preserved the original hangars and several historic buildings that now form the museum complex. Aircraft on display include a Spitfire, an Avenger torpedo bomber, a restored Harvard trainer, and several Cold War-era jets alongside more recent examples. The collection balances flyable and static aircraft with archival exhibits covering the personal stories of RNZAF personnel.

The museum is open year-round, with the indoor galleries accessible in all weather. Airshow events on the grounds bring aircraft demonstrations and additional crowds on specific dates throughout the year โ€” checking the events calendar before visiting can help visitors catch or avoid these busier periods. Admission is charged, with concessions available for families and groups.

Wigram sits southwest of Christchurch’s city center, accessible by car or public transport. The surrounding residential development of the former base gives the museum an unusual setting โ€” historic hangars surrounded by modern suburban streets. For aviation enthusiasts and those interested in New Zealand’s military history, the museum provides a focused and well-presented collection in a location that retains a tangible connection to the air force activity it documents.

Akaroa Harbour 2
#2 must-see

Akaroa Harbour

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๐Ÿ“ Canterbury

Akaroa Harbour is one of the most scenic natural harbours in the South Island of New Zealand, carved by ancient volcanic activity on the Banks Peninsula. The harbour stretches approximately 16 kilometres inland, its sheltered waters flanked by steep green hills that plunge dramatically into the sea โ€” a landscape utterly unlike the Canterbury plains just an hour's drive away.

The harbour is famous for its thriving population of Hector's dolphins, the world's smallest and rarest marine dolphins, found only in New Zealand coastal waters. Numerous tour operators offer wildlife cruises from the Akaroa wharf, and swimming with dolphins is a genuinely extraordinary experience in these protected waters. The harbour is also rich in marine birdlife, with little blue penguins, shags, and various seabirds commonly sighted.

Akaroa township, settled by French colonists in 1840, lends the harbour area a distinctive Gallic charm unusual anywhere in the Pacific. French street names, heritage buildings, and a strong culinary tradition have endured for nearly two centuries. Fresh seafood โ€” particularly Akaroa salmon and locally farmed Pacific oysters โ€” is a highlight of any visit. The harbour is accessible by road from Christchurch via the scenic Summit Road, which offers spectacular views across the peninsula.

Akaroa Port 3
#3 must-see

Akaroa Port

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๐Ÿ“ Canterbury

Akaroa Port is a picturesque working harbour and historic arrival point on the southern shores of Banks Peninsula, approximately 82 kilometres from Christchurch. The port carries the distinction of being the landing place of French colonists in August 1840 โ€” just days after the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi โ€” when the ship Comte de Paris brought 63 French settlers to establish what was intended to become a French colonial outpost.

Although British sovereignty forestalled the full extent of French ambitions, the Gallic heritage persists in the street names, architecture, and cultural character of the town. The port itself today serves as the departure point for dolphin swimming and wildlife cruises among Akaroa Harbour's resident Hector's dolphins โ€” some of the most intimate wildlife encounters available anywhere in New Zealand.

The wharf area is lined with seafood restaurants, ice cream shops, and a small collection of heritage buildings that recall the port's 19th-century trading heyday. Fresh Akaroa salmon is farmed in the harbour and served locally with justifiable pride. International cruise ships occasionally anchor in the harbour, bringing passengers ashore for a day of exploration in this remarkably well-preserved corner of Canterbury. The port's compact scale and unhurried pace make it one of the South Island's most relaxing destinations.

Arthur's Pass National Park 4

Arthur's Pass National Park

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๐Ÿ“ Canterbury

Arthur's Pass National Park straddles the Southern Alps of New Zealand's South Island, covering over 114,500 hectares of dramatic mountain terrain that transitions sharply between the wet West Coast and the drier Canterbury plains. Established in 1929, it is one of the country's oldest national parks and remains one of its most geologically active, shaped by ongoing tectonic uplift, avalanche corridors, and frequent alpine weather extremes.

The park is famous for its resident kea โ€” the world's only alpine parrot โ€” bold, intelligent birds that entertain and occasionally frustrate visitors with their curiosity and mischievous behaviour. Trails range from gentle valley walks to demanding climbs of peaks like Mount Rolleston (2,271 m), offering some of the finest alpine climbing in New Zealand. The Devil's Punchbowl Waterfall, reached by a short track, is one of the park's most accessible and dramatic sights.

Arthur's Pass village, sitting at 740 metres altitude, serves as the gateway community and is accessible by both road via SH73 and the historic TranzAlpine train from Christchurch โ€” a scenic rail journey widely regarded as among the world's great train rides. Waterfalls, beech forests, river gorges, and snowfields make this park a year-round destination for trampers, climbers, and nature lovers seeking genuine wilderness only 90 minutes from Christchurch.

Avon River 5

Avon River

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๐Ÿ“ Christchurch, Canterbury

The Avon River โ€” known in te reo Maori as Otakaro โ€” flows gently through the centre of Christchurch for approximately 14 kilometres before meeting the sea at Pegasus Bay. More than a waterway, the Avon has long been central to the city's identity: a calming green corridor lined with weeping willows, heritage bridges, and immaculately maintained gardens.

Punting on the Avon is one of Christchurch's most beloved traditions, with punters in Edwardian costume guiding flat-bottomed boats beneath the tree canopy โ€” an experience that recalls the city's English heritage and offers a uniquely peaceful perspective on the urban landscape. Electric boats and kayaks are also available for self-guided exploration.

Following the devastating 2011 Canterbury earthquakes, vast stretches of the riverbank were cleared of damaged buildings, giving way to the ambitious Otakaro Avon River Corridor regeneration project. This long-term vision is transforming 100 hectares of land into a vibrant public park connecting the central city to the sea. New playgrounds, artworks, wetlands, and walking tracks are already open, making the river corridor a living symbol of Christchurch's resilience, reinvention, and ongoing renewal as a 21st-century city.

Banks Peninsula 6

Banks Peninsula

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๐Ÿ“ Canterbury

Banks Peninsula is a dramatic volcanic landmass jutting into the Pacific Ocean from the Canterbury coast of New Zealand's South Island. Formed by two overlapping shield volcanoes active around eight million years ago, the peninsula's rugged craters have since been flooded by the sea to create Akaroa and Lyttelton harbours โ€” two of the finest natural ports in the country.

The peninsula covers roughly 1,100 square kilometres of steep farmland, native bush remnants, and coastline punctuated by tiny bays accessible only by foot or boat. Hector's dolphins, little blue penguins, and New Zealand fur seals inhabit these waters, and the Te Whakaraupล / Lyttelton Harbour is home to a thriving marine ecosystem. The Okains Bay Maori and Colonial Museum is one of the peninsula's hidden cultural treasures.

The summit road tracing the peninsula's spine rewards drivers with sweeping views across Canterbury Plains, the Southern Alps, and the open Pacific simultaneously. Akaroa township, with its well-preserved French colonial heritage, serves as the social heart of the peninsula. Trampers can explore multi-day routes through the Banks Peninsula Track, passing private farmland and dramatic coastal scenery on a four-day circuit that remains one of New Zealand's most rewarding walks.

Bridge of Remembrance 7

Bridge of Remembrance

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๐Ÿ“ Cashel Street, Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8011

The Bridge of Remembrance spans the Avon River on Cashel Street in central Christchurch and stands as one of the city's most significant war memorials. Completed in 1924, the bridge was built to honour the soldiers of the Canterbury Regiment who served in the First World War, with its imposing Triumphal Arch at the north end added in 1937 to commemorate both World Wars.

Constructed from reinforced concrete faced with Kaikลura marble, the arch is richly decorated with carved motifs including the Canterbury Provincial coat of arms and laurel wreaths. Bronze plaques record the campaigns in which Canterbury soldiers fought, from Gallipoli and the Western Front to the deserts of the Middle East. The memorial has since been extended to honour New Zealanders who served in subsequent conflicts.

The bridge survived the 2011 earthquakes structurally intact, though surrounding buildings were not so fortunate. Today it anchors the Cashel Street pedestrian precinct and the Otakaro Avon River Corridor regeneration zone, its elegant stonework a striking counterpoint to the new architecture rising around it. Visiting at dusk, when the arch is illuminated and reflects in the still Avon, is a particularly moving experience in a city where memory and renewal are inseparable.

Burkes Pass 8

Burkes Pass

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๐Ÿ“ Canterbury

Burkes Pass is a small historic village marking the gateway between the Canterbury Plains and the vast Mackenzie Basin high country โ€” one of the most scenically dramatic transitions in New Zealand. The pass sits at approximately 670 metres elevation, and the descent westward into the basin reveals a sweeping panorama of tussock grasslands, glacial lakes, and distant snow-capped peaks.

The village has a rich pioneering history. John Mackenzie, the legendary Scottish shepherd who first explored the basin bearing his name, passed through this area in the 1840s, and the surrounding high country became the domain of vast sheep stations that defined South Island pastoral life for generations. A charming collection of heritage buildings lines the main road, including an 1878 Anglican church and a historic store.

Today Burkes Pass functions primarily as a stopping point on the journey from Christchurch toward Lake Tekapo and Aoraki / Mount Cook, but the village rewards those who pause long enough to appreciate its understated character. Antique shops, a small gallery, and a general store operate from buildings that have changed little in a century. The surrounding farmland, coloured by lupins in summer and frost in winter, makes this one of the most photogenic drives in Canterbury's high-country circuit.

Canterbury Earthquake National Memorial 9

Canterbury Earthquake National Memorial

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๐Ÿ“ Montreal Street, Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8011

The Canterbury Earthquake National Memorial stands on the banks of the Avon River in central Christchurch as a solemn and beautifully crafted tribute to the 185 people killed in the 22 February 2011 earthquake โ€” New Zealand's deadliest natural disaster in 80 years. Designed by Slovenian architect Grega Vezjak, the memorial was opened in February 2017 on the sixth anniversary of the disaster.

The memorial takes the form of a long carved wall of white Slovenian limestone running parallel to the Avon River, its surface etched with the names of every victim and inscribed with a text acknowledging the grief of survivors and the resilience of the community. The wall faces the flowing river, creating a contemplative space that draws on the river's symbolic connection to Christchurch identity and renewal.

The site is deliberately open and unfenced, accessible at any hour without charge. A pohutukawa tree โ€” New Zealand's symbolic tree of death and regeneration โ€” anchors one end of the memorial, grounding it in local cultural tradition. The memorial sits within the broader Otakaro Avon River Corridor regeneration zone, and many visitors combine it with a walk along the river or a visit to nearby Hagley Park. It is a place of profound quietness in a city that continues to rebuild and remember simultaneously.

Canterbury Museum 10

Canterbury Museum

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๐Ÿ“ 11 Rolleston Ave., Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8013

Founded in 1867, Canterbury Museum on Rolleston Avenue is one of New Zealand's leading natural history and cultural institutions, housed in a striking Gothic Revival building designed by architect Benjamin Mountfort that has anchored Christchurch's cultural precinct for over 150 years. The museum's collections span geology, natural history, Pacific and Maori culture, and the remarkable human story of Antarctic exploration.

The Antarctic Hall is among the museum's most celebrated spaces, preserving artefacts and stories from the heroic age of polar exploration, including items connected to Robert Falcon Scott and his ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition. Nearby, the Maori Taonga collection offers one of the most significant displays of indigenous New Zealand cultural treasures in the South Island, presented with careful attention to tikanga and cultural context.

Other highlights include a reconstructed Victorian streetscape, an Egyptian mummy, and extensive natural history displays tracing New Zealand's unique geological and ecological evolution โ€” from the age of dinosaurs through the era of the giant moa. Admission to the permanent collection is free, a policy reflecting the museum's deep commitment to public access. Following the 2011 Christchurch earthquakes, parts of the museum underwent extensive remediation, and ongoing redevelopment continues to expand and modernise its world-class facilities for future generations.

Cashel Street 11

Cashel Street

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๐Ÿ“ Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury

Cashel Street in central Christchurch has become one of the most discussed retail and urban recovery stories in New Zealand following the 2010 and 2011 earthquakes that destroyed much of the city’s historic commercial core. Where conventional reconstruction might have produced a blank streetscape waiting for permanent buildings, Cashel Street became the site of the Re:START container mall โ€” a temporary retail precinct built from repurposed shipping containers that kept commerce alive while the city planned its longer-term future.

The container mall operated for several years and demonstrated that adaptive, provisional urbanism could sustain a commercial street through major disruption. As reconstruction progressed, permanent buildings have gradually replaced or complemented the temporary structures, and Cashel Street has evolved into a mix of new architecture and refurbished heritage buildings. Retail, cafes, and hospitality businesses now line the pedestrianized section, giving the street a functioning commercial character that reflects Christchurch’s post-earthquake identity.

The street is accessible year-round and is busiest during shopping hours on weekdays and weekends. Christchurch’s climate means summers can be warm and dry, making outdoor seating along the pedestrian section particularly active from November through March. Winter is quieter but the indoor retailers and cafes remain fully operational.

Cashel Street sits in the heart of the central city recovery zone, close to the Christchurch Art Gallery, Cathedral Square, and the Avon River Precinct. For visitors interested in how cities respond to major disaster, the street and its surrounding blocks offer a live case study in urban resilience โ€” still unfolding, still imperfect, but genuinely instructive as an example of what Christchurch chose to prioritize in rebuilding its center.

Christchurch Arts Centre 12

Christchurch Arts Centre

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๐Ÿ“ Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8013

The Christchurch Arts Centre is one of New Zealand's most significant heritage precincts and a cultural cornerstone of the South Island. Occupying a magnificent ensemble of Gothic Revival stone buildings originally constructed for Canterbury College โ€” now the University of Canterbury โ€” between 1877 and 1926, the complex was repurposed as an arts and creative hub in the 1970s following the university's relocation.

The 23 heritage buildings, designed primarily by architect Benjamin Mountfort, feature vaulted ceilings, stone archways, and collegiate quadrangles that create an atmosphere of scholarly grandeur. Among the most notable spaces is the Great Hall, which hosts concerts, exhibitions, and major events, and the chamber where Ernest Rutherford โ€” who later split the atom โ€” conducted early scientific research as a student.

Severely damaged in the 2011 earthquakes, the Arts Centre underwent a decade-long, $290 million restoration programme โ€” one of New Zealand's largest heritage conservation projects. Today, fully restored, it houses galleries, artisan studios, restaurants, a boutique cinema, weekend markets, and the Museum of Contemporary Art. The complex is free to enter and explore, making it an accessible cultural destination that beautifully combines heritage architecture with living creative practice at the heart of Christchurch.

Christchurch Botanic Gardens 13

Christchurch Botanic Gardens

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๐Ÿ“ Rolleston Avenue, Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8013

The Christchurch Botanic Gardens spread across 21 hectares enclosed by a loop of the Avon River. In spring the cherry trees flower in dense canopies of pink and white, and in summer the rose garden carries an abundance that takes years of cultivation to achieve. The gardens have been maintained since 1863, and their age shows in the scale of the trees โ€” enormous oaks, elms, and cedars that create deep shade in summer and skeletal grandeur in winter.

The collection includes specialist gardens for native New Zealand plants, a fernery, a water garden, a herb garden, and a conservatory complex housing tropical species. The native plant section offers a useful introduction to New Zealand’s flora before time in natural areas. Admission is free, the gardens are open daily, and a visitor centre near the Rolleston Avenue entrance provides maps and information.

Morning visits in spring offer the best light and fewest crowds. The gardens are most vibrant from October through December and again in March and April. Winter visits reward with the skeletal structure of large trees and warmth of the glasshouses. The central location makes them accessible on foot from most Christchurch accommodation.

In a city that spent years rebuilding after major earthquakes, the Botanic Gardens have served as a constant anchor โ€” a place that remained intact when much of the surrounding urban fabric did not, continuing to function as Christchurch’s primary public green space.

Christchurch Gondola 14

Christchurch Gondola

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๐Ÿ“ 10 Bridle Path Road, Heathcote Valley, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8022

The Christchurch Gondola offers the most spectacular elevated perspective over the Garden City and its surrounding Canterbury landscapes, rising 500 meters above sea level to the summit of the Port Hills via a gondola cable car system that has operated at Heathcote Valley since 1992. The eight-minute ascent carries visitors from the valley floor through regenerating native bush to a summit complex with panoramic views spanning 360 degrees of exceptional scenery: the Pacific Ocean to the east, the Southern Alps stretching across the western horizon, the vast Canterbury Plains below, and the distinctive volcanic rim of Lyttelton Harbour โ€” one of New Zealand's most photographically beautiful ports โ€” immediately south. At the summit, the Time Tunnel attraction guides visitors through a multi-sensory presentation of Christchurch's geological and human history, from volcanic formation through Maori settlement to European colonization and the devastating 2010โ€“2011 earthquake sequence. Dining at the summit cafรฉ with floor-to-ceiling glass overlooking the Canterbury Plains and the Alps is a genuinely memorable experience at any time of day. The gondola operates year-round and is accessible from central Christchurch by shuttle or road, making it one of the city's most rewarding and easily organized experiences for visitors of all ages.

Christchurch Tram 15

Christchurch Tram

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๐Ÿ“ 109 Worcester St., Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8011

The Christchurch Tram is far more than a tourist novelty โ€” it is a living piece of the city's history and one of the most enjoyable ways to explore the regenerating central city. Trams first ran in Christchurch in 1905, and while the original network closed in 1954, a restored heritage service was relaunched in 1995, bringing vintage rolling stock back to the streets.

Today the tram operates a 2.5-kilometre loop through the heart of the city, stopping at key attractions including the Christchurch Arts Centre, the Canterbury Museum, New Regent Street, and Cathedral Square. Restored trams dating from the early 20th century have been beautifully maintained, with timber interiors and brass fittings evoking Edwardian elegance. Informative audio commentary accompanies each journey, sharing stories of Christchurch before and after the 2011 earthquakes.

A day pass allows unlimited hop-on, hop-off travel, making the tram a practical and atmospheric way to navigate the compact central city. Evening dining trams are also available, offering a uniquely atmospheric meal experience aboard moving heritage carriages. The Christchurch Tram represents the city's affection for its own past and its determination to preserve that character even as the rebuilt cityscape evolves around it.

Church of the Good Shepherd 16

Church of the Good Shepherd

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๐Ÿ“ Pioneer Drive, Lake Tekapo, Canterbury, 7999

Perched on the shores of Lake Tekapo in the Mackenzie Basin, the Church of the Good Shepherd is arguably the most photographed building in New Zealand. Built in 1935 from local Mount John bluestone, this small interdenominational chapel was erected as a memorial to the pioneering runholders of the Mackenzie country โ€” the farmers and families who shaped this remote high-country landscape.

The church's east-facing window above the altar frames a view of the lake and the Southern Alps that has become iconic worldwide. On a clear day, the turquoise lake, snow-dusted peaks, and vast Canterbury sky create a scene of startling natural beauty. Sunrise and sunset visits offer particularly luminous light conditions, though crowds gather at peak season โ€” patience rewards the persistent.

The surrounding area is part of the Aoraki Mackenzie International Dark Sky Reserve, one of the largest such reserves on Earth, making evening visits extraordinary for stargazing. A short lupine-lined path leads to the church from the main Tekapo township, where restaurants and accommodation cater to visitors arriving from Christchurch or heading toward Mount Cook. The site holds genuine spiritual significance and visitors are asked to respect the working church during services.

Hagley Park 17

Hagley Park

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๐Ÿ“ 14 Riccarton Ave., Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8011

Hagley Park is the largest urban green space in New Zealand and the green heart of Christchurch, covering approximately 165 hectares just west of the city centre. Established in 1855, shortly after the city's formal founding, the park has served generations of Christchurch residents as a place for recreation, relaxation, and public life.

The park is divided by Riccarton Avenue into North and South Hagley. North Hagley contains the Christchurch Botanic Gardens, sports fields, the Avon River, and the central playground. South Hagley is more open, with extensive sports grounds used for cricket, hockey, football, and golf. The park hosts major public events including international cricket at Hagley Oval, one of the world's most picturesque cricket venues.

In the aftermath of the 2011 earthquakes, Hagley Park took on additional significance as public buildings were demolished and the park became the symbolic gathering place for a grieving, rebuilding city. The Canterbury Earthquake National Memorial sits at the park's edge along the Avon River. Wide tree-lined avenues, jogging paths, and the gentle flow of the river make Hagley Park a daily sanctuary for Christchurch people โ€” and an essential experience for any visitor seeking to understand the city's character.

Hanmer Springs Thermal Pools and Spa 18

Hanmer Springs Thermal Pools and Spa

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๐Ÿ“ 42 Amuri Ave., Hanmer Springs, Canterbury, 7334

Hanmer Springs Thermal Pools and Spa is New Zealand's premier alpine spa destination, set within the small township of Hanmer Springs, roughly 135 kilometres north of Christchurch in the Canterbury foothills. The pools draw on geothermally heated mineral water that has been enjoyed by visitors since the 1880s, when the government first developed the site as a recuperation retreat.

Today the complex features over a dozen outdoor pools at varying temperatures โ€” some reaching 42 degrees Celsius โ€” alongside private thermal pools, sulphur pools, a family activity area with waterslides, and a fully equipped day spa offering massages, facials, and wellness treatments. The picturesque setting, framed by the Hanmer Forest and snow-dusted mountains in winter, amplifies the restorative atmosphere considerably.

Beyond the pools, Hanmer Springs village offers adventure activities including jet boating, bungy jumping, white-water rafting on the Waiau River, and mountain biking through the surrounding forest park. The township itself has a charming alpine character with boutique accommodation and excellent dining options. Whether visitors come for a quiet winter soak or an action-packed summer weekend, Hanmer Springs delivers an accessible and genuinely rejuvenating escape from the bustle of urban Canterbury life.

Hooker Valley Track 19

Hooker Valley Track

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๐Ÿ“ Hooker Valley Track, Mt Cook National Park, New Zealand, 7999

The Hooker Valley Track is widely regarded as one of New Zealand’s finest short walks, threading through Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park along a route that ends at the edge of a glacial lake with direct views of the country’s highest peak. The track covers roughly ten kilometers round trip, passing through a landscape shaped by ice, moraines, and braided rivers fed by retreating glaciers.

Three swing bridges cross alpine streams along the way, and the trail surface is well-maintained, making the walk accessible to most fitness levels. The final destination is Hooker Lake, where icebergs calved from the Hooker Glacier float quietly against a backdrop of sheer rock faces. On clear days, Aoraki/Mount Cook rises directly ahead, its summit sharp against the sky. Interpretive panels along the route explain the glacial history of the valley and the ongoing changes driven by warming temperatures.

Summer in the Southern Hemisphere โ€” December through February โ€” brings the longest days and the most reliable weather, though conditions can shift rapidly at altitude. Spring and autumn offer quieter trails and striking light, particularly in the morning and late afternoon. Winter visits are possible but require checking conditions, as the track can become icy and the lake may freeze at its margins.

The trailhead sits close to the small village of Aoraki/Mount Cook, which provides accommodation, a visitor center, and cafes. The park is also home to other walks and climbing routes that extend the range of experiences available to those spending more than a day in the area. The Hooker Valley Track delivers a remarkable concentration of alpine scenery within a manageable walking distance.

International Antarctic Centre 20

International Antarctic Centre

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๐Ÿ“ Corner Roy Place and Orchard Road, Christchurch Airport, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8052

The International Antarctic Centre occupies a functional building near Christchurch Airport, but the experience inside it pulls visitors into a world defined by cold, wind, and the particular silence of the most remote continent on earth. Christchurch has served as the gateway city for Antarctic expeditions for over a century, and the centre draws on that relationship to deliver an encounter with polar conditions that goes beyond conventional museum display. The cold chamber alone โ€” which replicates Antarctic blizzard conditions โ€” produces a visceral understanding that no photograph adequately communicates.

The facility includes interactive exhibits covering Antarctic wildlife, geology, and the history of exploration, alongside a penguin encounter area where little blue penguins can be observed at close range. The Hagglund all-terrain vehicle ride takes visitors across an outdoor course that simulates the kinds of terrain used in Antarctic field operations. Audiovisual presentations cover life at Scott Base, New Zealand’s permanent Antarctic research station, and give context to the logistical complexity of operating on the ice continent today.

The centre is open daily year-round and is well suited to a half-day visit, making it convenient to include before or after a flight given its proximity to the terminal. Evening is actually an interesting time to visit as it is quieter and the penguin feeding typically takes place in the late afternoon. The cold chamber is included in standard admission and operates at around minus eight degrees Celsius โ€” bring or borrow a jacket from the provided rack regardless of the season outside.

Within Christchurch, the International Antarctic Centre fills a distinctive niche, translating the city’s deep and ongoing connection to polar exploration into something tangible and interactive rather than purely archival.

Milford Track 21

Milford Track

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๐Ÿ“ Fiordland National Park, Southland

The Milford Track in Fiordland National Park is one of New Zealand’s nine Great Walks and among the most celebrated multi-day hikes in the world, covering 53.5 kilometers through a sequence of alpine valleys, mountain passes, and rainforest that culminates at the head of Milford Sound. The four-day journey passes through some of the most geographically dramatic landscape in the Southern Hemisphere.

The track begins at the northern end of Lake Te Anau and follows the Clinton River valley through dense beech forest before ascending to MacKinnon Pass at 1,154 meters, the high point of the route with views across multiple valleys on clear days. The descent leads past Sutherland Falls โ€” one of the tallest waterfalls in New Zealand โ€” before the final section drops into the temperate rainforest near Milford Sound. Three huts managed by the Department of Conservation provide accommodation on the independent route, while a guided walk option uses private lodges.

The Milford Track is open only from late October through late April, due to avalanche risk and hut closure in the colder months. January and February are the most popular months and require booking well in advance โ€” hut passes and guided walk places often sell out a year ahead. Shoulder months in November and April offer better availability and often more settled conditions.

Access to the track starts from Te Anau, which functions as the gateway town for Fiordland. Boat transport across Lake Te Anau reaches the trailhead, and a ferry connection at the Milford end returns walkers to Te Anau or continues to Milford Sound. Planning transport and accommodation well ahead of arrival is essential, as capacity across the entire system is tightly managed.

Mona Vale 22

Mona Vale

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๐Ÿ“ 40 Mona Vale Ave., Riccarton, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8011

Set behind a stone gateway on Mona Vale Avenue in Riccarton, Mona Vale is one of Christchurch’s most graceful heritage properties, combining a restored Edwardian homestead with extensive gardens that spread along a bend in the Avon River. The estate has been a public garden since the city acquired it, and it functions today as a peaceful retreat within easy reach of the central city.

The gardens are the main draw, with formal rose borders, flowering perennials, and mature specimen trees arranged across grounds that feel deliberately unhurried. Punting on the Avon is available from the property, allowing visitors to drift along the riverbanks beneath willow and oak trees. The homestead itself is periodically open for functions and events, and a cafe on the grounds provides a practical reason to linger through the afternoon.

Spring is the most rewarding season, when the rose gardens and flowering bulbs reach their peak and the grounds fill with color. Summer brings long evenings and full foliage on the river trees. Autumn strips the oaks and planes to gold and copper, extending the garden’s visual interest into the cooler months. The property remains open through winter, though the garden shows less of its character in the colder, quieter months.

Mona Vale sits west of the central city along the same river corridor that defines much of Christchurch’s garden character. The Avon connects this estate to the Botanic Gardens and the Hagley Park reserve, making it possible to walk or cycle a green corridor through much of the city. For visitors interested in Christchurch’s pre-earthquake heritage, the homestead and grounds offer one of the more complete surviving examples of the city’s Edwardian landscape ambitions.

Mount Hutt 23

Mount Hutt

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๐Ÿ“ Canterbury

Mount Hutt is one of New Zealand’s premier alpine ski resorts, rising dramatically from the Canterbury Plains on the South Island to offer some of the Southern Hemisphere’s most reliable and exhilarating snow conditions. Located approximately 100 kilometers west of Christchurch in the heart of the Southern Alps, the resort sits at an altitude that regularly delivers an extended ski season stretching from June through October โ€” longer than almost any other New Zealand field.

The mountain’s terrain caters to a broad spectrum of ability levels, from wide, groomed beginner runs and intermediate cruisers to the challenging chutes and steep faces that have made Mount Hutt a favorite among advanced skiers and snowboarders seeking genuine high-alpine thrills. At its peak elevation of 2,086 meters, the summit offers sweeping panoramic views across the Canterbury Plains all the way to the Pacific Ocean on clear days โ€” a perspective unique in New Zealand skiing.

The resort’s high-speed chairlifts and modern facilities ensure efficient access to 365 hectares of skiable terrain, while the nearby village of Methven provides charming aprรจs-ski dining, accommodation, and a warm small-town atmosphere beloved by New Zealand ski families. Heli-skiing operations also access remote backcountry terrain in the surrounding ranges for the most adventurous powder seekers. Mount Hutt consistently ranks among Australasia’s finest alpine experiences, making it a must-visit for any winter sports enthusiast traveling the South Island.

New Regent Street 24

New Regent Street

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๐Ÿ“ Christchurch Central City, Christchurch, Canterbury, 8011

New Regent Street is one of Christchurch's most charming urban spaces and a rare surviving example of the Spanish Mission Revival architectural style in New Zealand. Completed in 1932, the street was designed as a speciality shopping precinct with a unified facade of pastel-coloured two-storey buildings featuring terracotta tiles, wrought ironwork, and decorative plasterwork that give it a distinctly Mediterranean character.

Remarkably, New Regent Street survived the 2011 Canterbury earthquakes in relatively good condition, allowing for careful restoration rather than demolition โ€” making it one of the few intact heritage streetscapes in a city that lost much of its built heritage. The Christchurch tram runs through the street on its loop, adding an additional layer of period character to the experience.

Today the ground-floor tenancies are occupied by independent cafes, boutique retailers, chocolatiers, and galleries, giving the street a vibrant commercial life that feels authentically local. Eating and drinking along New Regent Street has become a Christchurch institution, particularly on sunny afternoons when tables spill onto the pedestrian lane. The street is a short walk from Cathedral Square and represents the city's successful effort to honour its architectural heritage while creating spaces that feel alive and relevant to contemporary urban life.

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Christchurch sits on the Canterbury Plains at the edge of the Banks Peninsula, a volcanic formation of extinct craters now filled by harbors and bays. The things to do in Christchurch have been transformed by the 2010-2011 earthquake sequence that killed 185 people and destroyed or damaged the majority of the central city’s buildings. The rebuilt city center has become a study in urban regeneration: the Cardboard Cathedral (a temporary church designed by Shigeru Ban as an earthquake memorial, now permanent); Re:START Mall, which pioneered retail shipping containers as architecture; and the new Te Pae convention center and Riverside Market. The Canterbury Museum (temporarily relocated during renovation, reopening 2025-2026) holds the country’s best Antarctic exploration collection. The Christchurch Botanic Gardens are among New Zealand’s finest. The Gondola on Port Hills provides panoramic views over the city and Lyttelton Harbour. Akaroa, 75 km southeast on the Banks Peninsula, is a former French settlement (the only permanent French colony in New Zealand) now famous for the Hector’s dolphin swimming experience (the world’s rarest and smallest dolphin species).

Best time to visit

December through February (austral summer) is warmest (18-25ยฐC) and best for outdoor activities. March through May brings golden autumn colors and comfortable walking temperatures. June through August are cold and wet (4-10ยฐC) but the city is quieter. The Canterbury snow season (late June-September) makes Christchurch a base for nearby ski fields (Mount Hutt, Porters).

Getting around

Christchurch Airport is 10 km northwest of the city center, one of New Zealand’s busiest international airports with Air New Zealand and Qantas connections from Australia, plus connections from Asia. The city center is walkable or cyclable โ€” Christchurch has an excellent bike network rebuilt post-earthquake. Buses cover the wider city. For Akaroa and the Banks Peninsula, rental car or the French Connection shuttle from the city center. The TranzAlpine (the world’s great train journeys) departs Christchurch for Greymouth through the Southern Alps (5 hours each way).

What to eat

Christchurch’s food scene has grown dramatically post-earthquake. Little High Eatery (a food hall in the central city) is the best introduction to the local dining scene. Black Estate in Waipara Valley (north of the city, 90 minutes) is one of New Zealand’s most beautiful winery experiences. The Saturday Farmers’ Market at Riccarton House is the best source of Canterbury produce. Canterbury lamb and salmon from the Mackenzie Basin feature heavily on menus.

Frequently asked questions

What are Hector's dolphins in Akaroa?

Hector's dolphins are the world's rarest and smallest dolphins (1.2-1.4m), endemic to New Zealand and found almost exclusively in the waters around the South Island. Akaroa Harbour has a resident population. Dolphin swimming tours (wetsuit provided, 2-3 hours on the water) give a good chance of snorkeling with them; sightings are common but not guaranteed as wild animals. This is considered one of the world's best dolphin swimming experiences because the population is accessible and habituated to boats.

Is Christchurch still in earthquake recovery?

Recovery is substantially complete. The central city was largely rebuilt by 2019; some sites (including the Canterbury Museum, in renovation) are still in progress. The visible earthquake legacy is now the innovative rebuilt architecture rather than damage. The red zone โ€” the abandoned land along the Avon River โ€” has been converted into a linear park (the Otakaro Avon River Corridor) that is one of the city's most pleasant green spaces.