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Miramar, New Zealand

Miramar
Miramar is located in New Zealand Wellington
Miramar
Miramar
Basic information
Local authority Wellington City
Date established 1904
Coordinates 41°19′S 174°49′E / 41.317°S 174.817°E / -41.317; 174.817Coordinates: 41°19′S 174°49′E / 41.317°S 174.817°E / -41.317; 174.817
Population 8,334 (2006 )
Surrounds
North Maupuia
Northeast Karaka Bay
East Worser Bay
Southeast Seatoun
South Strathmore Park
Southwest Rongotai
West Kilbirnie

Miramar is a suburb of Wellington, New Zealand, south-east of the city centre. It is on the Miramar Peninsula, directly east of the isthmus of Rongotai, the site of Wellington International Airport.

'Miramar' means "sea view" in Spanish. The name was chosen by the first European to settle in the area, Scotsman James Coutts Crawford (1817-1889). Crawford was a former Royal Navy officer turned businessman and colonist, who arrived in Wellington in 1840. Crawford established a farm on the peninsula, which at the time was known as Watt's Peninsula, and drained a large lagoon known as Burnham Water. This lagoon covered much of the low-lying land on the peninsula; now this area is occupied by suburban houses, streets, parks and shops.

The original Māori name for the area when it was still an island was Te Motu Kairangi (meaning "esteemed" or "precious" island). On 18 November 1904 Miramar Borough was formed.

In April 1921, Miramar was incorporated into the City of Wellington. The records of the Miramar Borough Council were transferred to the City of Wellington at the time of amalgamation and can still be accessed today through Wellington City Council.

Prior to World War 2 the then government purchased an independent film company called Kaft Films in Darlington Rd, Miramar and set up a full body, government film production operation, to cover New Zealand's contribution in WW2. It was called the National Film Unit. In 1979 the NFU moved to Avalon, Lower Hutt, NZ, next to the national television entity 'Avalon'. In the late nineties, Sir Peter Jackson purchased the Film Unit, as it was then known, to produce his films. He used the NFU's facilities to an extreme degree while making Braindead. Since then, Jackson has brought the Film Unit back to Miramar, which would now be seen as a sunset arm of his empire.

Film director Sir Peter Jackson and his colleagues Sir Richard Taylor (VFX) and Jamie Selkirk (Editor) have built a series of multimillion-dollar studios, sound stages, and pre- and post-production (including Weta Digital and Weta Workshop) facilities in Miramar, where he filmed The Lord of the Rings trilogy and King Kong. It has been hailed by Mexican film director Guillermo del Toro as "Hollywood the way God intended it".


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