Dunedin named Most Beautiful City in KNZB Beautiful Awards
Dunedin named Most Beautiful City in KNZB Beautiful Awards
Keep New Zealand Beautiful (KNZB) were excited to announce the winners of this year's Beautiful Awards at a gala dinner held at the Auckland Maritime Room this evening.
Dunedin was crowned the Most Beautiful
City, against strong competitor Hutt City, while Taupo
and Raglan took out the Most Beautiful Large and
Small Town awards, respectively. Most Beautiful Town and
City finalists were decided after a visit from celebrity
judges, renowned New Zealand stencil artist Flox (Hayley
King), NZ House & Garden Editor Sally Duggan, along with a
representative from KNZB.
In addition to winning the
Most Beautiful Small Town Award, Raglan has also
taken out the Supreme Award, in what the judges
described as an unprecedented commitment and effort
regarding their community beautification programme. Raglan
will receive a customised community mural, designed and
painted by Flox in their town. Twelve other awards were also
presented on the night, celebrating environmental excellence
among businesses, schools, individuals and places throughout
New Zealand.
Heather Saunderson, CEO of Keep New Zealand Beautiful, says "The Beautiful Awards celebrate the incredible inroads into sustainability, environmental excellence and community beautification that New Zealand is making as a nation. From the efforts of councils in the Most Beautiful Towns and Cities Awards, to the contributions made by everyday kiwis in our Community Group and Individual Awards; every entrant in the Beautiful Awards deserves to be celebrated for their contribution towards making New Zealand a safer, cleaner and more beautiful place for current and subsequent generations."
Dunedin Railway
Station
Beautiful Awards 2018
Full List of
Winners
Beautiful Towns and Cities
The Most Beautiful Towns and Cities Awards are hotly contested year after year. Submissions must outline how the positive actions that have been taken by councils to protect and enhance their local environments. These prestigious awards review initiatives such as litter prevention/waste minimisation, community beautification projects, recycling projects and sustainable tourism attractions.
Most Beautiful Small
Town
Finalists: Waihi,
Raglan
Winner: Raglan
Raglan is a
beautiful seaside community, renowned for its world-class
surf break and a high-visitor destination in the Waikato
region. Raglan’s entry showcases the fierce pride that
locals have in their environmentally and sustainability
focused town. Community led initiatives ensure that their
ethos is front of mind with council and
contractors.
Most Beautiful Large
Town
Finalists: Taupo,
Timaru
Winner: Taupo
The Taupo
District Council worked hard to walk-the-talk and set an
example in waste minimisation. Most of their rubbish bins
have been removed from their offices, to encourage more
conscientious decisions when disposing of waste, they’ve
implemented compost bins at each office and, they no longer
offer disposable plastic cups at the water coolers. They are
leading by example and their award submission is full of
outstanding examples of how this behaviour is being extended
out and encouraged in the community.
Most
Beautiful City
Finalists: Hutt
City, Dunedin
Winner: Dunedin
The
Dunedin City Council are supported by a very engaged and
active local branch, Keep Dunedin Beautiful. Together, their
submission exhibits a strong sense of community pride; they
have implemented exceptional recycling initiatives to
further engage the community, which have shown outstanding
results. Their community beautification has an element of
heritage conservation, which fits naturally with the essence
of the city.
Community Awards
Klean Kanteen Community
Environmental Initiative Award
This award
honours innovative projects that have achieved extraordinary
environmental results by harnessing the power of
partnership.
Finalists: Plastic Bag
Free Raglan, Coast Care Bay of Plenty, Timona Park Orchard
Trust.
Winner: Plastic Bag Free
Raglan
Plastic Bag Free Raglan have been actively
addressing the global issue of plastic pollution by taking
initiative in their local area. They have been able to get
an overwhelming 93% of community members on board in
supporting a Plastic Bag Free community. This has involved
getting 1,500 reusable bags out to the locals, implementing
plastic bag free education modules in local schools and
creating a Plastic Bag Free business accreditation programme
which has seen 95% of local businesses Plastic Bag
Free!
Community Group Award
This
award recognises and honours a not-for-profit community
group that contributes to enhancing the environmental and
social aspects of their region and additionally shows a
strong sense of community spirit.
Finalists:
Plastic-Bag-Free Coromandel Town, Eketahuna Chorus
Building Project, Keep Waihi Beautiful
Winner:
Plastic Bag Free Coromandel Town
Plastic Bag
Free Coromandel Town was formed late 2017 to inspire and
encourage local residents, business owners and visitors to
improve the environment by decreasing plastic waste. The
Plastic Bag Free Coromandel Town group consists of a
dedicated team of volunteers that have aimed to educate
people around the damage single-use plastics have on our
environment and to demonstrate alternative ways to use
them.
New Zealand Couriers Sustainable School
Award
The Sustainable Schools Award, proudly
sponsored by New Zealand Couriers, annually honours a
teacher, school or tertiary institution for commitment and
practical action to implement sustainable practices and
environmental projects, which enhance the school and/or
community. The recipient is awarded $500 to fund
environmental educational activities within the
school.
Finalists: Discovery
School, Porirua; Dawson Primary School, Auckland; Portland
Kindergarten, Whangarei.
Winner:
Discovery School, Porirua
Discovery School are
proud hosts to numerous native trees sourced by Paper4Trees
and fundraising. The native trees and grasses have been
planted in an effort to maintain forest play, learning areas
and to entice wildlife for students to observe. Students
throughout the school benefit from the garden areas;
enjoying shared reading groups in the orchard, exploration
in the bug hotels and lizard gardens, to learning maths and
economics from the sale of their 'worm-wiggle juice’ for
gardens.
Resene Best Street
Award
Proudly sponsored by Resene, this award
recognises and celebrates a street in New Zealand that
clearly stands out for its beauty, cleanliness, plantings
and sense of community pride.
Finalists:
Queen Street, Richmond; Upper Trafalgar Street,
Nelson; Main Street, Gore.
Winner: Queen
Street, Richmond.
Over the past 18 months, Queen Street
has undergone dramatic transformations featuring interactive
public art, plantings, history information panels and bike
facilities. It’s turned into an amazing space for events,
social activity, outdoor dining and community cohesion.
General public feedback was welcomed through pop-up sessions
at the Richmond Mall and Richmond Library which helped
inform the improved street design, now highlighted with
landscape plantings that complement the clean contemporary
lines of the streetscape and pedestrian friendly
design.
Resene Kiwi’s Choice
This award, proudly sponsored by Resene,
recognises a favourite public spot in New Zealand based on
its location, facilities, natural beauty, man-made beauty,
cleanliness, popularity, and
uniqueness.
Finalists: Castlepoint,
Wairarapa; Margaret Mahy Playground, Christchurch;
Taumarunui Northern Entrance.
Winner:
Margaret Mahy Playground, Christchurch.
Named
after one of New Zealand’s most beloved children’s
authors and a Lyttelton Harbour local, the Margaret Mahy
Playground opened as a Christchurch Rebuild Anchor Project
and now stands as the largest playground in the Southern
Hemisphere! Amongst all the demolition, road works and
building sites, it is a place of colour, noise and laughter.
Equipped with disability friendly equipment and a special
sand pit area the playground has become an iconic
destination spot in Christchurch, loved and used by all age
groups.
Plumbing World Best Loo
This award, proudly sponsored by Plumbing
World, recognises the best public loo in the country based
on the location, the facilities, cleanliness, interior,
exterior and the surrounding environment of the
loo.
Finalists: Benneydale Public
Toilets, Te Mata Peak Park, Hot Water Beach
Toilets.
Winner: Hot Water Beach
Toilets
This iconic public toilet facility officially
opened just a year ago, visually blending in beautifully
with the surrounding coastal environment. They are located
on the forefront of the world famous Hot Water Beach which
see visitors including overseas tourists, New Zealand
visitors and locals. The facility has been purpose built to
accommodate high tourism numbers, large amounts of sand and
a harsh beachside environment. Low maintenance and easy to
clean, this facility ensures an exceptional visitor
experience for overseas visitors and locals
alike.
Sustainable Business
Awards
The Environmental Business awards
recognize and acknowledge businesses that strive to put
sustainability at the core of their business practices.
Most Sustainable Small Business – less
than 20 staff
Finalists: The
Rubbish Whisperer; The Falls Retreat; Pouch
Products.
Winner: The Rubbish
Whisperer
The Rubbish Whisperer offers environmentally
friendly solutions to single use plastics with the aim of
reducing waste and pollution. They have been committed to
improving our environment by encouraging discussion around
waste via blogs, social media, appearances and media
coverage. The Rubbish Whisperer has developed 12 product
lines so that consumers are able to move towards
biodegradable and reusable waste products – 8 of which are
manufactured right here in New Zealand.
Most
Sustainable Large Business- more than 20
staff
Finalists: ecostore;
Waste Management; Road Metals
Winner:
Waste Management
With a long term commitment to waste
optimisation, energy efficiency, and research and
innovation, Waste Management have already made a significant
difference by producing electricity from landfill generation
and alternative fuels by hazardous waste. In March this year
Waste Management opened its Electric Vehicle Innovation Hub
being New Zealand’s very first conversion workshop. They
are now operating 6 electric trucks saving 125 litres of
diesel per day for each truck and replaced 26 light vehicles
saving nearly 50,000 litres of petrol.
Most
Sustainable Business Project
This award
honours New Zealand businesses who have achieved
extraordinary results through an environmental or
sustainability project in the past 12 months.
Finalists: UYOC, Vendella Ltd,
Ceres Organics
Winner: UYOC
UYOC work
with bloggers and cafes to encourage customers and cafes to
work together to reduce unnecessary single-use waste.
UYOC’s main focus is in creating positive change,
minimising waste, raising funds for charities and NGO’s,
connecting customers and businesses within the common goal
of responsibility and stewardship. UYOC is also about
rethinking of the relationship with our national capital,
the way many of us are living, the damage we can cause and
addressing these things in a way that focuses on the
positive and empowers us all to be the
change.
Individual Awards
Young
Legend Award
The Young Legend Award honours
an outstanding volunteer under the age of
18.
Finalists: Amy Magyar; Rosetta
Brown; E Wen Wong.
Winner: Amy
Magyar
Amy is currently chair of her college Leo club.
During her time as chair, she has worked on several
beautification projects planting native trees and flaxes.
Amy is also a very active member of Keep Waihi Beautiful’s
Student Committee. She recently helped out with a student
led programme giving talks at local primary schools on waste
minimisation - encouraging hundreds of our young tamariki in
Waihi to think hard about their rubbish and where it ends
up. The campaign encouraged children to ‘do the right
thing’ with their rubbish and focused on the importance of
reducing, reusing and recycling.
Tidy Kiwi
Award
The Tidy Kiwi Award honours exceptional
leadership in litter prevention, waste reduction, recycling
and beautification activities.
Finalists:
Anita Goodman; Bryan Fairbairn; Charlotte
Fisher.
Winner: Anita Goodman
Anita
Goodman has well and truly earned her title as Hamilton City
Council’s Waste Ambassador! Anita has been growing her own
fruit and veg, swapping excess with the neighbours and
composting any food waste to go back to her garden. Combined
with her other efforts to remain frugal, this has resulted
in only putting out one rubbish bag and two recycling bins
every six months! She has extended her Tidy Kiwi efforts
beyond her own backyard and furthermore cleaned up 1,871
cans from Hamilton gutters within 105 bicycle commutes and
successfully managed to have the Countdown HQ send out
nationwide communications around their litter issue – well
done Anita!
Local Hero Award
The
Local Hero Award acknowledges extraordinary contributions
made by New Zealanders in their local community for high
standards in social and environmental practices.
Winner: Wayne Davis
Wayne is a
charismatic and self-professed people person. His
professional background is varied and well rounded, having
worked in the motoring industry and serving in Local
Government for 9 years as a Waitakere City Councilman. Wayne
is a family man and active member of the community, a former
trustee of Keep Waitakere Beautiful, former Foundation
Member for the Waitakere Asian Support Group and the current
Chairman of Keep West Auckland Beautiful.
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