Events to bolster Wellington summer season
Events to bolster Wellington summer
season
Wellington city hoteliers say an exciting
programme of events is going to make Wellington a vibrant
place to be this summer – and visitors need to book early
to avoid missing out.
Steve Martin, Wellington
Regional Chairman of the Tourism Industry Association Hotels
Sector, says the industry is confident about the power of
events to bring visitors to the city.
“A cluster of
fantastic Wellington events drove great results over winter
and spring, with Wellington enjoying very healthy growth in
room nights,” Mr Martin says.
“With so many more
highly anticipated events coming up this summer, there’ll
be some busy days and weekends ahead.
“Right now
visitors will still be able to find a room in the city
whether they’re coming for Nitro Circus, Sevens
Wellington, CubaDupa or Cricket World Cup - but we’re
encouraging people to get in while they can.”
TIA
Hotel sector members in Wellington have agreed to further
add to the excitement of the Sevens by not imposing holiday
surcharges on Waitangi Day to make fans feel even more
welcome.
Positively Wellington Tourism CEO David Perks
says the mix of summer events is well-balanced, with appeal
across a wide variety of markets.
“The return of
Nitro Circus is sure to draw a big crowd, as is the
Homegrown music festival. Cricket World Cup will deliver
international visitors, including England’s Barmy Army,
and the long Waitangi weekend coinciding with Sevens
Wellington makes for an ideal second summer break. As we saw
a few summers ago with Game Masters, Te Papa’s
Tyrannosaurs: Meet the Family exhibition is a great
incentive for road-tripping families transitioning between
islands to stop in the capital for a night or two. And we
can’t wait for CubaDupa to round off the summer by
bringing the street festival vibe to New Zealand’s coolest
urban quarter.”
Steve Martin says getting a balance
between growing the available accommodation and maintaining
healthy occupancy rates has been well-managed in
Wellington.
“January is traditionally a ‘low
season’ for Wellington, in terms of domestic visitor
numbers and hotel occupancies. However, strategic placement
of events to bolster softer times of year has certainly
helped attract visitors to the city across the year, and
that’s allowed the hotel sector to increase our available
rooms over the last 10 years, while occupancy rates have
kept pace.”
TIA Chief Executive Chris Roberts says
events are identified in the tourism industry’s Tourism 2025 growth framework as an
important way to overcome seasonality and encourage
travel.
“The Wellington events calendar is a great
example of Tourism 2025 in action, and is definitely
contributing to our industry goal of almost doubling total
tourism revenue to $41 billion a year,” Mr Roberts
says.
ends