Telling Niue’s Biodiversity Story
Telling Niue’s biodiversity story
Travellers exploring Niue’s Huvalu Conservation Forest will have all the forest facts at their fingertips following completion of a major biodiversity project on the island.
Funded by the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) in partnership with the Niue Tourism Office and the Niue Department of the Environment, the six-month project involved research on the island’s forest biodiversity and the development of a number of educational installations and resources including:
• interactive displays at the Niue Visitor
Information Centre with text, images, maps, artifacts and
the island’s first interactive touch screen
display
• informative signage throughout Huvalu Forest
on items of scientific, cultural and historical significance
and indigenous uses of the forest’s ecosystems
• a
large public display at Niue’s Hannan International
Airport
• self-tour information
brochures.
Auckland-based creative agency RUN developed all the display materials and managed and facilitated the project under contract to the FAO, consulting extensively with government departments, village councils and local guides to compile the biodiversity picture with the assistance of a Landcare Research team.
RUN Design Director Laura Cibilich, who led the project, says it came about through the FAO’s promotion of eco-tourism globally – a $20 billion industry - as part of 2017’s Year of Sustainable Tourism. “The aim was to promote Niue’s forest conservation area, which covers almost a quarter of the island and is one of the world’s 34 biodiversity ‘hotspots’, containing some of the most threatened plants and animals in the world.
“We wanted to create a product that made it easy for people to find out about the Huvalu at all levels – from a short summary in the forest to deeper detail via the Information Centre touchscreens. Our goal was to create installations that would inform, educate and excite both visitors and locals about the importance of the forest in sustaining the island’s ecosystems, culture and biodiversity conversation in the Pacific.”
Niue Tourism Director of Marketing Felicity Bollen says the Huvalu Forest has been a conservation area for many years, “but till now information on the Forest wasn’t readily available particularly for visitors. We’re excited these new installations give them a chance to learn more both in the forest and via the new interactive technology.”
RUN Creative Director Raymond McKay says special touches in the project included the recycling of local Kafika hardwood from the forest for use as signposts, and development of a special typeface based on old Niue signs for use in all displays and materials. Niuean illustrator LeGrand Hekau was also involved in the project bringing invaluable local knowledge to the signage and displays, says Raymond.
Completed at no cost to either the Niuean or New Zealand Government, the project was launched during the June visit of the New Zealand Prime Minister the Rt Hon Bill English and a parliamentary delegation for the official opening of the Scenic Matavai Resort’s new conference centre.
ENDS
Niue
snapshot
Niue is a large upraised coral atoll 2400km and a 3.5-hour flight north-east of NZ, in the centre of a triangle formed by Samoa, Tonga and the Cook Islands. Located east of the international dateline, the island is serviced by Air NZ with two flights in and out a week and has a host of natural attractions including some of the clearest ocean water in the world, providing spectacular snorkeling, diving and fishing, forest and scenic walks and many small coves providing safe swimming. The island has a resident Niuean population of around 1600 people and is a self-governing nation aligned closely with NZ, with its own Parliament and Premier. To find out more about Niue please visithttp://www.niueisland.com