A 32-ha site about 1/2 hour’s drive from home on a good low-traffic day was once an old, overgrown quarry and is now a beautiful public park. After almost 70 years as a quarry, it was closed in 1979, and for some unknown reason, the local council decided they might reopen it. A local woman didn’t want the return of the constant blasting and all the heavy traffic as she thought there were better things to be done with the land. She was correct.

With this foresight, the Te Puna Quarry Park Society was formed in 1993. Within three years, the first newsletter went out, and the first work day cleared gorse, wattle, buddleia hakea and plenty of dumped rubbish from what is now the visitor carpark.
The woman who started this is Shirley Sparks, who was awarded a QSM in 2005 and is now patron of the Quarry Park Society. Once Shirley had the working group organised, a master plan was commissioned, and it is still being used in the continually developing life of this park.

It divides the park, which climbs several rocky terraces and essentially has no topsoil, into ‘rooms’, including a heritage rose garden, butterfly garden, sensory garden, herb garden, and group plantings, including orchids, bromeliads, fuchsias, Japanese maples, nikau, cabbage trees (featuring more than ten varieties), magnolias, and native plants of New Zealand, South Africa, and Australia.
It is always a pleasure to view the large, steep area on the park’s eastern side, as over the past 13 years, it’s been cleared of pines and replanted with natives. Volunteers have put in tracks and signs and tried to stay ahead of weeds, including wild kiwifruit, Taiwanese cherry, and asparagus fern, as the regenerating bush grows.
In addition to pest plants, volunteers have battled rats, possums, mustelids, rabbits, and feral goats. Unfortunately, rabbits have returned, and gardeners have resorted to wire mesh cages to protect plants until their numbers are reduced. On the positive side, bird life has flourished, and tui, kereru, fantails, wax eyes, grey warblers, and California quail are regularly sighted.

As well as the garden trails, the park has many artworks, from a giant stone dragon to musical chimes made from recycled materials, from a mosaic life-size couple to wooden carvings by local Māori. It is a park that is a community project in the environmental arts, and it is easy to realise that the sculpture plays a large part in this fantastic park.



It seems you can be viewed and enjoyed anywhere you stand tall in the Western Bay of Plenty – Mauao.

This park is not only a pleasure to our visual senses, but it has also developed a building that is hired out for functions and terraced seating for the amphitheatre, which now holds regular concerts when our unpredictable weather allows visitors to burst out in song.
Strolling around Te Puna Quarry Park has been on my to-do list for a while now, so I enjoyed setting aside a few hours on a warmish day to stretch my legs around nature; it truly is a park to indulge all our senses in a pleasurable way.
How interesting. It looks like a park that I would enjoy. A good community effort.
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You would enjoy this garden, Jude. However, there are some undulating paths to follow.
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Undulating is fine as long as it’s not with a steep drop and loose stones!
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I’m with you regarding steepness and loose stones. I fall enough on the basketball court 😉
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I love a story of people power! And it created a thing of beauty. Fabulous! Mel
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Absolutely, people power and the dedication and energy of the volunteers who keep it it going year after year.
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There is nothing like it and a community is better for it!
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Agreed.
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A wonderous solution to a noise problem!
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Now it’s noisy with bird life and human chatter.
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What a wonderful vision Shirley sparks had! And amazing that it was carried through. Especially love the sculptures with a view.
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No stopping a woman with a vision. Sculptures were the drawcard for myself.
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I’m a fan of outdoor sculptures, and this park has some fine examples. I especially like the dragon.
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Yes, I am too a fan of outdoor sculptures and the dragon has enjoyed a fair few admiring glances over many years.
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Great vision by Shirley Sparks and great community effort. I particularly like the unique park entrance and The Dragon.
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Acknowledging, Tangata Whenua, “people of the land” with their kūwaha (entrance) is important for the whole community.
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I love that someone had the vision and “spark” to turn an old quarry into such a place of beauty (with lots of help). Your photos highlight some extra special bits. The sculptures are amazing!
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Thanks Eilene and yes a woman with vision and more importantly the energy to see that vision become reality. I think it is much harder to keep that vision moving forward and luckily for us the community has achieved that. Hopefully, for many years to come.
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What a beautiful place to visit!
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I have not spoken to anyone who has visited and left the Quarry Gardens with a negative response. Worth the effort to enjoy a wander and enjoy what’s on offer.
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What a lovely space to ‘breathe’, Suzanne, and very well done to those who made it possible.
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It is a fabulous place to enjoy and see our part of the world from another viewpoint. Thanks, Jo.
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🤗🩵
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What a fabulous community initiative! The volunteers have clearly done an amazing job 😀 I love the art works too, especially the stone dragon and Synchronicity, while the entrance is fantastic too!
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What would our world be like if not for the huge effort volunteers do throughout our communities?. I’m guessing it wouldn’t be so jolly or productive.
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Absolutely!
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I love a Sculpture Park and wildlife of course, so a great idea for sure.🙂
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I am sure you would enjoy the garden though your beloved four legged family member might need to stay home 🙂
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Well done to Shirley Sparks for having the vision to kick-start this lovely place. I like the ‘Star Turn’ sculpture, it looks lovely 🙂
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