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The
beautiful Kapiti Coast District is located 50 minutes drive
north of New Zealand's capital city, Wellington.
Wellington is
a thriving and culturally-diverse city at the bottom of the
country's North Island.
The Kapiti Coast District Council's neighbouring authority to
the south is Porirua City Council and Horowhenua District
Council to the north.
The District is settled around the coastline townships of
Paekakariki, Raumati, Paraparaumu, Waikanae and Otaki. The major
commercial and retail centre is Paraparaumu and its distinct rural
areas - Te Horo, Waitohu and the Hautere Plains - are
intermingled with the township settlements to the north.
Environment
The Kapiti District covers 40 kilometres of coastal
plain. Its natural boundary to the east is the Tararua Ranges
and to the west the Tasman Sea. The District strongly identifies
with Kapiti Island, a national wildlife sanctuary, which is
located five kilometres offshore from Paraparaumu.
Population
The Kapiti Coast District had a usually resident population of
46,200 at the time of the last Census on March 6, 2006.
It is one of the fastest growing population areas in New
Zealand. Usually resident population increased by 8.8% from
2001 to 2006 following a 10.0% increase in the 1996 to 2001
period. This compares with population growth of 5.9% for the
Wellington Region and 7.8% for New Zealand over the 2001 t0 2006
period.
Economy
Apart from the significant rural sectors, major contributors to
the economy are the retail trade and tourism, house construction
and related trades, education, aged care and some niche
manufacturing industries.
The retail sector led employment with 20.8%, followed by
construction 12.5%, health and community services 11.6%, and
property and business services 10.1%.
The Kapiti Coast District Council and Horowhenua District
Council jointly fund
NatureCoast, an economic development agency for the combined
region.
The District's gross domestic product in the year ended March
2003 was an estimated $721 million, representing 0.6% of the New
Zealand economy. The largest contributors were finance and
business services (including property services), retail trade,
construction and manufacturing.
Kapiti has had a shift in land use to more diverse horticultural
uses such as grapes, olives, feijoas, asparagus and nashi pears
ventures alongside the more traditional market gardening
pursuits.
It also has a small but growing tourism sector with
activity-based ventures including trips to Kapiti Island and
ventures based around Paraparaumu Airport and the river and
forest parks at Otaki Forks and Maungakotukutuku Valley. |
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