Skip to main content

Transport

The North Island main trunk line

Learn about the rapid rise and slow decline of passenger travel on the iconic main trunk line. Read about life on the rails and the vital role of the railway refreshment room.

More on this topic

Container shipping

Container shipping in New Zealand began 1971 and revolutionised the shipping industry - and containers themselves came to be used for everything from houses to prison cells

More on this topic

Rail tourism

From the late 19th century New Zealand’s expanding rail network opened up exciting leisure and tourism opportunities.

More on this topic

Railway stations

For many years the railway station was a prominent and familiar landmark in New Zealand cities, towns and rural districts

More on this topic

Cook Strait rail ferries

For more than four decades the Cook Strait road/rail ferries have formed a 'floating bridge' linking the North and South Islands into a single national transport system.

More on this topic

Oamaru Harbour

Ports were vital to colonial expansion and no town could prosper without one. The story of Oamaru Harbour helps explain why New Zealanders were once so dependent on sea transport.

More on this topic

Oamaru Harbour

Ports were vital to colonial expansion and no town could prosper without one. The story of Oamaru Harbour helps explain why New Zealanders were once so dependent on sea transport.

More on this topic

Lyttelton-Wellington ferries

For more than 80 years the overnight Lyttelton ferry, or Steamer Express Service as the Union Steam Ship Company called it, was a vital link in the country’s transport network.

More on this topic

Richard Pearse

Was the year 1902 or 1903? Whatever the precise date, Richard Pearse was the first New Zealander to fly - very briefly.

More on this topic