The Mole (sea wall) 55 Moana Street, Portobello, Aramoana 9082

The Mole (sea wall)





237 Reviews
  • FridayOpen 24 hours
  • SaturdayOpen 24 hours
  • SundayOpen 24 hours
  • MondayOpen 24 hours
  • TuesdayOpen 24 hours
  • WednesdayOpen 24 hours
  • ThursdayOpen 24 hours




The Mole (sea wall) 55 Moana Street, Portobello, Aramoana 9082




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55 Moana Street, Portobello, Aramoana 9082

Hours

  • FridayOpen 24 hours
  • SaturdayOpen 24 hours
  • SundayOpen 24 hours
  • MondayOpen 24 hours
  • TuesdayOpen 24 hours
  • WednesdayOpen 24 hours
  • ThursdayOpen 24 hours

Features

  • Wheelchair-accessible car park
  • Wheelchair-accessible entrance
  • Good for kids




Recommended Reviews

Shane R
05.10.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Aramoana = Pathway to the Sea" Indeed !!! A truly gorgeous beach with amazing scenery and vibrant wildlife. The bounty of beautiful seashells that wash up here is absolutely endless
Ros C
09.09.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Unbelievable stench from the seagulls. Spotting some seals. Amazing shells on the beach beside, but don't get caught out by the tide.
Daryll Edlin
01.09.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Great walk on the wharf and awesome beaches.
M N Scott
28.08.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Great place for history, wildlife and views. Definitely recommend.
WH Lum
15.08.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Must walk until the end to see seals. Saw a few penguins swimming too. Around 5:3pm+
Richard Healey
06.08.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
The mole at the entrance to Otago Harbour provides the opportunity for a pretty unique seaside walk, with some interesting maritime history thrown in.Originally known as Cargill’s Pier, after early notable Captain William Cargill (check out Cargill's Castle and Tunnel Beach), the Mole is a man-made rock wall constructed to protect the harbour entrance from silt. It directs tidal flow and helps keeps the channel clear. It extends a thousand metres out to sea and provides generally good footing for walkers but is closed to vehicle traffic. Common sense should be used when a trip is planned in rough weather.The Otago Harbour Board was established on 30 June 1874 to manage the Port and Harbour.  This body remained in place untill 1988.Today, Port Otago Limited operates two wharf systems – Port Chalmers and Dunedin – within Otago Harbour. Port Chalmers is one of New Zealand’s two deepest container ports and services the largest container ships in the New Zealand trade.Port Chalmers owes its considerable natural depth to the designof Sir John Coode, a nineteenth century, English, civil engineer.  Sir John was invited to New Zealand in 1880 to delivere a report to the Government on improving facilities and depths at 10 ports throughout the country.  His plan for Port Chalmers was simple but, ultimately, effective.The entrance to Otago Harbour features a sand bar that, at the time, restricted the size and draft of vessels calling at the port.  The Otago Harbour Board had decided that dredging the channel was the only solution and invested in a large bucket dredge even though Coode’s report was due to be presented.  Coode considered a dredge could work, but that nature would have the final say and long-term improvement of the entrance and channel could not be secured by mechanical means.  He proposed a long (1,890m) mole outward from the sandspit in a north northwest direction, with a shorter (518m) eastern mole to be built out from Taiaroa Head.  The tidal current, in its rush to make its way through the narrowed entrance created by the moles, would cut into the sandbar and deepen the channel naturally.The first load of rock for the long mole was deposited in January 1885 and, by November 1887, the mole was 1,246m long.  The beneficial effects of the mole were immediately apparent with the depth at the sand bar increasing by 4.6m from its 1879 depth.  Plans for the eastern mole were subsequently shelved.Between 1921 and 1945 several hulks were scuttled along the Mole to protect it from erosion by the sea.Marine mammals are often found sleeping on the rocks of the Mole. Please give them some space as you walk by, for your sake as well as theirs.
Trudy Drake
01.08.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Long drive, I like it. Nice beaches either side of the mole. Long walk out and didn't get to the end coz there were two seals on the walkway so opted to turn around and head back.Saw Fairy terns, shags and seals on the rocks towards the end of the mole hanging out. Awesomely clear water.
Maurice Keane
29.07.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Fabulous walk along the sea wall. Spotted a couple of seals, and could see the albatross on the hill opposite. Warm, with no breeze. Fabulous winter day.
Martin Eriksen
19.07.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Aramoana Beach is just awesome. There's a cliff with a hole in it there. Huge beach and easy to park there. The views are pretty and amazing scenery with the cliffs that rise up behind you. Good surf area.There's also the option of doing (some of) the Heyward Point walk that takes you on top of the cliff looking down on the beach. Amazing change of perspective of the same place.
peter fataaiki
19.07.2023
The Mole (sea wall)
Wild, windswept, exposed long sea wall perpendicular to aramoana beach. Saw seals sleeping on it near the end.Across the harbour mouth from the Royal albatross centre.

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55 Moana Street, Portobello, Aramoana 9082
The Mole (sea wall)