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JnVSydney
澳大利亚Greater Sydney21,219 条分享
2023年3月
Located near the waterfront is this lovely pedestrianised area, the lees vehicle's the better in our opinion, nice to walk around enjoying the vibe of the city.
撰写日期:2023年5月10日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
Leatherlion
意大利米兰8,429 条分享
2022年6月 • 夫妻情侣
La piazza su cui affaccia il palazzo della municipalità è un piazza quasi anonima. La piazza potrebbe essere tenuta un po’ meglio.
撰写日期:2022年11月24日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
Sofi NS
希腊雅典22,921 条分享
2019年11月
η πλατεία του δημαρχείου δεν έχει τίποτα παρά μόνο ομάδες νέων και χορεύουν κάποιες φορές διασκεδάζοντας οικονομικά. πιστεύω ότι θα μπορούσαν κάπως να την εμπλουτίσουν. γύρω της καταστήματα κάθε είδους. βρίσκεται στην επέκταση της Queen Street.
撰写日期:2020年1月7日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
Oldjack
澳大利亚大墨尔本地区29,056 条分享
2019年11月
This square ,at the side of the Town Hall really had little atmosphere or character apart for the small statue of Sir Dove-Myer Robinson. It could be so much better in the center oif town.
撰写日期:2019年11月4日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
Janjust16
匈牙利布达佩斯861 条分享
2019年7月 • 夫妻情侣
Food all around. Clear Ice globe 🌏 to just hang out, ice rink, projector in the middle of the well maintained park- awesome sauce!
撰写日期:2019年7月12日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
CNWgtnNZ
新西兰惠灵顿1,211 条分享
2019年4月 • 家庭
Lovely square of greenery in the middle of the city. Sunny day. There is the Aotea Centre, a top dessert bar and a couple of other eateries. Scattered seating around. Be a nice place to sit if you worked in the CBD.
撰写日期:2019年4月12日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
Peter M
澳大利亚墨尔本1,293 条分享
2019年3月 • 独自旅游
Aotea Square is a large paved public area mnext to Queen Street. It was opened in 1979 by Sir Dove-Myer Robinson and was renovated in 2010. It is used for open air concerts,gatheries,markets and rallies
撰写日期:2019年4月6日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
on_the_go_98765
Tucson20,581 条分享
2019年2月 • 夫妻情侣
This square is Auckland's center for political discourse, protest rallies and various
demonstrations, as well as being the primo location for concerts and markets and parades. Maybe its close-cousins would be Athens' Parliament Square (where we have been during demonstrations) or even Washington D.C.'s Great Mall or Istanbul's Taksim Square (yup, been there during a demonstration too). Every major city surely has a place where people congregate for a number of reasons to raise their collective voices. This is Auckland's center.
Nothing volatile going on while we visited one brief weekend in February. And we are totally fine with that. We observed families watching carefully as their little tots took to their kiddie-wheels, hotties strutted their stuff, tourists grabbed on to anything that looked to make a good photo op and raised their hands in those ridiculous peace sign /victory poses (??? what is up with that anyway???), and the square was bouncing to life. Time for us to grab our grub and giddy-up back to the hotel.
The center of the square features an absolutely beautiful and intricate arch, Maori style. The arch motif is a common element in Maori culture. This particular piece was crafted by a Maori artist/sculptor and features fishes, birds, the moon, stars, small Maori vessels (everything filled with Maori symbolism), and a beautiful (Haiku) poem inscribed in the arch: "stop your snivelling creekbed, come rain, hail, and flood water, laugh again." The "snivelling" part spoke to me: shake it off (or so says Taylor Swift) and get on with life. Or so I heard anyway.
Each of us takes away something different and I feel quite certain that there is an entire college course taught in deciphering the hidden meaning to this haiku and all those delightful undercurrents of "what does this mean anyway?" Maybe I need to take that course. But as the tourists, "we takes them as we finds them" and feel the connection in our souls between this remote ancient culture and our own highly over- commercialized and interconnected selves. Sigh. Enough said.
Around the square is a statue dedicated to a founding father. He looks to be a Sonny Bono look-alike: both so dimunitive in stature but good things come in small packages (proven time and time again). You can't miss the statue, just look for those tourists wrapping themselves around the dude, all holding up those two fingers raised in (what?) triumph or conquest or victory sign ... this just escapes me. I am still mightily confounded. We normally try to stay completely clear of these remonstrations (and these people).
So, the square is front and center in the heart of the CBD and also the location for good eats and lots of fun (go to Sky World for some good entertainment and multi-ethnic eats and maybe bowl a game or two). The square is close to the university and that alone seems like enough to light the fuse of whatever cause is the cause du jour.
We love Auckland for its vibrancy, its multiculturism, its vitality, and its diversity. This (Aotea) square is home base for Auckland's pulse and its heart.
demonstrations, as well as being the primo location for concerts and markets and parades. Maybe its close-cousins would be Athens' Parliament Square (where we have been during demonstrations) or even Washington D.C.'s Great Mall or Istanbul's Taksim Square (yup, been there during a demonstration too). Every major city surely has a place where people congregate for a number of reasons to raise their collective voices. This is Auckland's center.
Nothing volatile going on while we visited one brief weekend in February. And we are totally fine with that. We observed families watching carefully as their little tots took to their kiddie-wheels, hotties strutted their stuff, tourists grabbed on to anything that looked to make a good photo op and raised their hands in those ridiculous peace sign /victory poses (??? what is up with that anyway???), and the square was bouncing to life. Time for us to grab our grub and giddy-up back to the hotel.
The center of the square features an absolutely beautiful and intricate arch, Maori style. The arch motif is a common element in Maori culture. This particular piece was crafted by a Maori artist/sculptor and features fishes, birds, the moon, stars, small Maori vessels (everything filled with Maori symbolism), and a beautiful (Haiku) poem inscribed in the arch: "stop your snivelling creekbed, come rain, hail, and flood water, laugh again." The "snivelling" part spoke to me: shake it off (or so says Taylor Swift) and get on with life. Or so I heard anyway.
Each of us takes away something different and I feel quite certain that there is an entire college course taught in deciphering the hidden meaning to this haiku and all those delightful undercurrents of "what does this mean anyway?" Maybe I need to take that course. But as the tourists, "we takes them as we finds them" and feel the connection in our souls between this remote ancient culture and our own highly over- commercialized and interconnected selves. Sigh. Enough said.
Around the square is a statue dedicated to a founding father. He looks to be a Sonny Bono look-alike: both so dimunitive in stature but good things come in small packages (proven time and time again). You can't miss the statue, just look for those tourists wrapping themselves around the dude, all holding up those two fingers raised in (what?) triumph or conquest or victory sign ... this just escapes me. I am still mightily confounded. We normally try to stay completely clear of these remonstrations (and these people).
So, the square is front and center in the heart of the CBD and also the location for good eats and lots of fun (go to Sky World for some good entertainment and multi-ethnic eats and maybe bowl a game or two). The square is close to the university and that alone seems like enough to light the fuse of whatever cause is the cause du jour.
We love Auckland for its vibrancy, its multiculturism, its vitality, and its diversity. This (Aotea) square is home base for Auckland's pulse and its heart.
撰写日期:2019年3月16日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
Sunshine77UC
新西兰基督城35 条分享
2019年2月 • 家庭
Coffee Culture in Aotea Square - outstanding service and friendly staff. When we last visited Auckland we dined there three days in succession - staff up-sized our coffee on the third visit acknowledging we were regulars - great initiative and really appreciated. Thank you to the team
撰写日期:2019年3月3日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
escancio
墨西哥墨西哥城466 条分享
2019年1月 • 夫妻情侣
Contigua a Queen Street, es un lugar de descanso con un par de esculturas, donde se realizan ejercicios orientales, que dispone de cafeterías y pequeños restaurantes cercanos.
撰写日期:2019年3月3日
此点评为 Tripadvisor 会员所写的主观评论,并不代表 Tripadvisor LLC 的观点。 Tripadvisor 对点评进行检查。
Depends what you mean by "good". The Rendezvous hotel and the Sky Tower complex are a short walk away if you want fine dining, with the Sky Tower by far the best option. But you will need to book ahead. If you want interesting Asian food I've found it good to haul myself up Queen Street where you'll find real Asians eating real Asian food in basic surroundings. It's not fine dining but it's good food.
撰写日期:2016年6月12日
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