Slow Down – You’re Here
Waiheke Island shaping a sustainable future
All Current Projects
2022: Slow Cars – enable microcars
Electric 2 and 3 wheeled mopeds (max speed 50 km/h) are legal in NZ, but not the safer 4 wheeler. Let’s ask NZTA/MOT to make 4-wheel mopeds legal and designate Waiheke Island as the first Local Transport Zone allowing their use on Waiheke roads.
2021: Shelter.NZ multi-pods
Multi-purpose pods are suitable for occupation by people, animals, machinery and chattel. They are a key part of the SlowFoods project to provide farm worker housing, seed sheds, tool and machinery. But we need central and local government to come to the party.
2023: Slow Energy – Local Solar
Solar power is slow power, it takes all day to charge, makes no sounds and has no moving parts. It can be on a roof, or a solar farm hooked to the grid. It can have 24/7 storage.
A Waiheke group is implementing a local solar power initiative. As this project unfolds, Slow Down NZ will provide links to Waiheke Energy
2023: Slow Foods: Grow local food
Unlike olives and grapes which can grow on slopes, market foods need level land. Divert truckloads of excavated clay to local sites at no charge to the land owner. Prepare the land with terraced gardens for market garden food growing on a rent-free commercial basis.
2020: SlowCycles – Cross Waiheke
The NZ Cycle Trail is a great idea, but pedaling through the big smoke is not. Instead ride to Devonport, take Fullers to Matiatia and Sealink to Half Moon Bay – except the Waiheke route is along a main arterial. Hey AT, do it right, a new cycle route like they do in the EU.
2021: Shelter.NZ multi-pods
Multi-purpose pods are suitable for occupation by people, animals, machinery and chattel. They are a key part of the SlowFoods project to provide farm worker housing, seed sheds, tool and machinery. But we need central and local government to come to the party.
2022: Slow Cars – enable microcars
Electric 2 and 3 wheeled mopeds (max speed 50 km/h) are legal in NZ, but not the safer 4 wheeler. Let’s ask NZTA/MOT to make 4-wheel mopeds legal and designate Waiheke Island as the first Local Transport Zone allowing their use on Waiheke roads.
2023: Slow Foods: Grow local food
Unlike olives and grapes which can grow on slopes, market foods need level land. Divert truckloads of excavated clay to local sites at no charge to the land owner. Prepare the land with terraced gardens for market garden food growing on a rent-free commercial basis.
Previous Accomplishments
2002: SlowNet – bring broadband
In 2002, Waiheke began a broadband initiative. Telecom was not interested, so Waiheke said they would build their own network. As expected, that panicked the industry and soon both Telecom and ICONZ were installing broadband. The name SlowNet was inspired by the sign that greets the ferries.
22003: Love Matiatia (Round 1)
In 2003, Waitemata Infrastructure Ltd sought a private plan change to convert Waiheke’s gateway into a private boutique hotel. The island organised into the Community & People of Waiheke (CaPoW) with ⅓ of the population joining to oppose. Funds held by Me Aroha Waiheke Foundation, later Trust Waiheke, who raised $170,000 to defeat WIL.
22008: Raise Bed Gardens
In 2008, a community resource to make raised bed gardens was launched. A set of steel and timber moulds were made, filled with the Waiheke mud brick mix (Gap 40 / cement). Ownership of the moulds and mixer was released into the public domain, circulated throughout Waiheke, passing from one gardener to another .
02013: Food Forests Waiheke
In 2012, the Trust was dormant until it was reactivated for the Food Forest Waiheke project. 30 fruit trees on a community-owned section were under-planted to create a thriving eco-system. As a pilot program, it was to serve as a model for local food. It worked and continues to serve as a model even after its founder moved off island.
2014: SlowCycles – bring ebikes
In 2013 the Slow Down team went to China to find the latest in ebike kits, bringing back a new midmount motor that would change NZ transport as it flattened the hills. It then put together a buying group in 2014, 27 kits that bike dealers noticed. Soon Waiheke had the most ebikes per capita in NZ and ebikes went viral, nationwide.
202013: Food Forests Waiheke
In 2012, the Trust was dormant until it was reactivated for the Food Forest Waiheke project. 30 fruit trees on a community-owned section were under-planted to create a thriving eco-system. As a pilot program, it was to serve as a model for local food. It worked and continues to serve as a model even after its founder moved off island.
22014: SlowCycles – bring ebikes
In 2013 the Slow Down team went to China to find the latest in ebike kits, bringing back a new midmount motor that would change NZ transport as it flattened the hills. It then put together a buying group in 2014, 27 kits that bike dealers noticed. Soon Waiheke had the most ebikes per capita in NZ and ebikes went viral, nationwide.
2023: Slow Foods: Grow local food
Unlike olives and grap
es which can grow on slopes, market foods need level land. Divert truckloads of excavated clay to local sites at no charge to the land owner. Prepare the land with terraced gardens for market garden food growing on a rent-free commercial basis.
Click on photographs for links