Elisapeta Hinemoa Heta is a New Zealand MÃÂori architectural graduate. She is affiliated to the NgÃÂti Wai and Waikato Tainui iwi (tribes). She also has Samoan and Tokelauan heritage. Heta was the recipient of a National Association of Women in Construction (New Zealand) Excellence Award in 2018.
Heta grew up in a small cottage in RÃÂnui, West Auckland, and later in Te Atatà « North. Her mother was a school caretaker and cleaner, and her father was a security guard. She attended Ranui Primary School, Te Atatà « Peninsula Primary School, Te Atatà « Intermediate School and Rutherford College.
She enrolled to study architecture at the University of Auckland in 2007, and went on to complete two master's degrees: one in architecture and another in museums and cultural heritage. After graduating, she took a series of short-term contracts, including for DesignTRIBE, in television and film, and also travelled to the United States. On her return, she worked with Lynda Simmons to prepare an exhibition for Architecture + Women NZ, which was staged in 2013.
In 2015, she joined architectural design firm Jasmax and began to work with three other MÃÂori architectural graduates to bring MÃÂori design principles to the firm's projects and to engage with local iwi and hapu. She later became a principal architect at the company. At Jasmax, she has worked on projects such as the New Zealand Pavilion at Expo 2020 in Dubai, the Fale Malae project in Wellington, the Western Springs College NgàPuna O Waià Ârea development and infrastructure such as stations and pedestrian bridges for the Auckland City Rail Link project.
Heta was a New Zealand Institute of Architects board member from 2016 to 2019. She was co-opted to the board to represent NgÃÂ Aho, a national network of MÃÂori design professionals. She was instrumental in the process which gifted the Institute a MÃÂori language name, Te KÃÂhui Whaihanga, and also co-wrote and implemented Te Kawenata o Rata (a covenant) between NgÃÂ Aho and the institute, recognising Te Tiriti o Waitangi. She joined Architecture + Women NZ in 2013 and co-chaired the organisation in 2017 and 2018.
In 2022, Heta was appointed co-director of the UIA (International Union of Architects) Indigenous Peoples Work Programme.
In 2018, she won the Rising Star Award (office-based category) at the National Association of Women in Construction (New Zealand) Excellence Awards. In 2022, Heta received a Te KÃÂhui Whaihanga New Zealand Institute of Architects President's Award.