à Âtara is a suburb of South Auckland, New Zealand (formerly Manukau City), situated 18 kilometres to the southeast of the Auckland City Centre. à Âtara lies near the head of the TÃÂmaki River. The area is traditionally part of the rohe of NgÃÂi Tai ki TÃÂmaki, and the name à Âtara refers to à Âtara Hill / Te Puke à  Tara, a former NgÃÂi Tai ki TÃÂmaki pàand volcanic hill to the north of the suburb. From 1851 to 1910 the area was part of the Goodfellow family farm, and during the 1910s the area was an agricultural college run by the Dilworth Trust.
After the construction of the Auckland Southern Motorway in the 1950s, Ã Âtara developed as a suburb, primarily as part of a state housing project by the New Zealand Government.
à Âtara, meaning "The Place of Tara", is a shortened form of à Âtara Hill / Te Puke à  Tara, the volcanic hill previously found to the north of the suburb. The hill is either named for the Waiohua ancestor and taniwha of the Manukau Harbour, Tara-mai-nuku, or for the 19th century paramount chief of NgÃÂi Tai ki TÃÂmaki, Tara Te Irirangi. An earlier name applied to the area was NgàKopi o Toi ('The Karaka Berries of Toi'), named for a karaka grove said by tradition to have been brought to Tamaki from the Chatham Islands and planted in the vicinity of Greenmount by Toi-te-huatahi. During European settlement, the name à Âtara became associated with the area in the 1850s.
à Âtara is found in South Auckland at the south-eastern headlands of the TÃÂmaki River, primarily to the north-east of the Auckland Southern Motorway. The à Âtara Creek runs through the suburb, becoming a tidal estuary of the TÃÂmaki River in the north.
There are two features of the Auckland Volcanic Field in the area. Pukewairiki is an estuary of the à Âtara Creek and a volcanic maar that erupted an estimated 130,000 years ago. à Âtara Hill / Te Puke o Tara is a volcano located to the north in East TÃÂmaki that erupted an estimated 56,500 years ago, and was quarried in the mid-20th century. Lava flows from the hill flowed as far south as the à Âtara Town Centre.
The à Âtara area is part of the rohe of NgÃÂi Tai ki TÃÂmaki, who descend from the crew of the Tainui migratory waka, who visited the area around the year 1300. The mouth of the TÃÂmaki River was traditionally known as ("The Waters of TÃÂiki"), named after the NgÃÂi Tai ancestor TÃÂiki. TÃÂiki settled with his followers along the eastern shores of the TÃÂmaki River, alongside the descendants of HuiÃÂrangi of the early iwi Te Tini à  Maruiwi. The upper reaches of the river near modern was traditionally known as , referring to Mokoikahikuwaru, a protector taniwha of the Tainui waka who is described in legends as taking up residence at the Panmure Basin. The area is close to the portages where waka could be easily taken over land between the Manukau Harbour and TÃÂmaki River, including Te Tà  Waka at à ÂtÃÂhuhu and Waokauri / Pà «kaki portage at Papatoetoe.
NgÃÂi Tai created extensive cultivations along the eastern shores of the TÃÂmaki River. The area around (à Âtara Creek) and à Âtara Hill / Te Puke à  Tara was home to the extensive stonefield gardens and a fortified pÃÂ, occupied up until the early 19th century. Over time, with the emergence and expansion of later hapà «/sub group of Iwi and iwi identities, NgÃÂti Tai occupying the area of Tara became closely interlinked by marriages with Te Akitai, NgÃÂti Tamaoho and NgÃÂti Kahu of the TÃÂmaki Makaurau (Auckland) confederation of tribes known collectively as Te Wai à  Hua, and with the Hauraki Gulf peoples of NgÃÂti PÃÂoa and NgÃÂti TamaterÃÂ, among others. The NgÃÂti PÃÂoa chieftain Hauauru noted in 1851 that by the mid-1830s NgÃÂti PÃÂoa, NgÃÂti Tamateràand Te Akitai had competing interests in à Âtara. While all of these groups hold ancestral relationships to the à Âtara area, NgÃÂi Tai continue to retain recognised mana whenua status.
During the Musket Wars in the 1820s, NgÃÂi Tai sought temporary refuge in the Waikato. When English missionary William Thomas Fairburn visited the area in 1833, it was mostly unoccupied.
In 1836, William Thomas Fairburn brokered a land sale between TÃÂmaki MÃÂori chiefs covering the majority of modern-day South Auckland and East Auckland. The sale was envisioned as a way to end hostilities in the area, but it is unclear what the chiefs understood or consented to. MÃÂori continued to live in the area, unchanged by this sale. In 1854 when Fairburn's purchase was investigated by the New Zealand Land Commission, a NgÃÂi Tai reserve was created around the Wairoa River and Umupuia areas, and as a part of the agreement, members of NgÃÂi Tai agreed to leave their traditional settlements to the west.
In 1851, William Goodfellow purchased Otara Farm along the south-eastern shores of the TÃÂmaki River, where he built a homestead. William and Ann Goodfellow were some of the very first migrants to Auckland, New Zealand in 1840 on the ship the Lady Lilford. The Goodfellows were joined by Reverend Gideon Smales, who settled a block purchased from the Government in 1856 at East TÃÂmaki. The wider East TÃÂmaki area was predominantly farmland where crops such as wheat were grown, and in the late 19th century the area began converting into dairy farms.
In 1861, Governor George Grey ordered the construction of the Great South Road further south into the Waikato, to improve supply lines through swampy and thickly forested country, prior to the Invasion of the Waikato. On 9 July 1863, due to fears of the MÃÂori King Movement, Governor Grey proclaimed that all MÃÂori living in the South Auckland area needed to swear loyalty to the Queen and give up their weapons. Most people refused due to strong links to Tainui, leaving for the south. During this time, the Te ÃÂkitai Waiohua rangatira êhaka Takaanini was arrested and died on Rakino Island. After the war, the Crown confiscated 1.2 million acres of MÃÂori land around the Waikato, including Waiohua land in South Auckland, and NgÃÂi Tai land in East Auckland, despite NgÃÂi Tai being considered "friendly" people by the Crown and not asked to leave the region.
In 1910, the Goodfellow family sold their farm to the Dilworth Trust, who established the Dilworth Ulster Institute School of Agriculture in 1915. Few people attended the agricultural college, which closed in 1918. In 1919, the Dilworth Trust subdivided the property, and in 1950 sold much of the land to the Ministry of Works, who established the Otara Fertiliser Research Station at the site of the former school. In 1929, the Waitemata Brewery was constructed on the corner of Bairds Road and Great South Road, later becoming DB Breweries.
The development of the Auckland Southern Motorway in the mid-1950s led to an explosion in the population of Papatoetoe and Manurewa to the south. To counter overcrowding in the central suburbs, the New Zealand Government undertook large scale state housing developments, creating planned suburbs. à Âtara was chosen as a site for a state housing project due to its proximity to the motorway and the industrial areas of à ÂtÃÂhuhu and Penrose, and it was the second large-scale state housing development in Auckland aimed at low-income families, centred around a retail and community centre, following Glen Innes. In August 1958, a Memorandum of Agreement was signed between the Ministry of Works and the Manukau County Council to develop à Âtara, and within 10 years over 3,000 houses had been built.
In June 1958, Otahuhu Foodtown, the first supermarket in New Zealand, was opened by Tom Ah Chee in the future site of à Âtara, who pooled his resources with two other Auckland produce shop owners, Norman Kent and John Brown. The à Âtara Town Centre was officially opened in 1966.
In 1968, the Otahuhu Power Station was opened in à Âtara, which at the time was the largest gas turbine in Australasia, and operated until 2016. In 1970, the Otara Fertiliser Research Station was redeveloped into Manukau Institute of Technology's à Âtara campus, and in 1972 the NgÃÂti à Âtara Marae was officially opened. In 1987, the à Âtara Town Centre was redeveloped, with the sculpture Fish Canopy by architect Rewi Thompson. Inspired by Pasifika fale and constructed in the shape of a fish.
à Âtara covers and had an estimated population of as of with a population density of people per km<sup>2</sup>.
à Âtara had a population of 21,711 in the 2023 New Zealand census, a decrease of 1,161 people (âÂÂ5.1%) since the 2018 census, and an increase of 972 people (4.7%) since the 2013 census. There were 10,674 males, 10,977 females and 60 people of other genders in 4,659 dwellings. 1.8% of people identified as LGBTIQ+. The median age was 27.6 years (compared with 38.1 years nationally). There were 5,895 people (27.2%) aged under 15 years, 5,868 (27.0%) aged 15 to 29, 8,283 (38.2%) aged 30 to 64, and 1,668 (7.7%) aged 65 or older.
People could identify as more than one ethnicity. The results were 10.2% European (PÃÂkehÃÂ); 21.8% MÃÂori; 78.4% Pasifika; 7.4% Asian; 0.4% Middle Eastern, Latin American and African New Zealanders (MELAA); and 0.3% other, which includes people giving their ethnicity as "New Zealander". English was spoken by 89.7%, MÃÂori language by 5.7%, Samoan by 27.4%, and other languages by 17.0%. No language could be spoken by 2.7% (e.g. too young to talk). New Zealand Sign Language was known by 0.5%. The percentage of people born overseas was 35.1, compared with 28.8% nationally.
Religious affiliations were 65.1% Christian, 1.1% Hindu, 1.1% Islam, 2.3% MÃÂori religious beliefs, 0.5% Buddhist, 0.1% New Age, and 0.7% other religions. People who answered that they had no religion were 21.4%, and 8.1% of people did not answer the census question.
Of those at least 15 years old, 1,023 (6.5%) people had a bachelor's or higher degree, 7,776 (49.2%) had a post-high school certificate or diploma, and 7,020 (44.4%) people exclusively held high school qualifications. The median income was $29,200, compared with $41,500 nationally. 348 people (2.2%) earned over $100,000 compared to 12.1% nationally. The employment status of those at least 15 was that 6,984 (44.2%) people were employed full-time, 1,362 (8.6%) were part-time, and 1,101 (7.0%) were unemployed.
à Âtara achieved some international recognition due to the success of the song "How Bizarre", by à Âtara-based musical group OMC. The group's name stands for "à Âtara Millionaires' Club", an ironic reference to à Âtara being one of the least wealthy areas of Auckland at the time the group formed.
à Âtara is also known for its Saturday morning 'flea market' held in the à Âtara shopping centre car park next to the South Campus of Manukau Institute of Technology. The à Âtara Markets first started in the late 1970s, and are the largest street market in New Zealand.
à Âtara long had some of the highest crime rates of the country, but recently a major action against the Tribesmen and Killer Beez gangs (in 2008), and 2010s increases in police force numbers in the area, combined with a community policing approach, have been credited with both reducing crime and establishing less hostile attitudes between the locals and the police.
Sir Edmund Hillary Collegiate consists of three schools on a single campus. The Junior School catering for years 1âÂÂ6 has a roll of ; the Middle School, years 7 and 8, has students; and the Senior School catering for Years 9âÂÂ13 has . Hillary College, Bairds Intermediate and Clydemore Primary School are the three schools that now form Sir Edmund Hillary Collegiate.
Tangaroa College is a secondary school (years 9âÂÂ13) with a roll of . The Tangaroa College Teen Parent Unit shares its campus.
Ferguson Intermediate is an intermediate school (years 7âÂÂ8) with a roll of .
Bairds Mainfreight Primary School, Dawson School, East TÃÂmaki School, Flat Bush School, Mayfield School, Rongomai School, Wymondley Road School and Yendarra School are contributing primary schools (years 1âÂÂ6) with rolls of , , , , , , and students, respectively.
Te Kura Kaupapa MÃÂori o Otara is a MÃÂori language full primary school (years 1âÂÂ8) with a roll of .
St John the Evangelist Catholic School is a state-integrated full primary school (years 1âÂÂ8) with a roll of .
All these schools are coeducational. Rolls are as of
à Âtara is also home to Manukau Institute of Technology's two main campuses.