Southward Car Museum

Coordinates: 40°53′39″S 175°01′45″E / 40.894035°S 175.029224°E / -40.894035; 175.029224
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Southward Car Museum
Map
Established1979; 45 years ago (1979)
TypeCar museum
FounderLen Southward
Websitewww.southwardcarmuseum.co.nz
The entrance to Southward Car Museum from Otaihanga Road.

The Southward Car Museum is an automobile museum and event centre in Otaihanga, New Zealand. It was established by Len Southward in the 1970s to house his collection of over 450 vehicles and several aircraft and is now run by a charitable trust.[1] The museum is just north of Paraparaumu on the Kāpiti Coast, about an hour's drive from Wellington and situated just east of the North Island Main Trunk railway and State Highway 1, on Otaihanga Road.

The purpose-built building includes a 6000 square metre exhibition hall, engineering workshop, gift shop and small cafe, all set in park-like grounds. The building also incorporates the 474-seat Southward Theatre, which features the 1929 Wurlitzer Unit Orchestra theatre organ that was originally installed in the Civic Theatre in Auckland.

History[edit]

The core car collection was the personal work of Sir Len Southward and his wife Vera. The couple began collecting cars in 1956 with a Ford Model T.[2]

Having established the largest private car collection in Australasia, in 1976 Len purchased a 6-hectare (15-acre) site on which to establish a museum open to the public. Ground was broken on the museum site in 1971, but construction wasn't given council consent until 1977. The museum officially opened on 22 December 1979.[1]

Len and Vera Southward Legacy exhibit

In 2020 a new exhibit in the museum was opened, detailing Len and Vera's lives and achievements, including new digital and material installations.[1]

Collection[edit]

Main display hall of Southward Car Museum, New Zealand, 2023

The museum has about 450 vehicles,[1] which include:

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Haxton, David (11 December 2020). "Southward Car Museum adds legacy room in honour of Sir Len Southward". Kapiti News. NZME Publishing. Retrieved 22 July 2022 – via The New Zealand Herald.
  2. ^ Lambert, Max (1991). Who's Who in New Zealand, 1991 (12th ed.). Auckland: Octopus. p. 595. ISBN 9780790001302.

External links[edit]

Media related to Southward Car Museum at Wikimedia Commons

40°53′39″S 175°01′45″E / 40.894035°S 175.029224°E / -40.894035; 175.029224