Princes Wharf Auckland history

Looking out on the stunning Waitemata Harbour, Princes Wharf is home to a mixture of bars and restaurants as well as the five star Hilton Hotel.

There is are public viewing decks at the very end of the Wharf that boast views from the East, North and West. Complete with seating areas, they are a great space for harbour views, fresh air and a lovely place to just enjoy a coffee, read a book or grab a snack in a secluded spot.

Only on Princes Wharf could you romance someone with an incredible dining experience, sip on a cocktail, enjoy a beer or wine with friends, grab an ice cream or coffee, watch the ships come in or the sails go out, take a short stroll at dusk while the sun goes down and the city lights come on!

Princes Wharf is accessible via Quay St, in the heart of Auckland City. You can keep reading to learn more about Princes Wharf Auckland history!

Auckland's Waterfront Since 1924

Princes Wharf Auckland history
Princes Wharf, August 1924. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collection.

A century on the Waitematā

Few places in Auckland carry as much history as Princes Wharf. For over a century, this stretch of timber and concrete jutting into the Waitemata Harbour has been at the centre of the city’s relationship with the sea — first as a working cargo wharf, then as the gateway for great ocean liners, and today as one of Auckland’s most beloved waterfront dining and entertainment precinct.
Princes Wharf Auckland history
Opening Day of Princes Wharf 1929. Taken from Auckland Weekly News.

Built for a growing city

Plans for a new wharf on Auckland’s inner harbour were drawn up in 1920 by the Auckland Harbour Board, with construction beginning in 1921. Auckland’s new Princes Wharf was the finest structure of its time in the South Seas — a two-storey concrete building stretching over 1280 feet into the Waitematā, sufficient to accommodate four of the largest overseas liners – unlike any wharf Auckland had seen before. Every previous wharf in the city had been a single-storey shed; Princes Wharf was built for a different era entirely.
The wharf was formally opened by his excellency The Governor General on the 12 May, 1929. With HMS Hood – then the largest battlecruiser in the Royal Navy — berthed alongside for the occasion, a signal of just how significant the new infrastructure was to the British Empire’s Pacific interests. Princes Wharf was named for King George V son’s.

Princes Wharf Auckland history
The Esmeralda arrives at Princes Wharf, August 1966. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collection / NZ Herald.

Gateway to the world

Through the 1930s, 40s and 50s, Princes Wharf was Auckland’s window to the world. Cargo ships arrived from Britain, South America and Asia; ocean liners brought emigrants, returning Kiwis, and international visitors to a city growing rapidly after the Second World War. During the war, the wharf was used extensively by United States forces supporting operations in the Pacific. Sea travel remained Auckland’s main international gateway until the rise of long-distance air travel in the late 1950s and 1960s. Great ships including the Rangitane and Ruahine were regular visitor, and the Chilean Navy training ship Esmeralda was among the many international vessels that called in over the decades. For generations of Aucklanders, Princes Wharf was the place you went to farewell someone leaving for the Old Country — or to welcome them home.
Princes Wharf Auckland history
Princes Wharf from the Ferry Building, March 1933. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collection.

Working wharf to waterfront destination

By the late 1980s and 1990s, as containerisation transformed the shipping industry, Princes Wharf’s working life began to wind down. In 1997, a major redevelopment got underway — one of the most significant transformations in Auckland’s waterfront history. Designed by Leuschke Group Architects, the redevelopment preserved the wharf’s long concrete bones while reimagining everything above. Six interconnected buildings now span the structure, with restaurants and retail activating the ground floor, the Hilton Auckland anchoring the seaward prow, and the Overseas Passenger Terminal welcoming a new generation of cruise ship visitors. Over 120,000 square metres of commercial space was created, while covered pedestrian walkways on each side of the central driveway kept the focus firmly on people and the harbour.
Princes Wharf Auckland

Princes Wharf today

Today, Princes Wharf is one of Auckland’s most recognisable landmarks and a destination in its own right. The wharf’s restaurants draw locals and visitors for long harbour-view lunches and waterfront dinners. The Hilton Auckland at the tip of the wharf remains one of New Zealand’s finest five-star hotels, its rooms looking out over the same Waitemata Harbour that cargo ships once navigated into port. Cruise ships still berth alongside at the Overseas Passenger Terminal, connecting Auckland to the wider Pacific. The public viewing deck at the Hilton end of the wharf & Shed 24 — free for anyone to use — offers one of the most peaceful vantage points in the city, with views stretching to Rangitoto Island and the Hauraki Gulf. Whether you’re here for a meal, an event, a bike ride along the waterfront, or simply to take in the harbour views, Princes Wharf remains what it has always been: Auckland’s place on the water.