Tākina Wellington Convention & Exhibition Centre
Tākina Convention and Exhibition Centre in Wellington, New Zealand is purpose-built for conferences. It offers modern spaces and customisation for any event.
Tākina, the capital’s exciting new convention and exhibition centre, opened in May 2023, marking the start of an exciting new era of business events for Wellington.
The experienced team at Tākina Events manages the spaces within Tākina. After a successful opening and inaugural week of events, Te Papa director of museum and commercial services Jake Downing talks about the behind-the-scenes efforts.
It was important to get staff into the building as soon as possible to get a feel for the space. Get them into the flow and gain a clear understanding of how everything worked before the venue opened. Doing this while Tākina was still being built was a challenge and it was different for each team. Testing the kitchen, for example, had to wait until it was certified. Our AV teams only got access to use the equipment days before the first test event went live. It was important for them to learn what they could before they could actually get in and plug in.
Another key learning was to wear comfortable shoes. When you’re walking every inch of a new venue, your step count gets pretty high.
We were lucky Tākina was delivered on time and that we had a chance to run test events. This allowed us to trial our operations and service delivery procedures in real-time. We have some great partners who allowed us to use their events as “guinea pigs”. They put massive trust in us and we will forever be grateful.
Both main test events had great feedback, from the catering to the venue and AV. As expected, we’ve learned how to do a few things differently across these events, but it didn’t impact the delegate experience.
Work started to promote and fill Tākina long before the doors opened, and people are excited to book this beautiful, world-class space. We’ve had a strong level of inquiries across a variety of different events.
These events range from some of New Zealand’s largest trade exhibitions to banquet dinners, and multi-day medium to large-scale conferences. With good demand coming from Australia and beyond. At the time of opening, there were more than 50 multi-day conferences planned in the first year, with bookings as far out as 2027.
We’re super excited to welcome and host guests into this amazing, wonderful space. This wouldn’t have happened without the hard work of all our partners: Wellington City Council, Business Events Wellington, WellingtonNZ, and Te Papa. I’m so grateful for the huge the team at Tākina Events has put in. There were some massive days, and they’ve done a wonderful job in bringing Tākina to life.
Tākina Convention and Exhibition Centre in Wellington, New Zealand is purpose-built for conferences. It offers modern spaces and customisation for any event.
Sarah Healy from Venues Wellington shares ways to help event planners make the most of their business events and conferences and meet sustainability goals.
Conference Innovators director Rachel Cook shares how to build a successful partnership with your business events venue provider.
Tākina Wellington Convention & Exhibition Centre was a key factor in the success of WaterNZ's largest conference to date, with more than 1,600 delegates.
Now in its second year, New Zealand’s Life Science Summit aims to create a better government understanding of the biotech sector.
ICMSA’s Emma Bowyer shares strategies for attracting Asia Pacific delegates to your conference and growing the attendance at your Wellington business event.
The New Zealand Women in Medicine Charitable Trust’s Wellington conference united medical wāhine to tackle industry challenges and build a stronger community.
Keynote speaker, Jehan Casinader, a survivor of depression and suicidality, talks about putting wellbeing at the heart of your conference experience.
Sustainability was top of mind at the New Zealand International Education Conference KI TUA held at Tākina Wellington Conference and Exhibition Centre.
Integrating Māori practices into events is no longer just a symbolic gesture. It is a meaningful reflection of an organisation’s cultural capability.