Te Ara o Timo in Avalon is named after a traditional wooden digging tool known as a timo. This implement was used for loosening soil during cultivation and often crafted from forked branches with a flattened blade and a rounded handle. The timo represents the practical ingenuity of Māori horticultural practices at Motutawa Pā, where such tools would have supported the settlement’s extensive gardening efforts in the 1840s 1.
In October 2022, Hutt City Council approved a development at 181B Taitā Drive, Avalon, comprising 205 residential units, a commercial building, and retail activity. As part of the resource consent process, formal approval of new street names was required. The original placeholder names (Road Alpha, Beta, Charlie, and Delta) were replaced with te reo Māori names following consultation with Mana Whenua and in line with the Hutt City Council Naming Policy Guide.
Each street name in this development reflects the historical and cultural significance of Motutawa Pā, which once occupied part of what is now Avalon Park. The pā’s surrounding areas were used for extensive gardening and food cultivation, extending south from Takapū near Te Awa Kairangi (Hutt River) across Fairway Drive to Boulcott’s Farm Heritage Golf Course.
- Hutt City Council[↩]