Wai Ariki Hot Springs and Spa is grounded in te ao Māori, including the physical design of the building.
This unique spa and wellness experience will give you an authentic taste of manaakitanga which is the centuries-old and internationally-renowned Ngāti Whakaue concept of welcoming their manuhiri (visitors).
Wai Ariki means ‘chiefly waters’ and directly connects to the origin of Rotorua’s geothermal waters which were called to Aotearoa (NZ) by Ngātoroirangi – the great ariki (chief) and tohunga (priest) of the Arawa waka
(the canoe or vessel that brought the tribe of Te Arawa to Aotearoa New Zealand from Hawaiki).
Ngātoroirangi became overcome by snow, ice and wind on the peaks of Mt Tongariro, and prayed to his sisters in Hawaiki to send fire to revive him. Te Pupu and Te Hoata, the subterranean goddesses of fire, made their mark on our land as they desperately searched for their brother. Finally, they reached Ngātoroirangi, bringing heat and fire, saving him from certain death, and leaving behind the geothermal resource we draw on today.
It is said that the sisters of Ngātoroirangi rested longer in Ōhinemutu – the ancestral home of Ngāti Whakaue and the whenua (land) on which Wai Ariki has been developed – which imbued the area with a special potency, providing its unique healing powers.
The elders of Ngāti Whakaue have always known and used the innate healing properties of the waters in their whenua. They would visit the waiariki (hot springs) in conjunction with immersion in the contrasting waipuna (cold springs), for therapy and healing.
These traditional practices are at the heart of the Wai Ariki spa journey, offering the same healing benefits for manuhiri from across Aotearoa (NZ) and around the world.