Whitford Brown Avenue
View on MapAotea, Wellington
Camera Details
- Type
- Speed Camera
- Region
- Wellington
- Location
- Aotea
- Coordinates
- -41.122463, 174.858308
About This Location
This camera was installed in late 2014, and in its first full year it issued over 15,000 tickets worth $1.13 million, making it the country's highest-grossing speed camera at the time. In 2008, retired Erebus disaster investigator Ron Chippindale was killed by a speeding driver while walking on the footpath here, after which the speed limit was dropped from 70km/h to 50km/h and a median barrier was added. Residents were split on the camera from day one. Some called it a waste of money on an already-improved road, while others pointed out that Aotea College students regularly cross here. When it was first installed, locals accused police of hiding it behind a pohutukawa tree to boost revenue, and police agreed to reposition it. The camera's unpopularity has gone beyond words: it's been shot at twice, beaten, and sawn off its post. It has since slid to around fifth in the national revenue rankings, but it still catches plenty of drivers, including one clocked at 103km/h in the 50km/h zone.
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Related News
- NZ's highest-grossing speed camera in spot with no fatalities in eight years
Stuff - 2016-03-04
- Residents question positioning of speed camera
Stuff - 2014-09-15
- Whitford Brown speed camera NZ's busiest
Stuff - 2016-01-12
- Porirua speed camera catches man driving 103km/h on a 50km/h suburban street
Stuff - 2017-10-25
How This Camera Works
This is a fixed spot speed camera that measures your instantaneous speed as you pass using radar technology. If your speed exceeds the posted limit, the camera captures an image of your vehicle and number plate. Spot speed cameras are the most common type across the Wellington region and operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.