Photos showed a large plume of grey smoke billowing into the sky. A woman who saw the blaze that night said it could be seen from a long way away.
The building was left gutted.
Image 1 of 10: Damage after a fire at Mitai Maori Village. Photo / Annabel Reid
A place of joy
The performance area was a space where stories, song, and haka brought Māori culture to life for visitors from around the world.
Mitai Ngatai said it provided employment, pride, and purpose for local whānau, giving young performers a place to learn, grow, and carry their traditions forward.
For him, it wasn’t just a stage, but a place that helped Māori culture “survive and thrive”, providing employment, joy and pride.
Fire and Emergency group manager Brendon Grylls said the investigation was still under way, but it was not treating it as suspicious.
Grylls described the “rapidly developing” fire as “devastating”.
It was the second blaze the city had seen in the past three weeks after Whakarewarewa Rugby Community Sports Club - the city’s oldest rugby club - lost its clubrooms in a fire that destroyed photos, trophies and precious club memorabilia.
The fires so close together would have an impact on the community, Grylls said.
“You feel for them.”
Fire destroyed the Whakarewarewa Rugby Community Sports club.
Photo / Kelly Makiha
Grylls said firefighters did a “really good job” confining the fire to the building, with the wind thankfully blowing flames away from trees.
In a sign of support and sympathy, he received multiple calls from people checking in, along with several community members joining together for the clean-up.
Mitai Ngatai said performances would continue in the forest area, used when Mitai Māori Village first opened.
It was a “lovely area”, he said, and would still offer visitors a beautiful, authentic experience.
Visitors were expected to arrive today, as the show must go on.
Rotorua mayor Tania Tapsell said her thoughts were with Mitai Māori Village as they rebuild.
Employing many locals, the village was also a “much-loved” attraction for visitors, Tapsell said.
Annabel Reid is a multimedia journalist for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post, based in Rotorua. Originally from Hawke’s Bay, she has a Bachelor of Communications from the University of Canterbury.