A 10m-tall dinosaur sculpture in Taupō has been added to the list of notable ‘big’ sculptures around Aotearoa.
The artwork joins a host of iconic (and occasionally quite random and controversial) sculptures from around New Zealand. Let’s take a tour.

Kiwis are big on fruit and veggies, literally
The Central Otago town of Cromwell has been greeting visitors with its iconic Big Fruit sculpture, consisting of an apricot, pear, apple and nectarine, to signify the region’s stone-fruit crops since 1989.

In Bay of Plenty, a 16m-tall kiwifruit was set up for what was known as the Kiwi360 tourist attraction at the company’s Te Puke complex. The property on which the 38-year-old statue sits, was then purchased by Seeka in 2016.
There’s also a big apple sculpture at Waitomo, for the Big Apple Café, and a carrot at Ohakune’s entrance (which has survived for 41 years).

Just iconic Kiwi stuff
A big shoutout in the list of big sculptures goes to New Zealand’s farming industry.

We’ve got a big cow, known as Olive, that has stood guard outside Fonterra’s plant in Whareroa for about 30 years. It was vandalised twice – in 2019 and in 2024 by protesters commemorating Bobby Calf Awareness Day.

There’s another ‘mega’ cow plus 60 or so smaller artistically painted ones in Morrinsville. They’ve been installed as a nod to the region’s dairy farming history. Near Morrinsville, Tatua Co-operative Dairy Company’s factory pays homage with a 12m-high whipping cream can.

Giant dog and sheep head-shaped buildings in Tīrau, in the South Waikato district, host an information centre and wool shop. Te Kūiti, which hosts the annual national shearing championships, pays homage to the town’s history with a 6m-tall shearing sheep statue. (Te Kūiti also boasts a 2.7m bronze statue of former All Black Colin Meads.)


Flickr / Duncan Cumming / CC BY-NC 2.0
Symbolic of Kiwi summers, a giant jandal on the Hauraki Rail Trail, on the Coromandel Peninsula, offers some respite for hikers.
We’ve got some tributes to our flightless birds – kiwi sculptures in Eketāhuna and Otorohanga, and takahē in Te Anau.
Last but not least, the popular 7m-high L&P bottle in Paeroa, Thames Valley, where the factory used to be situated before closing in 1980.


Looks a little fishy
There are two big trout in regions known for the fish – Gore and Taupō – which were built in the ‘90s. A salmon has also stood tall in Rakaia since 1991.
Another gift from the ‘90s – a giant pāua shell, which is said to have been lined with 1000 sheets of real pāua, is in Riverton, Southland.

And some random ones…
Dale, the 8m-tall spider in Auckland, is marking its return after being put aside while Avondale’s town square was being redeveloped. It has been there for more than 20 years.
Quasi, a giant hand-face sculpture, took a tour of Christchurch and Wellington before heading off overseas to Australia. It is a partial self-portrait, based on scans of New Zealand artist Ronnie van Hout’s face and hand.
A gumboot sculpture marks the entrance to Taihape, dubbed the “Gumboot Capital of the World” thanks to satirist John Clarke. He played the character of Fred Dagg – a typical Kiwi farmer from Taihape who wore gumboots. The town has been synonymous with the boots ever since – and even celebrates Gumboot Day annually.


Artist Sam Mahon got into a bit of hot water over his depiction of former environment minister Nick Smith with his pants down squatting over a glass in 2017. It even made headlines on the BBC.

The sculpture, made out of horse poo, was said to be Mahon’s protest against the way the government treated the water quality issue. It was last reported in 2017 that the sculpture was in Nelson, but it’s not clear what has happened to it since.

