Taranaki's Waitotara Hotel catches fire for second day in a row

10:24 pm on 18 April 2025
Firefighters have been  battling a large fire at a country pub and hotel in south Taranaki.

Firefighters battled a large fire at a country pub and hotel in south Taranaki. Photo: Facebook / Whanganui & Area News

A beloved country pub and hotel in south Taranaki that was gutted by fire on Thursday is once again alight.

The Waitotara Hotel caught fire again shortly before 7pm on Friday, and over 20 firefighters battled the second blaze.

Fire and Emergency shift manager Chris Dalton said crews were alerted to smoke coming from the roof and would be on standby to monitor the building overnight.

It was not known if this was a case of re-ignition, he said, or whether there were spots that continued to burn from the first blaze and had gone unnoticed.

On Thursday night, firefighters were forced to rely on tanker water to put out the devastating and dramatic blaze.

The Waitotara Hotel, which has been described as the heart of the community, was gutted after a fire started at 6pm.

Photos showed flames shooting into the sky out of the two-storey tavern's roof.

Firefighters have been  battling a large fire at a country pub and hotel in south Taranaki.

Photo: Facebook / Whanganui & Area News

Taranaki Assistant Commander Shaun Wooller said 23 crews - or more than 80 firefighters and support staff - from Waverley, Pātea, Hāwera, Eltham, Kohi, Stratford, Whanganui, and New Plymouth worked to put out the blaze.

"The first crews arrived at around 6pm to find the building already well alight. All people were accounted for by 10pm, and most crews had left by 1.30am this morning. Two trucks are still at the scene now, monitoring the building for any further signs of fire."

Wooller said he drove from New Plymouth and arrived at the fire at 7.30pm.

"There was a fairly significant fire burning in the upper storey at that point."

He said the the fire started on the ground floor in the kitchen area and had spread to the upper floor by the time the first fire appliance arrived on the scene.

The building was severely damaged.

"The kitchen area was gutted and the upper floors are completely gutted. There's significant roof collapse. The four walls are still up and the chimneys are still up but there is significant damage throughout the building."

Wooller said one of the biggest challenges was water supply. Like many small country towns, Waitotara has no fire hydrants.

"We were struggling with water throughout the early stages of the fire, using tankers. There are no fire hydrants in the town. There is a river quite handy but being able to access that quickly and safely was a challenge."

He said firefighters used water from four Fire and Emergency tankers as well as two Fonterra tankers.

"That definitely made a difference for us when they arrived and we were quickly able to bring the fire under control once we had that really good volume of water available to us."

Wooller said losing the tavern was "devastating" for locals, some of whom were at the fire last night as volunteer firefighters.

"[For] small towns, it's the focal point, it's the town hall, the community hub, it's a meeting point so it's very, very important for those small communities.... FENZ is taking our community support very seriously and we're checking in, not only for the welfare of the community but a number of our firefighters who were present last night [and who] have close ties to the community and tavern as well.

"So it was a pretty emotional scene for a number of people who were there from Fire and Emergency as well as the community."