Product Details
AA Road Atlas New Zealand (AA Road Atlases)

AA Road Atlas New Zealand (AA Road Atlases)
From Automobile Association

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Product Description

Discover New Zealand's clearest mapping with this new large format atlas from the experts at the AA in association with Hema Maps. Including information on distances and journey times, map symbols, route planning, and key to map pages, this is the perfect companion for travelling through New Zealand. Each page is titled with its geographical location so you can turn to the page you need more easily. There is additional information on more than 600 campsites, motor caravan and motorhome dump stations, 20 city maps plus the Top 25 Places to See and the Top 20 Things to Do. The Lord of the Rings film locations are also shown on the mapping, so you can visit the set locations used for the films.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #140048 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-09-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 128 pages

Customer Reviews

Excellent for planning your trip5
The AA Road Atlas of New Zealand is an excellent resource for planning your trip and the routes you will take. The scale and detail are superb. With 4.75 miles to the inch, and terrain relief shown in detail, you can almost be there: want to swoop down a twisty road along a valley floor? No problem, this'll help you find one. For us geeks, it will also help you find Lord of the Rings film locations! At the front there are sections for things to do and see, campsite locations, travel times/distances etc., and at the back there is an encyclopaedic index of places and 'things' (e.g. the Mangatepopo Hut near the start of the Tongariro crossing, or the penguin colony in Oamaru). There are also detailed street maps for twenty of the main town and city centres, with additional maps for the suburbs of Auckland, Christchurch and Wellington.
Negative points: very few. The index doesn't list street names, so finding specific roads on the town/city maps requires patience (or the internet!), and some of the minor suburban roads around Auckland, Christchurch and Wellington aren't labelled (although it doesn't set out to be an A-Z). Given NZ's very British weather, printing it on waterproof paper might have been a good idea: this could get very soggy very quickly. Also, being an atlas rather than a map, it's not exactly pocket sized (about an inch wider and an inch-and-a-half taller than A4 size, but less than half-an-inch thick). For these last two reasons, I recommend backing it up with the waterproof, rip-proof foldout Rough Guide Map.

A Travel Guide as well as an Atlas5
I won't go into too much detail of the content of the atlas as the previous review has done that excellently. What I would like to say though is that having used this atlas it is actually much more than just a road map. It has so many places of interest and things to do in it that it could be the only book you need to plan your trip. I would really recommend finding places to go from this atlas and avoiding the large crowds at the places listed in travel guides. Obviously this is also an ideal road map for if you driving on your holiday and has plans of many major cities (and smaller ones). Get yourself this Atlas and save the trouble os getting a travel guide too. You won't be disappointed by this.

Accurate reliable good quality mapping ideal for road trip5
This atlas was invaluable during my tour of New Zealand's South Island. The scale is large enough that most minor roads are marked with colour coding indicating the grade of road. This gives you a rough idea of whether or not you can drive campervan down a particular road before you get to it.
It is more accurate than a lot of the tourist board maps. One map I was given listed two Campsites with facilities for campervans in Haast. The AA Atlas correctly showed that there was only one. The other one had been granted planning permission years before but had never been built.

The only shortfall of this map is that it gives no clue as to the gradient of the roads to be traversed. Some of the roads in the South Island travel through extermely rugged mountainous terrain with a great deal of prolonged climbing and very long descents. Some of these descents are so dangerous that they have special ramps at the bottom which offer drivers whose brakes have failed a chance of survival.

I would recomend that you purchase this excellent atlas and back it up with the rough guide waterproof map for more general navigation.