Toby Morris's Auckland

Toby sitting at a table looking at the camera.

I’m Toby Morris - a cartoonist, illustrator, writer and Creative Director at The Spinoff. I’m from Wellington originally, but have been in Auckland for about seven years now, and I’m still finding new favourites all the time. We live right between Sandringham Rd and Dominion Rd and we love the mix of cultures in that area.

The boy walking sculpture at Potter's Park.

Art in Potter’s Park

173 Balmoral Road, Mount Eden, Auckland

In the middle section of Dominion Road there’s a stretch of chinese restaurants, and close to that, on the corner of Balmoral and Dominion Roads, is one of my favourite busy parks to sit and eat and people watch.

Get some takeaway dumplings at New Flavour or Belly Worship and eat in the park. Along the way you’ll see a sculpture called OnDo - a giant bowl of noodles emerging from a ring of road cones. Across the road are two more sculptures. You can’t miss Boy Walking, but see if you can find the tiny tiny bronze house too. It’s fun to make up stories about how these three pieces are related. 

People browsing the Flying Out shop.

Musician-spotting at Flying Out

80 Pitt Street, Auckland Central

Just off K Rd is the best little record shop in Auckland. It’s run by - and kind of overlapping with - the modern version of Flying Nun.

If you’re into old Flying Nun, it’s the best place to find their old records, but mainly it’s the place to keep up with the best new stuff happening in Auckland and New Zealand music. It’s really welcoming and non-wanky, and you’ll come across all sorts of interesting stuff. If you spend a bit of time browsing, you’ll probably see a string of musicians come in and out to catch up with staff.

Red light inside The Wine Cellar and Whammy Bar.

Live music at St Kevin’s Arcade

183 Karangahape Road, St Kevin's Arcade, Auckland Central

The place to see live music in Auckland. If it’s happening, it’s at Whammy or Wine Cellar. Both are in St Kevin’s Arcade, an old half-mall, half-passageway between Myers Park and K Rd and a traditional hangout of Auckland creative kids.

The arcade has been gentrified in recent years, but Whammy and Wine Cellar are still just at the perfect level of original grunginess. It’s where the best live music will be playing if you’re up for a dance or a foot tap or a head nod.

Or if you’re just after a drink in the low light, the Wine Cellar front bar is comfy and unpretentious.

Fish and chips.

Sunset with fish n chips at Pt Chev Beach

Harbour View Road, Point Chevalier

My favourite spot for an outdoor dinner is the south end of Pt Chev beach at sunset. Park near the corner of Edith Street and Harbour View Road and take one of the paths near there down to the beach. At that end it's a bit quieter and you can sit on the grass among the pohutukawas and watch the sunset over the hills in the west. Bring some fish and chips or whatever easy takeaways you like.

And if you time it right with the tide, you can even get a quick sunset swim in, which is about as good as it gets.

A staff member working behind the counter.

Custard tart from La Voie Française

Shop 4/875 Dominion Road, Mount Roskill, Auckland

Usually referred to by locals as ‘the French bakery’ or just ‘Frenchie’. As in ‘mmm damn is this bread from Frenchie?’ This bakery, on the south end of Dominion Road, makes the best bread in Auckland.

There’s often a queue on weekends, but it’s worth the wait. The baguettes are incredible and all the sweet stuff is amazing. My personal favourite is the Far Breton - a kind of baked custard tart with prunes.

The wild west coast of Bethells Beach.

Te Henga/Bethell’s Beach

Bethells Beach

Honestly, one of the best things about Auckland is that in almost every direction you can drive 30-45mins out of town and you get to somewhere incredible. I love the West Coast beaches - wild and dark and windy. Definitely good for a walk and a brain refresh, or a swim and a picnic.

Piha is amazing and I love it, but lately we’ve been enjoying Bethells a lot, too. It’s so dramatic and beautiful, and you always leave feeling better about the world.

The entrance to Cazador.

Cazador takeaways

854 Dominion Road, Mount Eden, Auckland

One good thing to come out of Covid (for customers at least) has been some of the really high-end places evolving slightly to include more affordable, side businesses or takeaways. I’ve never eaten dinner at the proper Cazador. It sounds incredible, but is a bit fancy for me.

Now they’ve opened a little hole-in-the-wall type deli. It’s open to the street during the day. They have sandwiches and coffee and it’s all amazing. The first time I had one of their sandwiches, I thought about it for a week.

Outdoor seating at Morningside Precinct.

Eating up in the Morningside precinct

20 McDonald Street, Sandringham, Auckland

I have to shout out my other local - the base for The Spinoff where I work. The building  used to be a curtain factory and now has a vegetarian café, Kind (which does a mean huevos rancheros), a good fried chicken place called Electric Chicken and a little hole in the wall dumpling place called Bo’s. My tip is the pancake roll at Bo’s. I like the lamb, wrapped up in roti.

Morningside is changing - used to be a light industrial area- still mostly lots of little factories and workshops, but it’s morphing into something new. Bonus points - see if you can spot the Prime Minister in Kind, she hangs out there sometimes.

The exterior of Toi Tū building.

Meet the arts community at Toi Tū

1 Ponsonby Road, Ponsonby, Auckland

You'll spot Toi Tū at the K Road end of Ponsonby Road when you see the huge stylised graphic drips of paint coming out of the windows of a beautiful old brick building. It's one of my favourite facades in Auckland, a crazy mash of old and new and it makes me laugh every time I go there.

Toi Tū is a community art space, a set of artist studios and a gallery rolled into one. There's always something interesting on there, whether it's a talk or community art lessons or exhibitions that range from up and comers to established artists. The art world can be snobby and closed off, but I like Toi Tu for it's welcoming inclusive community energy.

Close up of comics.

Wrestle with comic artists at Arkham City Comics

2/885 Manukau Road, Royal Oak, Auckland

If you're into comics, the friendliest shop in Auckland is Arkham in Royal Oak. I like Arkham because it acts as a community space as much as a shop. They run clubs and game nights and you'll often overhear the community of customers coming in and out and catching up. Their service is always super friendly and if you're lucky you'll find resident wrestler and comic artist, Michel Mulipola, working on his own comics behind the counter.

Neat Auckland Places

Mor Bakery

Two women smiling in front of the camera outside a cafe.
Place Auckland
Cafes key icon. Goods key icon.

There is nothing quite like a freshly baked pastry to start the day, a simple fact well grasped by those at Mor Bakery in Auckland.

World

The store.
Place Auckland
Fashion key icon.

The home of innovative styles and trends.

The Vitrine

Inside the shop.
Place Auckland

A blink and you’ll miss it type of places with a lust for well crafted furniture and antique house accessories.

Bandung Café

Woman holding cocktail and plates of food at Bandung Café, Auckland.
Place Auckland
Cafes key icon. Restaurants key icon.

Inspired by home cooking from the team’s roots in Java, Parnell’s Bandung Café boasts a fresh take on Indonesian cuisine.