A giant sculpture of Gandalf riding an eagle departs Wellington airport
for good
[May 05, 2025]
By CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-McLAY
WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — For more than a decade, passengers at New
Zealand ’s Wellington Airport have boarded flights below the figures of
two giant, hovering eagles from the Hobbit films, one bearing a
bellowing wizard Gandalf.
With 50-foot (15-meter) wingspans and weighing 2,600 pounds (1.1 ton)
each, the sculptures that hover in the terminal have delighted tourists
and scared children since 2013. Their tenure was eventful — one became
unmoored from its fixings during a severe earthquake in 2016, and
plummeted onto the terminal floor below. No one was hurt.
But this month the majestic creatures, which underscore the capital
city’s connection to Peter Jackson ’s “Lord of the Rings” and Hobbit
films, will depart the terminal for good, Wellington Airport announced
Monday.
“It’s been quite a Lord of the Rings-heavy storytelling theme in here,”
said airport chief executive Matt Clarke. “Now we’re looking to change
that to something new.”
“It breaks my heart,” said one traveler, Verity Johnson, who sat beneath
a grasping eagle claw in the food court on Monday. The sculptures had
impressed her since she was young. “Please, please reconsider.”

“Taking them away is un-New Zealand,” joked another airport visitor,
Michael Parks.
The eagles were crafted by the film props and effects company Wētā
Workshop, which created tens of thousands of props for the Oscar-winning
fantasy films directed by Jackson -- one of Wellington’s best-known
residents, who lives on an isthmus near the airport. The movies based on
J.R.R. Tolkien ’s beloved novels generated billions of dollars in
tourism revenue for New Zealand and employed thousands of people in
Wellington over the 15 years of the movies’ production.
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A sculpture of an eagle from the Hobbit films, ridden by the wizard
Gandalf, hangs over the food court area of Wellington Airport, in
Wellington, New Zealand, Monday, May 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Charlotte
Graham-McLay)
 But during the years the eagles have
hovered in the terminal, Tolkien tourism has waned in Wellington —
although the city will perhaps always be synonymous with Jackson’s
films. Guided tours still convey fans to the settings of famous
scenes from the films and to visit production companies such as Wētā,
which will create a new display for the airport, to be unveiled
later this year, Clarke said.
Travelers have until Friday to admire the birds, which will then be
put into storage, Clarke said. He hopes the creatures – which each
feature 1,000 3D printed feathers – will find a home at a museum.
“It’s a spectacular thing for little kids to see,” Clarke said.
“Even your old, grizzled businessmen, they still pull out their
phones and take a quick cheeky photo too.”
Wellington Airport isn’t losing its quirky side. An enormous
sculpture of The Hobbit’s gold-hoarding dragon, Smaug, will remain
overlooking the check-in counters.
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