The Ayrburn Classic announces dates for 2026

Save the date: Friday 20 – Sunday 22 February 2026 That’s right. The Ayrburn Classic returns next February for what promises to be another world-class celebration, scheduled slightly earlier on the calendar to bask in Central Otago’s long golden evenings and late-summer glow. This festival will once again transform Ayrburn into a playground for car enthusiasts, food lovers, and seekers of high-end hospitality alike. The 2025 edition set an incredibly high benchmark, and is fast becoming one of the leading reasons to visit Queenstown – amongst New Zealanders and international travellers alike. With over 250 classic and contemporary luxury vehicles on display – collectively worth more than $250 million – the festival was a visual and visceral feast for attendees.

The scenic landscapes of Arrowtown, nestled near Queenstown, came alive this past summer with the dazzling debut of the Ayrburn Classic.
Hosted at the luxurious hospitality precinct of Ayrburn, this three-day celebration of motoring mastery, culinary excellence, and live entertainment captured the imagination of thousands – and left them wanting more.
Now, following the overwhelming success of its inaugural event, the Ayrburn Classic is back — and it’s shifting into an even higher gear.

Save the date: Friday 20 – Sunday 22 February 2026
That’s right. The Ayrburn Classic returns next February for what promises to be another world-class celebration, scheduled slightly earlier on the calendar to bask in Central Otago’s long golden evenings and late-summer glow. This festival will once again transform Ayrburn into a playground for car enthusiasts, food lovers, and seekers of high-end hospitality alike.
The 2025 edition set an incredibly high benchmark, and is fast becoming one of the leading reasons to visit Queenstown – amongst New Zealanders and international travellers alike. With over 250 classic and contemporary luxury vehicles on display – collectively worth more than $250 million – the festival was a visual and visceral feast for attendees.
Standouts included an $8 million LaFerrari, the latest Aston Martin Vanquish, and a fleet of dream machines from Rolls-Royce, Bentley, McLaren, and more. The event’s unique blend of elegance and accessibility attracted both seasoned collectors and casual admirers aplenty.

But that was just the beginning
The 2026 Ayrburn Classic will feature exciting new additions, turning the volume up on what’s fast becoming a landmark event. On Friday, the inaugural Tour d’Elegance will showcase the finest cars in motion, as they glide through the Wakatipu Basin’s breathtaking surroundings.
On Saturday, we open our gates to the public, judging begins, and the famed Ayrburn hospitality starts to flow. In the evening, a gala dinner will bring guests together for an exclusive night of fine food, conversation, and celebration.
By popular demand, Sunday sees the debut of Ladies’ Day, a most elevated celebration of women and motoring. This elegant Sunday feature will include a luxurious long lunch, Fashions in the Field, and a curated car exhibition – a nod to design, innovation, and heritage, with a distinctly feminine twist. Sunday is all about dressing up and indulging in world-class style, alongside world-class vehicles.

One of the premier reasons to visit Queenstown
More than a festival of motoring, the Ayrburn Classic is a weekend of lifestyle and entertainment for all.
For CEO Chris Meehan, the vision for the event is clear:
“This will be one of the premier reasons to visit Queenstown. The momentum is building, and we’re only just getting started.”
As an attendee of the 2025 event, you’ll be first in line when tickets go on sale and car registrations open. So keep a keen eye on your inbox – because 2026 is set to be even bigger, bolder, and more breathtaking.
The Ayrburn Classic 2026 is calling. Come along for the ride – again.

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All hands to the tanks

The call goes out. The volunteers pour into the military camp at Waiouru in the centre of the North Island. The only war, though, is going to be on rust, handbrake cables,
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Here is a group of willing sheddies who meet about once every six weeks under the keen oversight of George Pycraft. Their job: to continue repairing the heritage vehicles of the Army Museum at Waiouru.
Their “shed” is a group of four storage sheds housing 85 vehicles in various states of repair. They are as diverse as tanks, the 24-tonne M41 Walker Bulldog, the Centurion, and Valentine tanks (the latter still in World War II Pacific theatre camouflage), a 1941 Canadian Pattern Chevrolet gun tractor, an MB Jeep still wearing its 1942 Long Range Desert Group livery, an M113A1 Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) painted in UN colours and of the type used in Bosnia, a 1943 Ford F30 truck, a 39-inch searchlight and an M816 recovery wrecker truck made by American Motor Corporation in 1969.
Pycraft, the museum’s Assistant Curator – Technology, says with the help and dedication of the museum’s volunteers they are slowly coming closer to having a complete running collection of heritage vehicles.

A weighty subject

One problem with working alone in the shed and having a liking for large pieces of Victorian cast iron is the difficulty of safely moving or lifting them.
They can be moved with load skates and pipes as rollers, but how do you lift the weight onto the rollers? Trying to push down on a crowbar while arranging pipe rollers under a machine is inviting trouble. A toe jack allows you to lift and hold the weight in the air as you arrange the rollers and put in safety blocks. It is not intended for great weights or high lifts due to stability, but it allows you to lift the weight.

From armour to fighter

An unassuming garage in the Hunua Ranges south of Auckland is the current shed of Gordon Turner and home to his latest project – a full-sized replica cockpit of a Messerschmitt Bf 109E fighter plane. Made from plywood, timber and aluminium and five years in the making so far, it will never take to the skies. But it is eventually intended to become a flight simulator, giving the ‘pilot’ a realistic experience of flying one of World War Two’s most famous aircraft.