show your heart for the hauraki - Greenpeace

Using design to mobilise support for a unique waterborne protest event

We needed inspire everyone who loved the Gulf to show up – from blokey boaties to plucky paddleboarders.

Bottom Trawling, the practice of dragging weighted nets over the seafloor, indiscriminately bulldozes marine life and continues to contribute to ecosystem collapse in the Hauraki Gulf (Tīkapa Moana). The government was considering fisheries management changes, so Greenpeace Aotearoa launched an event to coincide with the government decision process and bring this topic into the media and public discourse.

The event idea was simple – a flotilla of boats and watercraft to tow a huge banner into the harbour. How could Greenpeace get the word out and maximise participation beyond the usual group of passionate supporters, to make the biggest splash possible?

Agency/Client Greenpeace Aotearoa (inhouse)

Year 2023

Country Aotearoa New Zealand

My roles Creative direction / copywriting / graphic design / event photography

Videography Ben Sarten

Drone Echo Valley

Show your Heart for the Hauraki was designed to be simultaneously a name for the event, and a call to action.

The symmetrical, iconic silhouette of Rangitoto Island looks the same from almost any direction in the harbour, and so instantly and unmistakably represents both Tāmaki Makaurau / Auckland City and the waters of the Hauraki Gulf. A cordon of watercraft, and even the typography itself, then surround the island shape, to symbolise community protecting the Gulf.

The core visual was built in a layered, flexible way to allow for quick resizing and reformatting for different media. The limited-run event T-shirt quickly became a coveted item, being spotted for months after the event being worn by activists and politicians.

The event on the day revealed a beautiful synergy with the design work; every type of watercraft depicted in the branding could be seen out on the water.

With over 200 people and 60 vessels registered, Greenpeace was run off their feet producing their popular bespoke banners for each participant.

While the event got national news media coverage, Bottom Trawling was ultimately only restricted in some small corridors, with only 6% of the gulf being protected. One year afterwards, the news was awash with reports of hundreds of dead Snapper being washed up on beaches. So, there is a sort of ironic longevity to the merchandise and messaging from this campaign, with a long road ahead to stand up for preservation of our marine ecosystem.