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Our story · Est. 1986

For forty years, we've trusted children to lead the way.

Sue Stevely-Cole opened the first Bear Park in St Heliers in 1986. This is the story of what she started.

A child running the boardwalk beneath a vine-covered pergola in a Bear Park garden
Bear Park · At a glance

Eleven centres across Auckland and Dunedin, founded, owned and run by teachers.

Founded1986, St Heliers
FounderSue Stevely-Cole
TodayEleven centres
ApproachReggio Emilia inspired
Our journey · 1986 to today
Opening day at the first Bear Park, St Heliers, 1986: Sue Stevely-Cole and families at the ribbon under the original Bear Park pre-school and nursery sign
1986 · St Heliers

The beginning.

Sue Stevely-Cole spent seven years teaching primary school. In 1986 she left the classroom and opened the first Bear Park in St Heliers.

Four years later she opened a second. She was onto something.

A child dancing with a silk scarf in front of a projected sky at a Bear Park centre
The intention

The intention.

Her intention was a home away from home for young children. A place where a child is trusted with a real idea, and a teacher is close enough to take it seriously.

Nothing rushed. A whole morning could belong to one question.

The original Bear Park lockup, established 1986
The bear · Since the beginning

The bear.

Sue chose the bear for what it gives a child: comfort, loyalty, and friendship without judgement. Forty years on, it is still the standard we hold ourselves to.

A child painting in sand at the light table, absorbed in a moment of discovery
2026 · Eleven centres

Today.

Eleven centres now, across Auckland and Dunedin, each with its own character, every one still run the way Sue ran the first.

The proof walks back through our doors: the children we cared for now bring us their own.

One centre became eleven. The idea never changed.

Our philosophy

Shaped around five values.

We honour tamariki as capable people with ideas worth taking seriously. Our programme is grounded in te Tiriti o Waitangi, Te Whāriki, the Reggio Emilia approach and the Enviroschools kaupapa.

A child proudly presenting his work to a delighted teacher01Whakamana

Children make real decisions here, and we back them.

A child in a quiet moment of her own in the garden02Kotahitanga

Every child arrives already someone. We start from who they are.

A baby held close over a parent's shoulder03Whānau Tangata

Whānau are part of the learning, and part of the place.

A Bear Park room prepared with provocations and working materials04Ngā Hononga

Children learn in conversation, with teachers close enough to keep it going.

Children and teachers together across the Bear Park Epsom garden05Kaitiakitanga

The garden is theirs to tend. Care for the world starts that small.

A Bear Park teacher and child studying agapanthus flowers together in the atelier
The people

More teachers, closer attention.

Bear Park has always staffed generously. More teachers per child means each teacher holds fewer relationships, and holds them deeply. When your child spends a morning chasing one idea, someone is there for all of it.

It changes the feel of a day. Teachers have time to sit inside play rather than direct it from the edge, and time to share what they saw with you at pick-up.

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The story is better in person.

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