About

New Brighton Surf Life Saving Club has a distinguished history of patrolling New Brighton beach, and providing a critical service to the community as well as performing competitively in surf sports.

Our mission is to prevent drowning and injury on the beach over the summer months. We achieve this by providing regular voluntary patrols on weekends from November until mid March. We also offer a thriving Junior Surf programme for 7-14 year olds, and a variety of competitive surf sport programmes too.

We value community service, volunteering, participation, development, teamwork, family, respect, responsibility, and high safety standards.

Club Committee

The 2024/2025 Club Committee members as voted in at the 2024 New Brighton Surf Life Saving Club AGM are as follows:

Committee Member Committee Position Contact
Dave Taylor Club Patron Contact via email
Doug McIntyre  Club President  Contact via email
Lachlan Hill Club Chairperson Contact via email or call 020 4007 1622
Liz Buckley Club Treasurer Contact via email
Kirsty Cullen Junior Surf Coordinator Contact via email
Jenna Sharpe Junior Surf Coordinator Contact via email
Sean Newbitt

Lifeguard Manager 

Powercraft Manager

Contact via email or call 027 914 4122
Matthew Nash  Sport Manager Contact via email
Gareth Allison Club Captian

Contact via email

Club History

In May 1910, the formation of the New Brighton Surf Bathing and Life Saving Club took place under the light of a smoky kerosene lantern at New Brighton School.

The summer of 1909-10 was long and hot, with the Christchurch hordes frequently making the tiresome journey to the beach in horse-drawn trams. There was no lifeguard patrol, no reel and line, not even a lifesaving buoy to be thrown from the pier. It relied on the strong swimmers staying at the beach, the stalwart men of East Christchurch who had in the habit of making New Brighton their Mecca since 1905. There were several drownings, as many near misses, not just at New Brighton.

In May 1910, under the light of a smoky kerosene lantern at New Brighton School, local New Brighton resident Alfred P. Hopkins called a public meeting to discuss the formation of a club to safeguard the foreshore of New Brighton. This became the foundation meeting of the New Brighton Surf Life Saving Club, and the foundation meeting of the sport in New Zealand.