The Nelson Technical School (the forerunner of NMIT) was set up in 1904 and the building was designed by Stead Ellis, a trained architect and secretary to the Nelson Education Board. The doors opened in 1905, initially offering classes in cookery, engineering, woodwork, commerce, craft, secretarial and plumbing.
The land that the building sits on was donated by Nelson City Council and construction was led by John Scott Jnr at a cost of £1124. In 1930, the Technical School was merged with Nelson College with many part-time hobby classes and a few vocational courses being offered. Nelson Polytechnic officially became a technical institute in 1971.
This programme is NMIT’s main “Into-Employment” aeronautical engineering programme and is designed to provide you with all the technical skills, knowledge and connection with employers you need for a rewarding career in the New Zealand aviation industry.
During the course you will learn and practice various welding techniques; however no projects as such will be undertaken. Please note there will be no assessments, certificates issued or unit standards credited at the end of the course.
The course topics include the history, the science and the process of espresso. Training is in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere using a commercial espresso machine and quality products.
If you are working in a job across the conservation, horticulture or viticulture industries, this short course will train you in the safe use of chainsaws.
If you have completed the Intermediate course, and you and your tutor think you're ready - get more serious with this first Advanced course. This course is for those who have finished Intermediate or have learnt Chinese for some time.
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