A day of disruption saw about 30 arrests as climate change group Extinction Rebellion took to Wellington's streets to demand action on climate change.
On Monday, the arrests occurred at 5pm at the intersection of Lambton Quay, Bowen St and Whitmore St, as about 36 protesters linked arms and sat in the middle of the road.
Evening commuter traffic, including buses, ground to a halt as hundreds of protesters surrounded the group occupying the intersection, singing and pounding drums as a chilling southerly bore down.
Occupiers did not resist arrest, instead walking peacefully amid applause and encouragement from fellow protesters, toward paddy wagons on the northern end of Lambton Quay.
It was the climatic end to a full day of occupation and demonstration by the group, who began the day at Midland Park, before forming a base in Stout St, outside the office of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE).
The protest is part of a wave of international disobedience planned for more than 60 cities around the world to draw attention to climate change issues.
In the morning, protesters blocked all entrances to the MBIE office and placed a three-metre pink boat in the middle of the intersection of Stout and Ballance, and a pink car at the Lambton Quay end of Stout St.
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Later in the day, some protesters glued their hands onto a glass partition at ANZ bank on Lambton Quay.
Relaying a message to another man with a megaphone, 15-year-old protester Micah Geiringer from inside ANZ told a crowd that he was a "climate justice advocate".
"We can no longer stand by as these monstrous corporations destroy our lovely planet," he said.
"This is our home. This is my children's home. This is their children's home. And so I am doing something that matters."
Protest spokesman Simon Oosterman said it was time to draw the line at climate change.
"Some might call us protesters, I call us protectors," Oosterman said.
"We have to take our feet and we have to put them on that line ... and we've drawn the line at ANZ bank."

The ANZ protesters later joined the rest of the crowd as people made their way back to Stout St.
Returning to the MBIE office, protesters ate food and sat down to listen to speeches, poetry and sang songs.
Another group of protest
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