South Island

Winter in Dunedin

Winter in Dunedin has a special beauty of its own, unveiling epic starlig nights, sweeping scenery, arts, fashion, food, and heritage along with an abundance of rare wildlife just minutes from the city centre.

The days and nights of winter in Dunedin are filled with extraordinary experiences for the whole family.

Cultural exploration

Dunedin’s past is full of stories about people journeying across the world to live here. One of the loveliest monuments to these adventurous  settlers is the Dunedin Chinese Garden, the only truly authentic Chinese Scholar’s Garden in the Southern Hemisphere. The tales of intrepid  Chinese entrepreneurs and other history-making Dunedin people, events and things is carried on in the ever changing exhibitions of the  neighbouring Toitū Otago Settlers Museum. The city’s goldrush days led to generous philanthropic donations to the city, some of which  helped to establish the remarkable collection in the Dunedin Public Art Gallery which contains works by internationally recognised artists  from Claude Monet to Dunedin’s own Frances Hodgkins.

Jump, climb and learn

Raise your heart beat by trying out Leap, an indoors excitement treat all under the same roof. With over 54 trampolines including a separate dodgeball court and basketball hoops, it’s an awesome place to have fun and expend energy. Take to the ropes and reach new heights on  heaps of different climbing challenges with varying design and difficulty. Otago Museum’s Tūhura science centre has over 45 handson interactives, including a giant DNA-inspired helical slide, and a three-tier tropical butterfly enclosure, plus a multi-screen, laseractivated
Beautiful Science gallery.

Grand heritage

Winter is the perfect time to explore some of Dunedin’s gorgeous historic attractions. Indulge your Downton Abbey obsession with a visit to  Dunedin’s very own Olveston, a wonderfully preserved Victorian family home furnished with fine art, furniture and artefacts purchased from  all around the world. Or explore the lavish interiors and impressive gardens of Larnach Castle, offering an insight into the lives of the wealthy  family that once owned it and in true Gothic style, the castle does indeed come with a ghost and a colourful past! Elsewhere in the  city, you can’t go a block without wandering past other fine examples of Dunedin’s prosperous past.

Be-jewelled galleries

Home to talented jewellers, goldsmiths and artists with gems, Dunedin, has plenty of art galleries that hold exhibitions by guest artists and  makers of tempting, wearable works. Gallery on Blueskin shows works of art and jewellery in a garden setting, offering café-style food and  beverages, too. Moray Gallery holds successive exhibitions from various artists and has drawers-full of jewellery to peruse. Quadrant exhibits  and sells contemporary New Zealand jewellery, sculpture and other 3D works. No doubt, if you take a walking tour of Dunedin’s galleries,  you can inquire about still more be-jewelled highlights. Design Withdrawals stocks many intriguing New Zealand-made gifts and features a  wide range of original works by jewellery artists.

Taste sensations

Finding great food is such a great reason to explore a city and Dunedin’s rising reputation as a ‘foodie’ destination means you’ll make lots of  tasty discoveries. Heavenly eating and imbibing experiences are to be had in all corners of the city and its hinterland. Local entrepreneurs are  creating new adventures in chocolate-making with ethical origin ingredients in mind. They’re also wowing the craft brewing fans by  inventing new drinks with groovy names. Naturally, our ocean-facing city has seafood specialists that combine high quality culinary skills  with the freshest Pacific fare.

Explore Dunedin street art

Grab a map and explore Dunedin’s outstanding Street Art Trail which is brilliantly woven through the central city and Warehouse Precinct,  making for surprising discoveries around every corner. Featuring works from local and internationally acclaimed street artists such as the  UK’s Phlegm and Belgiums’s ROA, the artworks provide a colourful and quirky addition to this heritage city. Grab a free map from the iSITE,  find your way by downloading the Street Art Cities App (iphone or Android).

Baldwin Street

Baldwin Street in Dunedin’s Northeast Valley was recognised as the steepest residential street in the world until 2019, then it wasn’t, and  now it is again. The street runs up the northern side of Signal ill, at slopes of up to 1:2.86 (for 2.86m horizontal distance, a rise of 1m). Try  counting the steps; it takes about ten minutes, just to walk about 350 metres! But don’t worry, there’s a drinking fountain at the top. Insiders  Tip – Walking backwards is heaps easier.

University of Otago

Take a self-guided tour or simply stroll around one of the world’s most beautiful campuses. The University of Otago is New Zealand’s oldest  and celebrates 150 years in 2019. Start in our visitors’ centre to learn more or pick up a unique memento. Open six days a week.

Visit www.dunedinnz.com