Added: 2 years ago
Driving Hillside Road in Dunedin, in the Otago region on the East Coast of New Zealand's South Island.
The port city of Dunedin was established by Scottish Presbyterians in 1848, with the city's name meaning Edinburgh in old Gaelic. The city is New Zealand's oldest and is considered New Zealand's architectural heritage capital. The foundations of this architectural heritage were built in the gold rush era in the 1860s, and today the city's abundance of old Victorian and Edwardian architecture is unmatched anywhere in the Southern Hemisphere. Dunedin's historic homes and other buildings are something to be seen. These include Olveston, Lanarchs Castle, and the Dunedin Railway Station, to name a small few.
Dunedin is built around the Otago Harbour, which indents the Otago Peninsula, attracting a large wildlife population just a 15-20 minute drive from the central city. Nature and wildlife tour companies run daily excursions to view fur seals, endangered yellow-eyed penguins, cormorants, and albatross. Nowhere else in the world does the largest of the world's sea birds live within such easy human access.
When Dunedin was founded in 1848 by a surveyor named Charles Kettle, An Octagon was placed at the centre, with Moray Place forming an outer octagon. George and Princes streets are the main streets heading North and South. These two names were the names of Edinburgh in Scotland's main streets
Today the Octagon, with its many bars and cafes, is a popular meeting place in the central city. Dunedin is well known for its artistic feel and is an excellent area to check out the local art and fashion scene.