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As of November 2018, there are 827 listings in Otago, of which 207 are Category 1 historic places. This list covers all historical areas, places, and buildings on the New Zealand Heritage List that fall entirely or in part within Dunedin City. It also covers places of local importance or historical notability.
The Dunedin Police Station building was constructed in the 1990s and is occupied by New Zealand Police on a long-term basis. [ 60 ] In 1995 David Bain was convicted of murdering five members of his family in Dunedin; he was later acquitted at a retrial in 2009.
The Dunedin History Museum is a local history museum located in downtown Dunedin in the U.S. state of Florida. Founded in 1970, [ 1 ] the museum is housed in a former railroad depot built by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in 1924.
The Tampa Bay Times called the hotel building Dunedin's "most historically valuable structure". [3] Herman Everett Wendell, who also designed the Suwannee Hotel in St. Petersburg, Florida was the building's architect. [4] The 110-room hotel was home to radio station WGHB, the first in Pinellas County, which began broadcasting in 1925.
Nearly two years after a historic Dunedin home known as the Kellogg mansion was approved for demolition, the land is back on the market. The empty waterfront property with a private dock at 129 ...
Buildings and structures of the University of Otago (21 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Dunedin" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total.
When the new building was opened, there were 742 members and more than 62,000 books. [4] Membership peaked in 1910 when there were more than 1900 members. By the 150th anniversary, in 2020, there were fewer than 100 members. [4] The Dunedin City Council bought the building from the Athenaeum Society in October 2007 for $1.13m. [5]
[2] The church is located next to Hammock Park (Dunedin, Florida). In 1926 the building was renamed Andrews Memorial Chapel and moved south on Scotland Street to make way for what is now the First Presbyterian Church of Dunedin. In 1970 it was bought by the Dunedin Historical Society, which had it cut in half and moved to its present location.