The Dunedin Railway Station has been named one the most beautiful railway stations in the world.
An Easter resurrection is planned for the former Dunedin North post office.
Andy Warhol will make a surprise appearance at the 2013 Dunedin Fringe Festival.
A passion for international justice has landed a Dunedin man a position researching Bosnian war crimes.
Australian musician Paul Kelly is to play in Dunedin.
New Zealand rodeo competitors learned the ropes in Middlemarch yesterday.
Paul Simon fans were greeted by the sound of silence at Dunedin's Regent Theatre yesterday. Just 10 people were lined up in a queue when tickets for the April 6 concert at Forsyth Barr Stadium went on sale at 9am.
Preferential tickets to the Paul Simon concert are available to Otago residents from today. Prices for tickets to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and 12-time Grammy Award winner's concert are $99 for silver reserve seating and $149 for gold reserve seating.
A group of Bentley car enthusiasts picked the wrong week to arrive in Dunedin.
Snakes tend to stay out of sight in Dunedin.
The start of the new primary school year next week cannot come quickly enough for some children.
A series of rare World War 1 photographs has been uncovered at the Hocken Library in Dunedin.
They are already calling her ''Kiwi Kylie'' in Australia.
Waikouaiti is in the pink. The coastal township looked like it was preparing to host a blossom festival yesterday. The community has turned on the style for Sunday's Waikouaiti Rodeo and the New Zealand Breast Cancer Foundation ''Tough Enough To Wear Pink'' campaign.
Dunedin is dragging the chain in the countdown to digital television.
Their relationship started out sweet, Dunedin couple Norman and Anne Rowlands recalled yesterday, as they celebrated their 70 years of marriage.
Dunedin residents may be stuck with the reopening of John Wilson Ocean Dr.
The hand of William Shakespeare came back to life in Dunedin yesterday. A rare book palaeography, or handwriting, course at the University of Otago Summer School this week has been teaching students how to write like the bard.
The Fortune Theatre is charged and primed for its 2013 season. The opening salvo is an explosive play which changed the landscape of New Zealand theatre. Nigel Benson reports.
A wager over a cup of tea brought two colourful characters to Dunedin yesterday. Patrina Lawes and Gaeleen Scholes-Daysh, of Cambridge, bet one another they could not travel from the North Island to Stewart Island for less than $100.