The Dowse Art Museum
A contemporary art institution with a focus on craft and applied arts.
101 Glenmore Street, Kelburn, Wellington
Wellington Botanic Garden ki Paekākā encompasses 25 hectares of specialised plant collections, colourful botanical displays, a unique landscape, a protected native forest, and views over Wellington City. It is a vast tract of land that has offered relaxation, playtime, shade, and education about flora and fauna for more than 150 years.
You’ll find the gardens sitting on the border of the CBD and only a few minutes walk from Parliament. A wonderland of winding paths, flat parklands, and hill climbs with breathtaking views awaits you. There’s a sound shell for concerts, children’s playgrounds, glow worm caves, and a sculpture walk. Children will love visiting the duck pond. You can also access the Cable Car museum, Space Place, and Bolton Cemetery (New Zealand’s oldest European cemetery). All this while the thrum of bird and insect life serenades you. Whether it’s your first or your hundredth visit, this vast garden paradise will enchant and surprise you.
The gardens host a programme of annual events. Gardens Magic brings music and performance alongside lights and art, while the Spring Festival and Tulip Sunday celebrate the changing seasons.
Unable to render element
The Wellington Botanic Garden is one of the oldest in Aotearoa. It contains a series of curated collections and seasonal displays. Every detail of the manicured expanse is designed and cared for by a team of dedicated staff. The international and native range includes collections of dwarf conifers, camellias, harakeke (flax), ferns, grasses, and threatened species. The Begonia House offers exotic tropical plants overlooking a vast rose garden.
The area where the garden lies has been an important site for generations. When Europeans arrived, there were already well-established pā at Pipitea and Kumutoto. The Pipitea Pā inhabitants used the area for food cultivation, building materials, food, fibre, medicine, and birds for food.
In 1844, the New Zealand Company set aside a 5-hectare strip of land to start a botanic garden reserve. At that time the area had dense podocarp forest including rimu, totara, and mataī. By 1868, it had become the Wellington Botanic Garden. Now, it’s recognised as a Garden of National Significance by the Royal New Zealand Institute of Horticulture, as well as an important Heritage Area by the Historic Places Trust.
A contemporary art institution with a focus on craft and applied arts.
Jump in the deep end of a thrilling adventure with Wellington Rafting.
New Zealand’s national museum reflects the country’s identity, history, and culture.
Home to a declaration, a treaty, and a petition — New Zealand’s founding documents are at the National Library of New Zealand.
Experience Wellington from the water and explore the eastern bays on the city’s only harbour ferries.
Walk the corridors of power and see where New Zealand laws and policies are made.
This pest-proof ‘urban island’ is the closest thing you’ll find to experiencing what New Zealand was like before humans.
Experience the stories of Wellington and its people. From maritime history, early Māori settlement, and the city’s evolution since becoming the capital in 1865.
A wildlife reserve where people can interact with rare native species.
Explore the forest, meet native birds, and learn about the connection to the land at a unique conservation centre in Mount Bruce Reserve.
The cultural heart of Porirua City showcases the best in contemporary Māori and Pacific arts at this world-leading gallery.
With rare forests, picnic spots and native wildlife, Ngā Manu nature reserve is a top spot to go for a day out on the Kāpiti Coast.
Telling the stories of how police have dealt with some of the country’s most infamous crimes, disasters, and other events.
A dominant feature of the Kāpiti Coast, this nature reserve is home to many endangered species.