Entire apartment
The Stuart Street Terraced House
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Reviews
9.89.8 out of 10 
Exceptional
Entire apartment
5 bedrooms1 bathroomSleeps 10
Popular amenities
- Dryer
 - Washer
 - Air conditioning
 - Kitchen
 
Explore the area

Dunedin, Otago
- The OctagonPlace, The Octagon1 min walk
 - Speight's BreweryPlace, Speight's Brewery7 min walk
 - University of OtagoPlace, University of Otago7 min walk
 - Dunedin (DUD-Dunedin Intl.)Airport, Dunedin (DUD-Dunedin Intl.)28 min drive
 
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About the area
Dunedin
With a stay at this apartment in Dunedin (Dunedin City Centre), you'll be within a 10-minute walk of University of Otago and The Octagon. .This apartment is 0.1 mi (0.1 km) from St. Paul's Cathedral and 0.1 mi (0.1 km) from Dunedin Town Hall. 
What's nearby
- The Octagon - 1 min walk - 0.0 km
 - Dunedin Town Hall - 1 min walk - 0.0 km
 - Speight's Brewery - 7 min walk - 0.6 km
 - University of Otago - 7 min walk - 0.6 km
 - Forsyth Barr Stadium - 3 min drive - 2.2 km
 
Getting around
- Dunedin Railway Station - 7 min walk
 - Dunedin (DUD-Dunedin Intl.) - 27 min drive
 
Restaurants
- Albar - 4 min walk
 - The Craic Irish Tavern - 2 min walk
 - Craft Beer & Kitchen - 2 min walk
 - Del Sol - 3 min walk
 - Subway - 2 min walk
 
About this property
Entire place
You'll have the entire apartment to yourself and will only share it with other guests in your party.
The Stuart Street Terraced House
Located right in the heart of Dunedin, less than a block from the Octagon, this superbly appointed landmark property has been lovingly refurbished throughout and will absolutely delight!
Ideal for those seeking an inner-city pad close to all of Dunedin’s main attractions, this home caters for groups of up to ten people and offers maximum flexibility with six beds available. Whilst there is only one open-plan living space, further room to spread out and relax is available throughout the home, with lovely nooks provided in the larger bedrooms.
The ground floor offers a new kitchen plus dining and living area with outlook to St Paul’s Cathedral at the top of the Octagon. A large heat pump ensures this area remains toastie-warm in the cooler months. This level also offers three bedrooms and bathroom with shower and loo, plus access to a rear courtyard area.
Upstairs offers three further bedrooms, a modern laundry with washer and dryer and the second bathroom with shower and loo. All rooms are well-appointed and tastefully decorated and three of the bedrooms are very large doubles, catering ideally to couples.
This is the ideal base for graduations, concerts, sporting fixtures, family gatherings and those wanting to enjoy Dunedin ’s many restaurants and cafes. Historic charms meets modern convenience here at The Stuart Street Terraced House – and you really can’t beat the location! Absolutely will not disappoint.
I am available by phone, text or Airbnb message throughout your stay!
The Central City area boasts the convenience of being within walking distance to the Hospital, University, shopping area, Stadium and the city’s entertainment hub at the Octagon. It is also steeped in history and dotted with beautiful homes and heritage buildings.
In the early years of Dunedin`s settlement, much of the city`s growth was on two areas of reasonably flat land close to the harbour, separated by the large Bell Hill and an area of low swampy land. As the city grew the swamp was drained to become the new city`s centre, and the hill was lowered by excavation to allow access between the two areas of settlement. A street grid was set up with the main road split in two by the city centre (now The Octagon) - Princes Street to the south and George Street to the north. Both these names, along with many of the city`s other street names, reflect those in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Princes Street is one of New Zealand`s most historic streets, with about 70 buildings in close proximity listed on the New Zealand Historic Places Trust Register. Several notable companies have either been founded or had their headquarters in Princes Street. Notable among these were The Drapery and General Importing Company of New Zealand, later simply known as The D.I.C., Hallenstein`s, and H.E. Shacklock. The first New Zealand headquarters of Briscoes were also located on Princes Street. Princes Street was at one point the location of a bridge across a small stream, the Toitu Stream, now diverted underground. A spring which fed the stream is still used as the source of water for Speight`s Brewery, on Rattray Street (the quality of the drinking water is worth investigating!).
A combination of money, good building stones and the then Scottish international pre-eminence in architecture saw a remarkable flowering of substantial and ornamental buildings, unusual for such a young and distant colony. R.A. Lawson`s First Church of Otago and Knox Church are notable examples. Maxwell Bury`s clock tower complex for the University (University of Otago Clocktower complex) and F.W. Petre`s St Joseph`s Roman Catholic Cathedral are others started in this time. Merchants like Edward Theomin built his grand town house Olveston and the Dunedin Railway Station was an opulent building, both completed in 1906. More companies and institutions were founded in these years, the Dunedin Public Art Gallery in 1884, the Otago Settlers Museum in 1898 and the Hocken Collections in 1910, all first of their types in New Zealand. After the war Modernist buildings appeared, such as the Dental School and Ted McCoy`s Otago Boys` High School and Richardson building. By 1990 Dunedin had re-invented itself as the `heritage city` with its main streets refurbished in Victorian style and R.A Lawson`s Municipal Chambers in the Octagon handsomely restored.
The Octagon was first laid out during Charles Kettle`s surveying of the city in 1846. The first major structure of any kind in the Octagon`s reserve area was a monument erected in 1864 to the memory of Cargill. This was moved several hundred metres to The Exchange in 1872 to allow for the construction of a central roadway. In 1887 a statue of the poet Robert Burns was unveiled. In the early 1890s several improvements were made to The Octagon, including fencing, and the planting of plane trees along the edge of the central roadway.
In 1963, the council was given £5,000 by the Evening Star newspaper to build a fountain in the Octagon. The Star Fountain featured synchronised lighting, music and water displays, which played at regular times of the morning and evening. During the late 1980s, the Dunedin City Council substantially renovated the Octagon. The `new look` Octagon was in many ways an `old look`, with covered walkways and Edwardian-style streetlights and fittings giving an antique look to the central city. The renovation of The Octagon, and particularly the addition of a plaza area, has seen an increase in al fresco dining in the Octagon, which is now a major hub for Dunedin`s restaurant and cafe culture.
Dunedin has an extensive bus service and taxis are easily ordered by phone. Uber is also available in Dunedin, as are Lime Scooters! Full details on transport options can be found at:
https://www.dunedin.govt.nz/search?query=getting+around+dunedin
Ideal for those seeking an inner-city pad close to all of Dunedin’s main attractions, this home caters for groups of up to ten people and offers maximum flexibility with six beds available. Whilst there is only one open-plan living space, further room to spread out and relax is available throughout the home, with lovely nooks provided in the larger bedrooms.
The ground floor offers a new kitchen plus dining and living area with outlook to St Paul’s Cathedral at the top of the Octagon. A large heat pump ensures this area remains toastie-warm in the cooler months. This level also offers three bedrooms and bathroom with shower and loo, plus access to a rear courtyard area.
Upstairs offers three further bedrooms, a modern laundry with washer and dryer and the second bathroom with shower and loo. All rooms are well-appointed and tastefully decorated and three of the bedrooms are very large doubles, catering ideally to couples.
This is the ideal base for graduations, concerts, sporting fixtures, family gatherings and those wanting to enjoy Dunedin ’s many restaurants and cafes. Historic charms meets modern convenience here at The Stuart Street Terraced House – and you really can’t beat the location! Absolutely will not disappoint.
I am available by phone, text or Airbnb message throughout your stay!
The Central City area boasts the convenience of being within walking distance to the Hospital, University, shopping area, Stadium and the city’s entertainment hub at the Octagon. It is also steeped in history and dotted with beautiful homes and heritage buildings.
In the early years of Dunedin`s settlement, much of the city`s growth was on two areas of reasonably flat land close to the harbour, separated by the large Bell Hill and an area of low swampy land. As the city grew the swamp was drained to become the new city`s centre, and the hill was lowered by excavation to allow access between the two areas of settlement. A street grid was set up with the main road split in two by the city centre (now The Octagon) - Princes Street to the south and George Street to the north. Both these names, along with many of the city`s other street names, reflect those in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Princes Street is one of New Zealand`s most historic streets, with about 70 buildings in close proximity listed on the New Zealand Historic Places Trust Register. Several notable companies have either been founded or had their headquarters in Princes Street. Notable among these were The Drapery and General Importing Company of New Zealand, later simply known as The D.I.C., Hallenstein`s, and H.E. Shacklock. The first New Zealand headquarters of Briscoes were also located on Princes Street. Princes Street was at one point the location of a bridge across a small stream, the Toitu Stream, now diverted underground. A spring which fed the stream is still used as the source of water for Speight`s Brewery, on Rattray Street (the quality of the drinking water is worth investigating!).
A combination of money, good building stones and the then Scottish international pre-eminence in architecture saw a remarkable flowering of substantial and ornamental buildings, unusual for such a young and distant colony. R.A. Lawson`s First Church of Otago and Knox Church are notable examples. Maxwell Bury`s clock tower complex for the University (University of Otago Clocktower complex) and F.W. Petre`s St Joseph`s Roman Catholic Cathedral are others started in this time. Merchants like Edward Theomin built his grand town house Olveston and the Dunedin Railway Station was an opulent building, both completed in 1906. More companies and institutions were founded in these years, the Dunedin Public Art Gallery in 1884, the Otago Settlers Museum in 1898 and the Hocken Collections in 1910, all first of their types in New Zealand. After the war Modernist buildings appeared, such as the Dental School and Ted McCoy`s Otago Boys` High School and Richardson building. By 1990 Dunedin had re-invented itself as the `heritage city` with its main streets refurbished in Victorian style and R.A Lawson`s Municipal Chambers in the Octagon handsomely restored.
The Octagon was first laid out during Charles Kettle`s surveying of the city in 1846. The first major structure of any kind in the Octagon`s reserve area was a monument erected in 1864 to the memory of Cargill. This was moved several hundred metres to The Exchange in 1872 to allow for the construction of a central roadway. In 1887 a statue of the poet Robert Burns was unveiled. In the early 1890s several improvements were made to The Octagon, including fencing, and the planting of plane trees along the edge of the central roadway.
In 1963, the council was given £5,000 by the Evening Star newspaper to build a fountain in the Octagon. The Star Fountain featured synchronised lighting, music and water displays, which played at regular times of the morning and evening. During the late 1980s, the Dunedin City Council substantially renovated the Octagon. The `new look` Octagon was in many ways an `old look`, with covered walkways and Edwardian-style streetlights and fittings giving an antique look to the central city. The renovation of The Octagon, and particularly the addition of a plaza area, has seen an increase in al fresco dining in the Octagon, which is now a major hub for Dunedin`s restaurant and cafe culture.
Dunedin has an extensive bus service and taxis are easily ordered by phone. Uber is also available in Dunedin, as are Lime Scooters! Full details on transport options can be found at:
https://www.dunedin.govt.nz/search?query=getting+around+dunedin
Make yourself comfortable in this air-conditioned apartment, featuring a kitchen with a refrigerator and an oven. Conveniences include a desk and a microwave. 
Property amenities
Internet
- Available in the apartment: WiFi
 
Kitchen
- Cookware, dishware, and utensils
 - Dishwasher
 - Hob
 - Microwave
 - Oven
 - Refrigerator
 
Bedrooms
- 5 bedrooms
 - Bedsheets provided
 
Bathroom
- 1 bathroom
 - Hair dryer
 
Entertainment
- TV
 
Laundry
- Laundry facilities
 - Washing machine
 
Work spaces
- Desk
 
Comfort
- Air conditioning
 - Heating
 
Pets
- No pets allowed
 
Suitability/Accessibility
- Smoke-free property
 
Services and conveniences
- Iron/ironing board
 
Safety features
- Carbon monoxide detector not reported (host has not indicated whether there is a carbon monoxide detector on the property; consider bringing a portable detector)
 - Smoke detector (host has indicated there is a smoke detector on the property)
 - Fire extinguisher
 
Policies
Check-in
Check-in time starts at 3:00 PM
Minimum check-in age: 21 
Check-out
Check-out before 10:00 AM
Special check-in instructions
You will receive an email from the host with check-in and check-out instructions
Pets
Pets not allowed
Children and extra beds
Children are welcome
Important information
You need to know
Extra-person charges may apply and vary depending on property policy
Government-issued photo identification and a credit card, debit card, or cash deposit may be required at check-in for incidental charges
Special requests are subject to availability upon check-in and may incur additional charges; special requests cannot be guaranteed
Onsite parties or group events are strictly prohibited
Host has not indicated whether there is a carbon monoxide detector on the property; consider bringing a portable detector with you on the trip
Host has indicated there is a smoke detector on the property
Safety features at this property include a fire extinguisher
This property is managed through our partner, Vrbo. You will receive an email from Vrbo with a link to a Vrbo account, where you can change or cancel your reservation
Property is also known as
169048
The Stuart Street Terraced House Reviews
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