Step inside Dunedin's most magnificent Edwardian home — a 35-room treasure trove of fine art, world-travelled antiques, and original family furnishings, preserved entirely intact since 1906. An extraordinary time capsule and one of New Zealand's great heritage interiors.
What to expect
Olveston was built in 1906 for merchant David Theomin and bequeathed to Dunedin City in 1966, entirely intact — meaning every piece of Flemish silver, Japanese lacquerwork, and Edwardian sporting trophy is exactly as the family left it. Your guided tour moves room by room through the billiard room, drawing rooms, gallery corridor, and family bedrooms, each layered with authentic objects and fascinating social history. The guide's commentary paints a vivid portrait of early 20th-century Dunedin as one of the wealthiest cities in the Southern Hemisphere. For lovers of interiors, art, and social history, this is simply unmissable.
Good to know
Olveston is 25 minutes by taxi from Port Chalmers (approx. NZD 40–50 each way). Guided tours run at set times: 9:30am, 10:45am, 12pm, 1:30pm, 2:45pm, and 4pm daily — book a specific time slot on the Olveston website to guarantee entry. The 45-minute tour pairs perfectly with a morning in Dunedin's city centre before returning to port.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Port Chalmers (Dunedin) — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.