Safety Score: 3,0 of 5.0 based on data from 9 authorites. Meaning we advice caution when travelling to New Zealand.
Travel warnings are updated daily. Source: Travel Warning New Zealand. Last Update: 2024-04-20 08:25:34
Explore Roseneath
The district Roseneath of Wellington in Wellington City (Wellington) is located in New Zealand and is a district of the nations capital.
If you need a place to sleep, we compiled a list of available hotels close to the map centre further down the page.
Depending on your travel schedule, you might want to pay a visit to some of the following locations: Blenheim, Palmerston North, Nelson, Richmond and New Plymouth. To further explore this place, just scroll down and browse the available info.
Local weather forecast
Todays Local Weather Conditions & Forecast: 16°C / 61 °F
Morning Temperature | 12°C / 54 °F |
Evening Temperature | 13°C / 56 °F |
Night Temperature | 13°C / 55 °F |
Chance of rainfall | 0% |
Air Humidity | 55% |
Air Pressure | 1016 hPa |
Wind Speed | Gentle Breeze with 6 km/h (4 mph) from South-West |
Cloud Conditions | Overcast clouds, covering 100% of sky |
General Conditions | Overcast clouds |
Sunday, 21st of April 2024
16°C (60 °F)
11°C (53 °F)
Sky is clear, moderate breeze, clear sky.
Monday, 22nd of April 2024
16°C (60 °F)
11°C (52 °F)
Sky is clear, moderate breeze, clear sky.
Tuesday, 23rd of April 2024
16°C (60 °F)
14°C (58 °F)
Broken clouds, strong breeze.
Hotels and Places to Stay
InterContinental Hotels WELLINGTON
YHA Wellington City - Hostel
Nomads Capital Backpackers Wellington
QT Museum Wellington Previously Museum Art Hotel
Apollo Lodge Motel
Ohtel
RYDGES WELLINGTON
Quest on Thorndon
At Home Wellington City
AMORA HOTEL WELLINGTON
Videos from this area
These are videos related to the place based on their proximity to this place.
ContourHD 1080p Downhill, Mt. Victoria Wellington NZ
ContourHD 1080p Downhill, Mt. Victoria Wellington NZ. First test run of the new camera strapped to my helmet. Mad Mike Jones. Props Pro's. Riding a Giant Glory 8 Comp Maestro.
Review of YHA Wellington youth hostel in Wellington, New Zealand
Video review of the YHA Wellington youth hostel in Wellington, New Zealand. This big clean hostel is an excellent budget accommodation choice when visiting Wellington.
Downhill MTB - Half Damian's track, Mt Vic Wellington
A run down half Damien's track up Mt Vic in Wellington. Riding a Giant Glory DH0. Please excuse the rattles as I had a clamp loose on the mount which I didn't realise untill the end of...
Haunted Places - Mount Victoria Tunnel, Wellington New Zealand
http://www.thetraveltart.com/ Haunted Places - Mount Victoria Tunnel, Wellington New Zealand. The legend here was that a woman was murdered and buried within the tunnel foundations during the...
Hataitai Beach Wellington City
Right by Hataitai Beach, this a small, quiet and friendly place within Evans Bay just below the ridge of Hataitai. Also nearby, located at Rongotai, is Wellington Airport , as you can see,...
Tailgating & punishment pass - Go Wellington 4187
To anyone not familiar with wide-angle helmet-cams, the punishment pass may be too subtle to see without clear markings on the road. For most of my subscribers, you can see the bus is on the...
Marist St Pats Clubrooms
Take a look at the Marist St Pats Rugby Clubrooms. Open every Saturday during club rugby season for our players and supporters. Also available for private functions. See our website for...
Serene and private hidden space in Hataitai, Wellington City.
Here is a little video tour of the serene, peaceful and private back hidden space of number 1 Overtoun Terrace, Hataitai. Wellington City, New Zealand. Currently vacant, with three double...
Catalina Lane - Lot 2 & Lot 3/ 308 Evans Bay Parade, Hataitai, Wellington - BEO $395,000
WHAT AN OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE IT ALL!!! Catalina Lane will be three fantastic new residential allotments that share a unique landscaped "village green" communal recreational space. The village...
36B Palliser Road Roseneath Wellington
For more information regarding this property. Please contact: JOHN CARPENTER 021 155 1166 04 391 1551.
Videos provided by Youtube are under the copyright of their owners.
Attractions and noteworthy things
Distances are based on the centre of the city/town and sightseeing location. This list contains brief abstracts about monuments, holiday activities, national parcs, museums, organisations and more from the area as well as interesting facts about the region itself. Where available, you'll find the corresponding homepage. Otherwise the related wikipedia article.
Statistics New Zealand
Statistics New Zealand is the national statistical office and a government department of New Zealand.
Wellington City
Wellington City Council is a territorial authority in the Wellington region of New Zealand. Wellington city extends as far north as Linden, and includes the rural areas of Makara and Ohariu. It is New Zealand's third-largest city, behind Auckland and Christchurch. Wellington attained city status in 1886. The settlement had become the capital of New Zealand in 1865, and since then has hosted New Zealand's Parliament and Government.
Wellington East Girls' College
Wellington East Girls' College is on the lower slopes of Mount Victoria. It was built on reserve land bordering Wellington College in 1925, to cope with the demand for female education in Wellington at the time. By the end of the First World War, there were over 800 pupils at Wellington Girls’ High School in Thorndon, so a new school was founded on the other side of the city. The College primarily serves families of the eastern and southern suburbs and inner city Wellington.
Mount Victoria, Wellington
Mount Victoria, locally abbreviated to Mt. Vic, is a prominent hill (height 196 metres) to the east of the centre of Wellington, New Zealand, and its associated suburb. To the south of it is a spur, Mount Albert, and the two are linked by a ridge. Mount Victoria's original Māori name is Tangi Te Keo. The suburb of Mount Victoria is a mixture of residential and commercial activity on the western flank of the ridge above the southern end of the Wellington CBD, Te Aro.
New Zealand Exchange
NZX Limited is a stock exchange located in Wellington, New Zealand. Since July 2005 it has been located in NZX Centre, the renovated Odlins building on the Wellington waterfront. As of 30 June 2009, the New Zealand Exchange had 233 listed issuers with a combined market capitalization of $49.024 billion.
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa
The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa is the national museum and art gallery of New Zealand, located in Wellington. It is branded and commonly known as Te Papa and Our Place; "Te Papa Tongarewa" is broadly translatable as "the place of treasures of this land".
St Mark's Church School
St Mark's Church School is the only independent Anglican co-educational school in Wellington, New Zealand for children aged from two (Early Childhood) to Year 8. The school is often seen on cricket match broadcasts from Basin Reserve. To its front is the modern, 1970s-era church building, the parish church to which the school is attached. A wooden church stood in its place prior to the 1970s' redevelopment.
Hataitai
Hataitai is an inner-city suburb of Wellington, the capital of New Zealand, 3.5 kilometres southeast of the city centre. The suburb extends over the southeastern flank of Mount Victoria and down a valley between the Town Belt and a ridge along the shoreline of Evans Bay. Hataitai is bounded by Hepara Street, Grafton Road and the suburb of Roseneath in the north, Wellington Harbour in the east, Cobham Drive, Wellington Road and Crawford Road in the south, and Alexandra Road in the west.
Oriental Bay
Oriental Bay is a suburb of Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand. Located close to the CBD on Wellington Harbour, it has the closest beaches to the central city and is thus a popular spot both for living and for visiting. Oriental Bay is situated against the northern slope of Mount Victoria, 1.5 kilometres southeast of the city centre, at the start of a coastal route which continues past Hataitai around Evans Bay.
BATS Theatre
BATS Theatre is New Zealand's leading venue for the development of new theatre practitioners and plays. Most of the productions at BATS Theatre are New Zealand works. Ninety per cent of its annual programme of 50 to 60 shows are New Zealand and world premieres. Despite its small size, BATS has a significant effect on the country's cultural landscape and complements the work of the other larger venues in the capital, Circa Theatre and Downstage Theatre.
Mount Victoria Tunnel
The Mount Victoria Tunnel in the New Zealand capital city of Wellington is 623 metres (slightly more than a third of a mile) long and 5 metres (16.4 ft) in height, connecting Hataitai to the centre of Wellington and the suburb of Mount Victoria, under the mount of the same name. It is part of State Highway 1.
Courtenay Place, Wellington
Courtenay Place is the main street of the Courtenay Quarter in the Wellington, New Zealand inner-city district of Te Aro. Courtenay Place is known for its entertainment and nightlife. Many restaurants are open late and most of the bars stay open until dawn. It contains offices, accommodation, tourist shopping, entertainment, food, art and buskers offering many genres of free performance. Pedestrian traffic is substantial around the clock.
Embassy Theatre, Wellington
The Embassy Theatre is a movie theatre in Wellington, New Zealand, located at the Eastern end of Courtenay Place in the shadow of Mt. Vic. Originally built in 1924 http://www. historic. org. nz/news/media_releases/2001_12_11. htm, the building has undergone a series of remodels and changes in ownership. It is currently owned by the Wellington City Council and temporarily administered by the Embassy Theatre Trust.
Sport New Zealand
Sport New Zealand (Sport NZ) is the government body responsible for community sport and recreation in New Zealand. Sport NZ believes sport is an integral part of New Zealand’s culture and way of life. The organisation believes whether New Zealanders are playing, coaching, refereeing, volunteering, managing or supporting – the power of sport helps bind communities and the nation together.
Downstage Theatre
The Downstage Theatre is a theatre in Wellington, New Zealand, and the country's longest running professional theatre, established in 1964. The founders at the inaugural meeting in the Wellington Public Library on 15 May 1964 were actors Peter Bland, Tim Elliott and Martyn Sanderson, with restauranteur Harry Seresin for the business arrangements. Sanderson believed in a small professional company in Wellington performing challenging works in an intimate venue.
Zephyrometer
The Zephyrometer is a civic sculpture by Evans Bay, Wellington. It was made by Christchurch artist Phil Price and installed in 2003. It is a kinetic sculpture consisting of a concrete cylinder holding a 26m tall needle which sways to show wind direction and speed (Wellington is known to Kiwis as "Windy Wellington"). The needle consists of fiberglass exterior around a wooden framework.
The Lagoon, Wellington
The Lagoon is an open public area at the centre of Wellington, New Zealand. It is a small lagoon filled with sea water and connected to Wellington Harbour through a narrow channel. It is surrounded by The Boat Shed, City-to-Sea bridge, and the Wellington Rowing and Star Boating Club buildings.
Museum Hotel de Wheels
The Museum Art Hotel is located in Wellington, New Zealand. It is one of the largest buildings to have been moved from one site to another. Weighing an estimated 3500 tonnes, this reinforced concrete building was moved from its original site, now the location of the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa to a site some 180 metres down and across a major road. The relocation started in May 1993 and was completed just over five months later.
Shelly Bay
Shelly Bay is a bay on the Miramar Peninsula of Wellington, New Zealand. The New Zealand Defence Force owned the land on Shelly Bay for 124 years until 2009. Shelly Bay was where most of the scenes depicting "Skull Island" in the 2005 film King Kong were filmed.
Former Post and Telegraph Building, Wellington
The Former Post and Telegraph Building is a building located in Wellington, New Zealand. The building, located on Herd Street, was designed by Edmund Anscombe and built in 1939. It originally had two full-size tennis courts on the roof. The courts were later demolished to make way for a sixth storey. The building ceased being used as the post office in the late 1980s and is currently a mix of apartments, restaurants and shops.
City to Sea Bridge
The City to Sea Bridge is a pedestrian bridge and public artwork located in Wellington City, New Zealand. Opened in 1994, the wedge-shaped bridge crosses arterial road Jervois Quay, connecting the public spaces of Civic Square to the Wellington waterfront precinct at the Lagoon. Around the square are the Michael Fowler Centre, Wellington Town Hall, Wellington City Art Gallery and Wellington City Library.
Homegrown Music Festival (New Zealand)
Homegrown Music Festival has been held annually in Wellington, New Zealand since 2008.
Belvedere (Wellington)
The Belvedere is a four storied concrete apartment building in Wellington, New Zealand. Edmund Anscombe designed the art deco building in 1937, and it was constructed the same year. Located at 82 Majoribanks St, Mount Victoria, Wellington, Belvedere has nine apartments spread over three floors, with ground floor garages.
Elliott House, Wellington
Elliott House is a historic building in Wellington, New Zealand. The house was built for James Sands Elliott, a medical professional, in 1913. The north side served as the family residence, while the Kent Terrace side served as his consultancy room and surgery. The building was renovated in 1988. The building, is classified as a "Category I" ("places of special or outstanding historical or cultural heritage significance or value") historic place by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust.
Te Aro Railway Station
Te Aro Railway Station was a station in Wellington, New Zealand, near the corner of Wakefield and Tory Streets. It was the terminus of the short-lived Te Aro Extension of the Hutt Valley Line and Wairarapa Line, opened in 1893, which can also be regarded as a branch line. The line was provided to extend Wellington passenger services through the centre of the Wellington CBD from the main Lambton Railway Station on the northern side of Wellington.