Dundee, United Kingdom
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Dùn Dèagh (Scottish Gaelic) — meaning 'fort of Daig'; historically known as the City of Discovery, Jam, Jute and Journalism
Once built on the triple foundations of jute processing, jam production (Dundee marmalade), and journalism (DC Thomson, publisher of The Beano, The Dandy, and much of Britain's best-loved comics and magazines, is still headquartered here), Dundee has undergone one of the most dramatic and most celebrated urban cultural transformations in the UK — a reinvention centred on its waterfront, its universities, and the establishment of one of Scotland's finest cultural venues, the V&A Dundee, which opened in 2018 and signalled the city's arrival as a serious cultural destination. The V&A Dundee — a building by Kengo Kuma whose dramatic cliff-face exterior of textured concrete panels references the geology of Scottish sea cliffs — is the only V&A museum outside London and the first major design museum in Scotland. Its permanent Scottish Design Galleries and ambitious temporary exhibition programme have drawn visitors and attention far beyond what a city of Dundee's size would ordinarily command. Adjacent on the regenerated waterfront is the Discovery Point museum and the RRS Discovery — the ship that carried Scott and Shackleton on the National Antarctic Expedition of 1901, built in Dundee and now moored permanently in the city as one of the finest maritime museum attractions in Scotland. The city divides between the historic High Street and Overgate core, the university precinct (two universities — Dundee and Abertay — give the city a substantial student population of over 30,000), and the Westend neighbourhood of Victorian terraces which has the best concentration of independent restaurants, coffee shops, and bars. The Jute Café Bar, the DCA (Dundee Contemporary Arts) cinema and gallery, and the Rep Theatre are the cultural anchors of a creative scene that has attracted significant talent. The McManus Gallery and Museum holds an excellent collection of Scottish and Pre-Raphaelite art. The Angus coast immediately east (with the cliffs, castles, and fishing villages of Arbroath and Montrose), Glamis Castle, the Angus Glens, and the city of Perth (25 minutes west) provide an outstanding regional context for a city whose regeneration story is one of the most admired in contemporary British urbanism.
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Population
87,000
Weather
Positioned on the north bank of the Tay estuary in eastern Scotland, Dundee has a relatively dry climate by Scottish standards — the Sidlaw Hills to the north provide a rain shadow effect, and the city receives less annual rainfall than both Glasgow and Edinburgh. Winters are cold but not extreme; summers are mild with long northern days. Spring (March–May): 4–14°C (39–57°F). Cool and brightening. The Tay estuary is beautiful in clear spring weather and the long Scottish daylight evenings begin. Summer (June–August): 11–20°C (52–68°F). Mild, often pleasant. Long daylight hours. Sea haar (coastal fog) can appear from the North Sea estuary. Autumn (September–November): 6–14°C (43–57°F). Cool and increasingly grey. The Angus glens and Perthshire hills to the north show spectacular foliage. Winter (December–February): 0–7°C (32–45°F). Cold with frost and occasional snow. Easterly winds from the North Sea can be penetrating.