Little now remains of the exhibition venue and structure, other than Logan Park and
Anzac Avenue themselves. The only remaining structure on the original site,
the exhibition's art gallery, was bought at the conclusion of the exhibition by Sir
Percy Sargood and his family, and donated to the city as an art gallery. The building remained the site of the
Dunedin Public Art Gallery until a new site was completed for the gallery in the central city in 1996. Some sections of some of the exhibitions buildings were sold to members of the public and moved to other sites, most notably a small domed structure now part of an art gallery at
Brighton, to the south of Dunedin. After the
Dunedin Public Art Gallery moved to its new site in the city centre in 1996, the building was shortened to allow for expansion to the neighbouring
University Oval cricket ground. The remaining portions of the gallery are used by the New Zealand Academy of Sport and Sports Medicine New Zealand as a gym, training venue, and offices. The former gallery building is the only remaining structure from any of the International Fairs held in New Zealand in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and one of only some eight left from this era of world fairs worldwide. The building was designed by
Edmund Anscombe, a driving force behind the staging of an exhibition in Dunedin, who was appointed official architect to the exhibition in 1924. The building has a
Heritage New Zealand Category I classification. == Former aquarium ==