Dundee made a bid to be named the 2017
UK City of Culture and on 19 June 2013 was named as one of the four shortlisted cities alongside
Hull,
Leicester and
Swansea Bay. Ultimately, Dundee's bid was unsuccessful, with Hull winning the contest. Dundee came in fifth place in a newspaper survey regarding numbers of cultural venues in the United Kingdom, ahead of other Scottish cities. In August 2021 Dundee made a joint bid with
Perth and Kinross,
Angus and
Fife for the UK City of Culture again in 2025 under the title of 'Tay Cities'. Dundee also intended to bid to become the
European Capital of Culture in 2023 but owing to
the United Kingdom voting to leave the European Union in June 2016 Dundee's bid, along with those of other British cities submitting bids, was discontinued by the
European Commission.
Museums and galleries in the city's Albert Square The city's main museum and art gallery,
McManus Galleries, is in Albert Square. The exhibits include work by
James McIntosh Patrick,
Alberto Morrocco and
David McClure amongst the collection of fine and decorative art, items from Dundee's history and natural history artefacts.
Dundee Contemporary Arts (abbreviated DCA) opened in 1999 is an international art centre in the Nethergate close to Dundee Rep, which houses two modern-art galleries, a two-screen arthouse cinema, a print studio, a visual research centre and a café-bar. Britain's only full-time public
observatory,
Mills Observatory at the summit of the city's
Balgay Hill, was given to the city by linen manufacturer and keen amateur scientist John Mills in 1935.
Dundee Science Centre in the Greenmarket is a science centre based on the five senses with a series of interactive shows and exhibits.
Verdant Works is a museum dedicated to the once dominant jute industry in Dundee and is based in a former jute mill. The
University of Dundee also runs several public museums and galleries, including the D'Arcy Thompson Zoology Museum and the Tayside Medical History Museum. The university, through
Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, also offers the Cooper Gallery for modern art and its archives include: the abcD (artists' books collection Dundee); the REWIND Archive (video art collection); and the
Richard Demarco Digital Archive. The
V&A Dundee Museum of Design opened in September 2018 and is built south of Craig Harbour onto the
River Tay in a building designed by
Kengo Kuma. It was officially opened by the
Earl and Countess of Strathearn, in 2019. It is the centrepiece of the city's waterfront redevelopment. The new museum may bring another 500,000 extra visitors to the city and create up to 900 jobs. " John Duncan 1911 McManus Galleries, Dundee The city's archival records are mostly kept by two archives: Dundee City Archives, operated by
Dundee City Council and the
University of Dundee's Archive Services. Dundee City Archives holds the official records of the city and of the former
Tayside Regional Council. The archive also holds the records of various people, groups and organisations connected to the city. The university's Archive Services hold a wide range of material relating to the university and its predecessor institutions and to individuals associated with the university, such as
D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson. Archive Services also holds the archives of several individuals, businesses and organisations based in Dundee and the surrounding area. The records held include a substantial number of business archives relating to the jute and linen industry in Dundee; records of other businesses including the archives of the
Alliance Trust and the department store G. L. Wilson; the records of the Brechin Diocese of the
Scottish Episcopal Church; and the
NHS Tayside Archive. The same archive also holds the
Michael Peto collection which includes thousands of the
photojournalist's photographs, negatives, slides, publications and papers.
Literature Dundee has a strong literary heritage, with several authors having been born, lived or studied in the city. These include
A. L. Kennedy,
Rosamunde Pilcher,
Kate Atkinson,
Thomas Dick,
Mary Shelley, Mick McCluskey,
John Burnside and
Neil Forsyth. The
Dundee International Book Prize is a biennial competition open to new authors, offering a prize of £10,000 and publication by Polygon Books. Past winners have included: Andrew Murray Scott, Claire-Marie Watson and Malcolm Archibald.
William McGonagall, regularly cited as the "world's worst poet", worked and wrote in the city, often giving performances of his work in pubs and bars. Many of his poems are about the city and events therein, such as his work
The Tay Bridge Disaster. Dundee's poetic heritage is represented by the 2013 poetry anthology
Whaleback City edited by W. N. Herbert and Andy Jackson (Dundee University Press) containing poems by McGonagall, Don Paterson, Douglas Dunn, John Burnside and many others. City of Recovery Press was founded in Dundee, and has become a controversial figure in documenting the darker side of the city.
Cinema The Dundee Mountain Film Festival (DMFF), held in the last weekend of November, presents the best presenters and films of the year in mountaineering, mountain culture and adventure sport, along with an art and trade exhibition. DMFF is also one of the members of International Alliance for Mountain Film (IAMF) among other important international
mountain film festivals.
Dundee Contemporary Arts hosts an annual horror film festival called
Dundead, which started in 2011. It also hosts the Discovery Film Festival, an international film festival targeted for young audiences. The city also has two
Multiplex cinemas,
Odeon and
Cineworld.
Theatre, drama, dance Dundee is home to a full-time
repertory ensemble, which originated in 1939. One of its alumni, Hollywood actor
Brian Cox, is a native of the city. The
Dundee Repertory Theatre, built in 1982, is also the base for the
Scottish Dance Theatre company. The Whitehall Theatre opened in 1969. The Little Theatre at the foot of the Hilltown is home to and maintained by Dundee Dramatic Society.
Music Dundee's principal concert
auditorium, the
Caird Hall (named after its benefactor, the jute baron
James Key Caird) in the City Square regularly hosts the
Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Various smaller venues host local and international musicians during Dundee's annual
Jazz, Guitar and
Blues Festivals. In 2025,
LiveHouse Dundee, a new large-scale live music and events venue opened in the former Mecca Bingo hall on the city's Nethergate, expanding Dundee’s capacity to host major touring acts, conferences and cultural events. Dundee has hosted the
National Mod a number of times – 1902, 1913, 1937, 1959 and 1974. Popular music groups such as the 1970s
soul-funk outfit
Average White Band, the
Associates, the band
Spare Snare,
Danny Wilson,
the Hazey Janes, the
Indie rock bands
the View and
the Law, and DJ
Hannah Laing are from Dundee. Musician, songwriter and performer
Michael Marra was born and raised in Dundee.
Ricky Ross of
Deacon Blue and singer-songwriter
KT Tunstall are former pupils of the
High School of Dundee, although Tunstall is not a native of the city. The Northern Irish indie rock band
Snow Patrol was formed by students at the
University of Dundee.
Brian Molko, lead singer of
Placebo, grew up in the city as did
Ian Cussick, singer of
Lake. Dundee has hosted several music events, including
BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend in 2006 and again in 2023 at
Camperdown Park in the north-west of the city. The city was due to host the event in 2020, but this was cancelled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Dundee staged its own music festival, Carnival 56 in 2017, a large outdoor music festival that also took place at Camperdown, although the event was cancelled after one year. From 2025, Dundee began hosting
Doof in the Park, an annual electronic music festival held in Camperdown too organised by Dundee DJ Hannah Laing, and has also hosted the Discovery Festival at Slessor Gardens. At the end of June, Dundee hosts an annual blues festival known as the Dundee Blues Bonanza.
Media & Co. Dundee is home to
DC Thomson, established in 1905, which produces over 200 million magazines, newspapers and comics every year; these include
The Beano,
The Dandy and
The Press and Journal.
STV North's Tayside news and advertising operations are based in the Seabraes area of the city, from where an
STV News Tayside opt-out bulletin is broadcast, (though not on Digital Satellite), within the nightly regional news programme,
STV News at Six. The city also had a community internet TV station called The Dundee Channel which was launched on 1 September 2009. Dundee formerly had three local radio stations that were based in the city. Radio Tay was launched on 17 October 1980. The station split frequencies in January 1995, launching
Tay FM for a younger audience and Tay AM playing classic hits (now called
Greatest Hits Radio Tayside & Fife). Neither Tay FM or Greatest Hits Radio are based within the city of Dundee, with their only locally targeted show (Tay FM breakfast) being broadcast from a Bauer studio in Edinburgh. In 1999, Discovery 102 was launched, later to be renamed
Wave 102 following a claim by
The Discovery Channel that the station could mistakenly be linked to its brand. The station was further rebranded to Wave FM and Pure Radio. The 102FM frequency now carries a relay of Aberdeen-based radio station
Original 106 which features news, content and commercials tailored for Tayside. During the 2020s, Dundee experienced growth in digital media and online publishing, alongside its established broadcast and print sectors. A number of independent digital platforms and community-led outlets expanded their presence, producing content focused on local culture, events and heritage. Dundee-based organisations and creators increasingly used social media and web platforms to promote the city’s cultural activity and regeneration, including Dundee Culture, which became one of several digital-first outlets operating within Dundee’s evolving media landscape.
Landmarks The city and its landscape are dominated by
The Law and the
Firth of Tay. The Law, a large hill to the north of the
City Centre was the site of an
Iron Age Hill Fort, upon which the Law War Memorial, designed by Thomas Braddock, was erected in 1921 to commemorate the fallen of
World War I. The waterfront, much altered by
reclamation in the 19th century, retains several of the docks that once were the hub of the jute and whaling industries, including the Camperdown and Victoria Docks. The Victoria Dock is the home of the frigate
HMS Unicorn and the
North Carr Lightship, while
Captain Scott's
RRS Discovery occupies Craig Pier, from where the ferries to
Fife once sailed. The oldest building in the city is St Mary's Tower, which dates from the late 15th century. This forms part of the City Churches, which consist of St Clement's Church, dating to 1787–8 and built by Samuel Bell, Old St Paul's and St David's Church, built in 1841–42 by
William Burn, and St Mary's Church, rebuilt in 1843–44, also by Burn, following a fire. Other significant churches in the city include the Gothic Revival
St Paul's Episcopal Cathedral, built by
Sir George Gilbert Scott in 1853 on the former site of Dundee Castle in the High Street, and the Catholic
St. Andrew's Cathedral, built in 1835 by George Mathewson in Nethergate. As a result of the destruction suffered during the
Rough Wooing, little of the mediaeval city (aside from St Mary's Tower) remains and the earliest surviving domestic structures date from the
Early Modern Era. A notable example is the Wishart Arch (or East Port) in Cowgate. It is the last surviving portion of the city walls. Dating from prior to 1548, it owes its continued existence to its association with the Protestant
martyr George Wishart, who is said to have preached to plague victims from the East Port in 1544. Another is the building complex on the High Street known as
Gardyne's Land, parts of which date from around 1560.
The Howff burial ground in the northern part of the City Centre also dates from this time; it was given to the city by Mary Queen of Scots in 1564, having previously served as the grounds of a
Franciscan abbey. Several castles can be found in Dundee, mostly from the Early Modern Era. The earliest parts of
Mains Castle in Caird Park were built by David Graham in 1562 on the site of a hunting lodge of 1460.
Dudhope Castle, originally the seat of the Scrymgeour family, dates to the late 16th century and was built on the site of a keep of 1460.
Claypotts Castle, a striking Z plan castle in West Ferry, was built by John Strachan and dates from 1569 to 1588. In 1495
Broughty Castle was built and remained in use as a major defensive structure until 1932, playing a role in the
Anglo-Scottish Wars and the
Wars of the Three Kingdoms. The castle stands on a shallow tip projecting into the Firth, alongside two beaches, one of sand, the other of pebbles. The ruins of
Powrie Castle, north of Fintry, date from the 16th-century. North of the City Churches, at the end of Reform Street, lies the
High School of Dundee, built in 1829–34 by George Angus in a Greek Revival style. Another school building of note is
Morgan Academy on Forfar Road, built in 1863, designed by
John Dick Peddie in a Dutch Gothic style. Dundee's industrial history as a centre for textile production is apparent throughout the city. Numerous former jute mills remain standing and while some lay derelict, many have been converted for other uses. Of particular note are the Tay Works, built by the Gilroy Brothers –1865,
Camperdown Works in Lochee, which built and owned by Cox Brothers, one of Europe's largest jute manufacturing companies, and begun in 1849, and Upper Dens Mill and Lower Dens Works, built by the Baxter Brothers in the mid-19th century. A more recent landmark is the Tower Building of the
University of Dundee built between 1959 and 1961. At the time of its construction only the Old Steeple was taller in the city. The Tower was built to replace the original college buildings which stood on the site. The building houses the university's main administration and includes galleries and the university's Archive, Records Management and Museum Services. Many 1960s landmark multi-storey housing buildings were demolished in the late 2000s. The former Tayside House block, nicknamed 'Faulty Towers' by many local people, was demolished in 2013 as part of the waterfront redevelopment program. According to the architectural historian
Charles McKean and his co-authors of Lost Dundee, the best views in the city were from Tayside House, because these were the only views from which the building itself could not be seen. == Sport and recreation ==