Once You Are There
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Melbourne Melbourne is the capital of the state of Victoria in Australia. It is the second largest city in Australia. It was voted the worlds' most livable city in 1994 and the least polluted for a city of its size. Melbourne is renowned for its parks, fickle weather, clanging trams, upside-down river, football and its cosmopolitan outlook. It is also the financial capital of Australia. ATTRACTIONS City Centre
Other city attractions include the bustling Queen Victoria Market on the northern fringe of the CBD; views from the 35th floor of the Regent Hotel at the eastern end of Collins St; the mammoth Treasury and State Parliament House buildings; Scots and St Michael's churches; the 19th-century Block Arcade, which runs between Collins and Elizabeth Sts; the collection of Gothic-revival banks on the corner of Collins and Queen Sts; and the landmark Rialto Towers (now boasting an observation deck) at the western end of Collins St. At the top end of Russell St there's the atmospheric Old Melbourne Gaol. Other historic buildings include the Old Customs House, St James Cathedral and the Old Royal Mint. The key to an important facet of Melbourne's character can be found on the sportsgrounds scattered on the parkland to the south-east of the city centre, including Flinders, Olympic and Yarra parks. The superb Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) and the National Tennis Centre reflect Melburnians' renowned passion for sport. The Yarra's South Bank The focus of Melbourne is slowly shifting to the south bank of the Yarra, which has seen large scale construction and the influx of huge sums of money and political will. The Victorian Arts Centre buildings and the National Gallery of Victoria are both on the south bank. The aliens-are-coming spire of the arts centre's theatre building is probably Melbourne's most famous landmark. Opposite the arts precinct are the Royal Botanic Gardens - considered to be one of the finest in the world - and Kings Domain, which contains the Shrine of Remembrance, Governor La Trobe's Cottage and the Sidney Myer Music Bowl. The new Southgate complex of shops, wine bars, snack stalls and restaurants line the Yarra's bank. Melbourne's gigantic Crown Casino entertainment complex is nearby. Inner-City Haunts The inner suburbs of Carlton, Fitzroy and Richmond are all recommended for their architecture, restaurants and atmosphere. Carlton is the Italian centre, full of pasta & spaghetti bars, muscle cars and slick Italian clothing stores. Victoria St in Richmond is the vibrant Vietnamese centre, chock full of budget restaurants, and the focus of the Lunar New Year celebrations in January-February. Fitzroy is now a magnet for the urban cool, cafe dwellers and property renovators, but was once the working-class heart of Melbourne. St Kilda is a day trip in itself. For years it was Melbourne's sex and sin centre - drunks, drugs, girls, shady deals and shady characters abounded - but the suburb is slowly being rejuvenated. Fitzroy St retains traces of its former tarnished character, although today you're more likely to be sipping a crisp white and dining on rocket salad than slugging a beer and looking for action. There is a string of average beaches running from St Kilda back into the city, including Middle Park, Albert Park and Port Melbourne. Luna Park, near St Kilda Beach, is an old-fashioned fairground that's fun for kids and coltish adults. Around Melbourne Attractions around Melbourne include numerous beaches, the old gold towns to the north and west, and the Dandenong hills and the Yarra Valley wineries to the east. The eastern arm of the bay is known as the Mornington Peninsula - a bayside beach strip which continues all the way to Portsea at the end of the peninsula. The bay's western arm curves around to the Bellarine Peninsula, where the beaches on the ocean coast are renowned for their surf. The peninsula is tipped by stately Queenscliff. A ferry traverses the head of the bay between Portsea and Queenscliff, and if you're lucky you may see dolphins frolicking off the bows. The beautiful Dandenongs are an hour's drive east of the city. The unique charm of the range and its peaceful forests have made the Dandenongs a favoured destination for those wanting to escape the city. Attractions include bushwalks, wildlife, steam-train rides on Puffing Billy, antiques, tearooms, and nurseries. Also inland to the east, there's the exceptional Healesville Wildlife Sanctuary and more than 30 wineries in the Yarra Valley region. Heading inland to the north-west, the important Aboriginal site at mysterious Hanging Rock and the hill station gardens and mansions of Mt Macedon are passed en route to the historic old mining towns of Bendigo, Maldon, Castlemaine and Daylesford. Sydney Sydney, a city with
a stunning Opera House, overlooking a vibrant, beautiful
harbour. A city which has more than 30 golden beaches
stretching north and south, all within 20 minutes of
the city centre. With a climate that never really gets
cold, life in Sydney is spent outdoors, walking, sightseeing
and relaxing in delightful cafes and restaurants overlooking
glistening blue waters.
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The
city centre consists of a 7 sq km rectangular grid of
streets bordered by the Yarra to the south, the Spencer
St railway station to the west and the Fitzroy Garden
to the east. Two of Melbourne's most obvious central
landmarks are the recently renovated Flinders St Station
and the neo-Gothic St Paul's Cathedral. North of these
buildings lies the continuing saga that is the badly
planned city square (construction of a hotel/apartment/shopping
complex has commenced), the boom-years' Town Hall, the
domed and pillared building containing the State Library
and the flamboyant City Baths.
Over
recent years a number of historic buildings and areas
have been tastefully developed and restored such as
Paddington in the Eastern Suburbs, now protected by
the National Trust, with its steeply sloping, tree-lined
streets crammed with rows of late 19th century houses,
trendy art galleries, boutiques and antique shops. The
historic, harbourside Rocks Area, site of Australia's
first European settlement, encompasses elegantly restored
buildings offering a wide variety of restaurants, entertainment
venues and specialty shops. Darling Harbour, formerly
a dockland area, has undergone a multi-million dollar
transformation into a harbourside complex of shops,
restaurants and parks encompassing a Chinese Garden
and the Sydney Aquarium. SIGHTSEEING:
