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BACKPACKERS GUIDE TO AUSTRALIATM
CANBERRA
AUSTRALIA > AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY > cANBERRA
INDEX 
Introduction 
Attractions 
  • Parliament House
  • Old Parliament House & Portrait Museum
  • Art Gallery
  • High Court
  • Science & Technology Centre
  • Foreign Embassies
  • War Memorial
  • Lake Burley Griffin
  • Mint

  • City/Civic Centre Shops 
    Youth Hostels 
    Places to Eat 
    Entertainment 
    Getting Around 
    GettingThere&Away 
    Where to Go Next
    Lake Burley Griffin, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 
    Picture: Lake Burley Griffin, Canberra,
    Australian Capital Territory
     
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    INTRODUCTION 
    When the seven Australian colonies federated in 1901 there was a dispute between Sydney and Melbourne over which should be the new nation's capital. The dispute was resolved by allocating land about half way between the two for the purpose of building a grand capital city. Thus Canberra was founded in 1927, but remained only a small town until much later. Australians distaste for self serving politicians in the central government who do not understand local issues leads many Australian's to hold Canberra in disdain. It is a planned city in every respect. There is no hustle and bustle or derelict areas. It is even built around a large artificial lake. Never the less Canberra is home to many impressive modern governmental buildings; and the lake is quite nice too. The most spectacular building is the near new Parliament House built into a hillside with a gigantic flagpole on top. Unlike other Australian cities, Canberra has a distinctly Australian native bushland feel. Fewer European trees have been planted here.
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    ATTRACTIONS 
     
    Parliament House (pictured) 
    The highlight of Canberra, Parliament House opened in 1988 to celebrate 200 years of white settlement of Australia. It is a magnificant modern building built into Capital Hill at the expense of over $1 billion. The giant four legged flagpole on top can quite easily be seen from a distance. The marble and native Australian wood interior is beautiful. One of the four original copies of the Magna Carta is displayed inside. 
    Australia's Parliament House 
    Picture: Australia's Parliament House in Canberra
    is built into Capital Hill.
    There are two chambers. The green House of Representatives and the red Senate have free guided tours every half hour. On sitting days visitors can watch the proceedings and antics of the politicians from the gallery in each chamber. Parliament house is open daily 9am to 5pm. Buses 231, 234, 235 and 901 run from the city centre to Parliament House. 
     

    Old Parliament House & National Portrait Gallery 

    Halfway between the new parliament and the lake is the old parliament. Government sat here from 1927 to1988. Regular tours are available. Today it houses the National Portrait Gallery and temporary exhibits from the National museum and Australian Archive. Open daily 9am to 4pm. Entry $2, children $1. Phone 6273 4723. 
     


    National Gallery of Australia 

    This superb gallery is on Parkes Place next to lake Burley Griffin. Works displayed include Aboriginal art and some of from the most famous Australian artists, Arthur Boyd and Sidney Nolan. Open daily 10am to 5pm. $3, children and students free.


    High Court (pictured) 

    The highest court in Australia resides in a monumentally large modern glass and concrete building on King Edward Terrace on the edge of Lake Burley Griffin. Open 9.45am to 4.30pm. The public may watch hearings from the galleries of the courts. Entry is free. Phone 62706811. 

    High Court of Australia 
    Picture: High Court of Australia

    National Science and Technology Centre 

    Lots of hands on interactive displays and devices to play with that challenge and amaze the mind. Lots of fun, especially for kids. Located on King Edward Terrace. Open daily 10am to 5pm. Allow at least 2 hours. Entry $8, children $4, students $5. Phone 6270 2800. 


    National Library of Australia 

    Included amoung the library's 5 million books are early manuscripts and maps and Captain Cook's logbook from the HMS Endeavour. Captain Cook is popularly regarded as having discovered Australia. This is incorrect, though he was the first Englishman to discover and accurately chart Australia's furtile east coast in 1770 This led to the establishment of a penal colony at Sydney 18 years later after England had lost its American colonies as a place to dump excess prisoners. There is free internet access at a terminal in the library foyer. The library is located on King Edwards Terrace by the lake. Open Monday to Thursday 9 am to 9 pm, Friday and Saturday 9 am to 5 pm, Sunday 1.30 pm to 5 pm. Entry free. Phone 6262 1111. 


    Foreign Embassies 

    There are many embassies in Canberra and some are built in the style typical of their homeland. The Chinese Embassy is a mammoth construction. The US embassy is model southern mansion. The Indian, Thai and New Guinea are in national style. The New Guinea embassy has a cultural display open weekdays 9.30 am to 12.30 pm and 2 pm to 4 pm. East Timor demonstartors are permanently camped outside the Indonesian embassy. Anti-nuclear demonstrators are camped outside the French embassy. French nuclear testing in the Pacific is controversial. Most of the embassies are in Yarralumba, west of Parliament House. 


    Australian War Memorial (pictured) 

    This massive Bzyantine style stone building in a prominant position at the end of Anzac Parade and overlooking the lake is appropriatly important looking and austere to honour Australia's war dead and wounded. Entombed here is an unknown Australian soldier from the battlefields of Europe. 

    Australian War Memorial 
    Picture: Australian war Memorial
    Sunlight shines on his tomb through the top of the dome at exactly 11am the 11th of Novemeber to commemorate the end of World War I and remember the dead. Opened in 1941, it has an incredible miltary history display from Sudan in the late 1800s to the Gulf War. Aircraft, tanks and parts of the two midget Japanese submarines that infiltrated Sydney Harbour in World War II. Anzac is the acronym for Australian and New Zealand Army Corp. Open daily 10 am to 5 pm. Entry free. Phone 6243 4286. Getting there: Buses 233, 302, 303, 362, 363, 436 and 901 stop nearby. 

    Lake Burley Griffin (pictured) 

    This is the large artificial lake visible at the bottom of the hillsfrom most of the Canberra attractions. The Captain Cook Memorial Water Jet in the middle shoots water 150 metres high. Burley Griffin, after whom the lake is named, won a competition to design Canberra when the nation decided to establish a permanent national capital there. 

    Lake Burley Griffin 
    Picture: Lake Burley Griffin
    The lake is surrounded by parkland. At Regatta Point on the north shore, the interesting National Capital Museum traces the development of the city. Open daily 9 am to 6 pm. Entry free. 


    Royal Australian Mint 

    Visitors can view the furnaces and presses used to make coins from behind thick plate glass windows. There is also a collection of rare and old coins. Open weekdays 9 am to 4 pm, weekends 9 am to 3 pm. Entry free. Located in Denison St, Deakin. Get there by bus 230, 231 or 267. 
     

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    CITY CENTRE / CIVIC CENTRE SHOPS 

    Northborne Avenue is Canberra's main street. The unexciting city centre (known as the civic centre) is just east of it near Vernon Circle north of the big Lake Burley Griffin. There are a number of shops here in a confusing octagonal pedestrian mall setup. It is easy to get disorientated. 
     

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    PLACES TO STAY 

    Youth Hostels 

    City Walk Hotel 2 Mort St (corner City walk) is in the city centre. Phone 62570124. Dorm $16, single $37, double $42. Kitchen, TV lounge. 

    Canberra YHA Hostel 191 Dryandra St, O'Connor, 6km northwest of the city centre. From the Jolimont Centre on Northborne Avenue catch bus 307 or 308 to the corner of Scrivener and Brigalow Sts, head northeast up Scrivener St to Dryandra St and turn right. From the Civic Bus interchange at the corner of Mort St and Alinga St catch bus 304 to the corner of Miller St and Scrivener St, then follow signs. Dorm $16, twin $21 each ($23 with private bathroom). Phone 6248 9155. Travel desk, bike hire. 

    Victor Lodge 29 Dawes St, Kingston, 500 metres from the train station.Phone 62957777. $16 for bed in 4 bed dorm, single $45, double $44. Includes light breakfast. BBQ and bike rental. Get there from the city by bus 352 to nearby Kingston shops and walk. 

     Major National Youth Hostel Chains 

    YHA - Youth Hostels Australia (Hostelling International) http://www.yha.org.au 
    VIP Backpackers http://www.vip-backpackers.com 
    Nomads Backpackers. Phone 1800 819883 or http://www.nomads-backpackers.com 
     

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    PLACES TO EAT 

    There are few eating options in Canberra. Try Civic Centre or the affluent suburb of Manuka. 
     

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    ENTERTAINMENT 

    There are a few nightclubs and pubs around the civic centre. When going home remember Canberra's public transport system does not run late and Canberra has an extreme shortage of taxis at late at night. 

    Pandora's nightclub. Corner Mort and Alinga Sts. 

    Private Bin nightclub, 50 Northbourne Ave. 

    Moosehead's Pub 105 London Circuit, 

    Asylum has live music. 23 East Row. 

    Wig & Pen English pub. Corner West Row andd Alinga St. 

    Canberra Casino 21 Binara St. Open 12 noon to 6 am. 
     

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    GETTING AROUND 

    Canberra has a metropolitan bus network. Phone 62077611. The main interchange is on Alinga St between Northborne Ave and Mort St. Fares are $2, express $4, daily ticket $6, weekly ticket $24. A book of 10 single tickets costs $14. 

    Taxi 6285 9222. 

    The hop on hop off Murray's Canberra Explorer bus route runs past 19 Canberra attractions. It leaves hourly from the Jolimont centre from 10.15am to 4.15pm. $18, children $8. 
     

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    GETTING THERE AND AWAY 

    Countrylink trains run north to Sydney twice a day. $40. The train station is on Wentworth Ave, Kingston. Phone 6239 7039. 

    Buses leave from the Jolimont Centre on Northborne Avenue by the city centre. McCafferty's runs coaches to Melbourne ($44). 

    Canberra airport is 7 km southeast of the city centre. Taxi from the city is around $10. ACT Minbuses are $8 and pick up from the Jolimont centre, various hotels and the YHA. Phone 6291 4592 to book. 
     

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    WHERE TO GO NEXT 

    Go skiing in the Snowy Mountains near Cooma to the southeast of Canberra. Continue through Cooma to meet the scenic NSW south coast at Batemans Bay. Then follow the Princes Highway either south through Narooma, Merimbula and Eden to Victoria and Melbourne or north to Sydney

    Travel noertheast to Sydney directly. 
    Alternatively take the long back road to Sydney via the spectacular Blue Mountains 

    Travel southwest to Melbourne 
    It is possible to detiur from Albury to ski in the Victorian Alps

    Travel west to Adelaide 
    Along the Murray River through the river towns of Albury, Echuca, Swan Hill and Mildura. A more more direct route goes through Mildura only.

    Copyright (c) 2000 Graham Warren. Backpackers Guide to Australia (TM) is a trademark.
     
     

    Page Index: [Introduction] [Attractions] [Parliament House] [Old Parliament House and National Portrait Gallery] [National Gallery of Australia] [High Court] [National Science and Technology Centre] [National Library of Australia] [Foreign Embassies] [Australian War Memorial] [Lake Burley Griffin] [Royal Australian Mint] [City Centre/Civic Centre Shops] [Youth Hostels] [Places to Eat] [Entertainment] [Getting There and Away] [Getting Around] [Where To Go Next]
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