Lovely, laid-back Melbourne has something for everyone: family fare, local and international art, haute boutiques, multicultural dining, Australian and Aboriginal history, spectator sports, and pulsing, swanky nightlife. Cruise on the free City Circle Tram loop to check out unique attractions like the Royal Botanical Gardens and the Healesville Sanctuary, which buzzes with local animal species.
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4.5 based on 801 reviews
Connects the historical past with the brilliant present. Visitors will see everything on this road. Historic buildings of fine architecture, luxury hotels, banks, multinational companies, fine shops, shopping malls and central sights. The eastern end of Collins Street has been known as the 'Paris End' since the 1950s due to its numerous heritage buildings, old street trees, high-end shopping boutiques, and for the first sidewalk cafes in the city. Blocks further west centred around Queen Street became the financial heart of Melbourne in the 19th century, with major banks and insurance companies, till now with the most prestigious office blocks and skyscrapers along its length. We had the opportunity to enjoy walking up and down Collins Street daily as our hotel was right here. Charming road, where each Melbourne visitor should be here at least once.
4.5 based on 5,064 reviews
Voted #8 of 323 things to do and see in Melbourne by Tripadvisor and winning the 2015 Travellers' Choice Award, join us on a personalised guided walk through one of Melbourne's most grand and historic landmarks,The Block Arcade. Built in 1892 and modelled on the Galleria Vittoria Emanuele in Milan, The Block Arcade is a heritage listed shopping arcade situated on Melbourne's Golden Mile and home to the largest mosaic floor in the southern hemisphere, its magnificent glass dome and the iconic Hopetoun Tearooms. Suitable for all ages, a guided walk through the Arcade will take you on a historical journey back to the early days of the Colony and a glimpse into Melbourne's rich and colourful history. Venture upstairs, which is not accessible to the general public, as you view the Arcade from its many windows and causeway. Tours run twice a week on Tuesdays or Thursdays. 11am - 12pm at $15 p/p 2 - 3.30pm at $22 p/p and includes a Devonshire afternoon tea. For groups of more than 8, prior arrangements can be made for alternative times/days.
The Block Arcade got an amazing tinder style history of men lining up around the Block to meet the women of their dreams, then the hand laid mosaic floors by imported Italian labourers, and the yummy cakes at the Hopetoun Coffee shop - be sure to make time to line up.
4.5 based on 488 reviews
A great place to go for a bite or just a coffee with many restaurants with outdoor seating to choose from to satisfy your needs.
4.5 based on 325 reviews
Completed in 1870, the Melbourne Town Hall is at the heart of the city's cultural and civic activity, hosting theatre, weddings, receptions and exhibitions. So many of the decisions that have helped shape Melbourne were made within the heritage-listed Town Hall. A mix of bluestone and Tasmanian freestone, the classically designed building features a clock tower and fine masonry. To go behind the scenes and visit the grand Council Chambers and stand where the Beatles and Abba waved from the impressive portico, take a Town Hall tour. As well as the Council Chambers, the Town Hall features a large auditorium, which was remodelled following a fire in 1925 and includes panels decorated with sepia figures. The auditorium's Grand Organ has featured in cutting-edge performances by a range of artists including Philip Glass, Paul Grabowski and the Necks. A free lunchtime concert series has been running since 2003, and the Grand Organ Museum offers visitors the opportunity to learn more about the organ and breathe air into its venerable pipes. Join a free Melbourne Town Hall Tour from Monday to Friday with tours departing at 11am and 1pm. Bookings essential.
The Melbourne Town Hall is certainly decked out around Christmas time. We visited the Town Hall later in the night to view the light show projected onto its facade. Being a 'first-timer', I was entertained by the light show, which is on a rotation, although I suppose you can become jaded by that sort of thing. Well worth a visit.
4.5 based on 38 reviews
Collins Street was, for many years, the pre-eminent address for Australia's dominant corporations. Number 333 Collins Street was the glorious banking chamber of the Commercial Bank of Australia (CBA), intended to display its wealth and stability. You can, in normal times, see its ornate ground floor with comortable Chesterfields for clients. You can also view the magnificent dome. The building is said to be the best serviced office complex in Melbourne.
4.5 based on 19 reviews
This beautifully contrasts against the County Court on the other side of the street... the old and the new... as it should be. If an old building can be maintained, it's wonderful that it is. Erected in 1874-84, the Law Courts comprise two storeys constructed of brick on Malmsbury bluestone footings and faced with Tasmanian freestone. The design is reputed to be based on the design of James Gandon's Four Courts building in Dublin, following a suggestion to Smith and Johnson by Chief Justice Sir William Stawell. The boldness of planning and massing and the mannerist details are highly characteristic of the work of the architect AE Johnson. This is a beautiful building representing the Renaissance Revival style. It can be reached by foot from Southern Cross or there is a bus route that runs up Lonsdale Street.
4.5 based on 65 reviews
Melbourne’s iconic Manchester Unity Building represents a rare blend of art, science, culture and commerce. As a magnificent structure, as a monument to human endeavour and as a hub of personal interaction, it has a special place in the history of Melbourne and the hearts of its citizens as well as the city’s economy.
A landmark in Melbourne CBD is the 'Manchester Unity Building' on Collins Street, corner Swanston Street, one of the city's main intersections, and just opposite the neoclassical Town Hall. The tall building with a stepped corner spire is maybe Melbourne's best example of Art Deco, although there is a Gothic touch to it, especially in the exterior, apparently inspired by the neo-Gothic Tribune Tower of Chicago, which had been built 5 years earlier, in 1927. There are tours offered to visit the whole building, but one can freely wander through the ground floor, where there is also the 'Café 1932', referring to the year the building was finished. There one can also read that it had been paid for by the 'Manchester Unity Independent Order of Oddfellows', an organisation, which came out of the Friendly Society Movement, providing protection, insurance and healthcare for its members against a regular fee.
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