Stunning landscapes and a unique pioneering history create a diverse and exhilarating destination to explore. A thriving, spirited outback center, Alice Springs is as famous for the personality of its locals and traditional art as it is for the natural wonders, including the stunning Larapinta Trail and the MacDonnell Ranges surrounding it.
Restaurants in Alice Springs
5.0 based on 12 reviews
Tjanpi Desert Weavers is a social enterprise of the Ngaanyatjarra Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (NPY) Women’s Council created to enable women in remote central deserts to earn their own income from contemporary fibre art. Tjanpi represents more than 400 Aboriginal female artists from 26 remote communities on the NPY lands, which cover approximately 350,000 square kms across the tri-state border region (WA, SA, NT) of Central Australia. Tjanpi Desert Weavers has a public gallery in Alice Springs where you can see and purchase your own unique piece of art and learn more about the women and culture of the NPY lands. Tjanpi also runs public weaving workshops and regularly exhibits work in national galleries, museums and public institutions.
5.0 based on 15 reviews
Visited during winter and swam in the outdoor heated pool. I didnt venture any further than the outdoor pool. Price for a swim was was decent. Shower facilities were good.
5.0 based on 151 reviews
Yubu Napa Art Gallery, Studio and Gift Shop is now open at the iconic Panorama Guth Building in Hartley Street, Alice Springs. We offer a wide range of contemporary indigenous art as well as beautifully handcrafted souvenirs and gift ideas. Our onsite artist studio is a comfortable space for the artist's to paint in, offering visitors an opportunity to meet an artist and hear the stories of the artwork firsthand! We hope to see you soon at Yubu Napa, the newest Gem in Central Australia
After having visited all the art galleries in Todd Mall, on a recent trip to Alice Springs, I was very impressed by a visit to the Yubu Napa Art Gallery in nearby Hartley Street. Their range of artists and artistic styles was better by far than anything I saw at the other galleries. It also provided a friendlier environment for Indigenous artists to do their work on-site.
4.5 based on 230 reviews
The Araluen Cultural Precinct is home to some of the most significant artistic, cultural and historical experiences in Alice Springs and provides a unique visitor experience, encompassing Central Australia’s key cultural institutions and collections. In its four galleries and 500 seat theatre, the Araluen Arts Centre presents an annual program of exhibitions, theatre, and film. The Araluen Galleries showcase the beginning and continuing development of the contemporary Aboriginal art movement, particularly of the Central and Western Desert. The Araluen Art Collection includes significant original watercolours by Albert Namatjira in his artistic response to the Central Australian landscape. A “keeping place of stories”, the Araluen Cultural Precinct offers a rich experience set amongst important Arrernte sites significant to the local Arltyerre (Dreaming) including yaye (Big sister hill), yaye akweke (Little sister hill) and a sacred 300-year-old corkwood tree.
There happened to be a great exhibition of indigenous art when we were here. Also other things to see around the precinct including a small air museum which had some interesting planes and history.
4.5 based on 969 reviews
The Alice Springs Reptile Centre is a privately owned park which displays an extensive range of reptiles from the Northern Territory of Australia including Terry the Saltwater crocodile and large Perentie Goannas. The talk and handling sessions are a must and are at 11am, 1pm Saturdays only. Due to COVID restrictions the Centre is only open on Saturdays until the 19th of December, and bookings are required.
What a fantastic place with knowledgeable staff and close ups of a crocodile, thorny devil etc. The guy doing the reptile tour is passionate and it shows. Entertaining and brilliant. Wish we had more time here.
4.5 based on 262 reviews
The Women's Museum of Australia (formerly known as the National Pioneer Women's Hall of Fame) is dedicated to celebrating the contribution of women in the pioneering history of the Northern Territory. More broadly, the Womens Museum of Australia is exhibiting stories which showcase the special contribution to Australia's heritage that women in many endeavors have made, not only for the benefit of their communities, but as lasting legacies that can inspire future generations, too. The Womens Museum of Australia is situated in the heritage-listed Old Gaol; so you can also explore prison life and learn about the history of incarceration as well as get a hands-on feeling for what life inside the cells what like for prisoners of the day.
We had a wonderful time and not enough time! The stories of women who demonstrated perseverance & grit was topped off by moving audio stories from the Gaol (both men and women’s cells provided moving insights into this strata of AS history). The chance to support current inmates by purchasing their art topped off a really interesting visit. Many thanks to the volunteers who keep this piece of history alive.
4.5 based on 1,309 reviews
Winner of the 2012 Brolga Northern Territory Tourism Award for Best New Tourism Development. Since 1928 the Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) has provided 24-hour emergency medical services to those who live, work and travel throughout Australia. Today, the RFDS provides the finest care to more than 275,000 Australians each year – that’s one person every two minutes. Visit the original Alice Springs working base operating since 1939 to learn more about this unique service. The theatre allows the visitor to watch in comfort the life size hologram of John Flynn telling the story of the Royal Flying Doctor Service, a truly amazing experience! The Royal Flying Doctor Service is a non profit organization, with 100% of all profits made from tours, purchases in the cafe and from our online store going straight to the replenishment of medical equipment.
We did a tour of this as part of the “A Town Like Alice“ tour. A very professional & modern setup. The introductory presentation is very good & followed by a very good hologram movie. The museum layout is very good & well worth the wandering around. There is a very good quality gift shop too. Well worth the visit - I would highly recommend visiting.
4.5 based on 888 reviews
History, Lifestyle & Innovation…Since 1951 when Alice Springs School of the Air was established, it has been at the forefront of developing techniques that continually enhance learning experiences of students living in remote areas of Central Australia.Immerse yourself in history, learn about outback lifestyle, discover world-class innovations and be inspired by what has been and continues to be a uniquely Australian method of education – achieved in “The World’s Largest Classroom”.
Our tour of this attraction was an off train excursion whilst doing The Ghan train trip from Darwin to Adelaide. We were taken by coach a short distance from the train but still within the townsite of Alice Springs. We were greeted by a very bubbly woman who showed us in to a classroom-like room for an informative video on the formation and workings of the school, formed in 1951, which is the largest classroom in the world. To think that the students are in remote areas and spread over an area in excess of 500,000 square miles is mind boggling. After the video you move in to an adjoining room to witness an actual lesson involving a teacher and student. There is so much to see and absorb in such a short time that you need to go for yourself and learn about this modern day wonder. As you leave there is the customary gift shop with a very good array of souvenirs to purchase with all the funds going to the administration and running of the school. It truly is an amazing place to visit.
4.5 based on 43 reviews
Ingeniously designed to accommodate the local climate and conditions, this building was the first hospital in Alice Springs, and now houses a local history museum with photographs, old radio equipment, maps and publications.
4.5 based on 297 reviews
Take a nostalgic trip into Australia's - and the world's - transport history at the National Road Transport icon. Become engrossed in, and perhaps relive, your own transport experiences surrounded by a unique collection of workhorses from yesteryear.
This is a truly outstanding collection and is worthy of a visit by enthusiasts and, more to the point, those who could not give a toss about trucks and road transport. The collection is huge and a real tribute to those men and women who have put their lives into the transport business across Australia. Just to see the huge collection of individual portraits and stories about those who have been inducted is really quite overwhelming. Then there is the range of vehicles, restored, originals, and wrecks; and the very impressive collection of Kenworths. This is definitely worth a visit if you are in the Alice. It was all put together by volunteers and is managed by volunteers! Well done - a real monument to the industry and its people.
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