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Sydney & Surrounds |
Sunny, sexy and sophisticated,
Sydney basks in its worldwide recognition as the
shining star of the southern hemisphere. The white-sailed
Sydney Opera House, caught mid-billow over the waters
of Sydney Cove, and the Sydney Harbour Bridge are
the pride and joy, but there's far, far more on
offer.
Sydney is the capital city of the Australian state
of New South Wales and Australia's largest and oldest
city (founded in 1788). With a metropolitan area
population of 4.3 million and a population of approximately
146,297 people in the city proper (known as the
"City of Sydney"), the Sydney metropolis
is the larger of the two main financial, transport,
trade and cultural centres of Australia (the other
being Melbourne).
Sydney is a significant global and domestic tourist
destination and is regularly declared to be one
of the most beautiful and liveable cities in the
world, admired for its harbour, beautiful coastline,
warm and pleasant climate and cosmopolitan culture.
Sydney significantly raised its global profile in
recent years as the host city of the 2000 Olympics.
It is also the host of the World Youth Day 2008
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Fabulous fusion
foods |
Australian cuisine,
heavily influenced by its extraordinary ethnic mix,
is rapidly becoming well-known overseas and, along
with its wines, is picking up sought after prizes
at major international competitions.
Throughout the city you can find restaurants to
suit all tastes and wallets - the inner-city suburb
of Newtown has everything from cheap Vietnamese
and Indonesian food through to African and French
cuisine, while another inner-city suburb, Glebe,
is famous for both sophisticated and down-to-earth
eateries.
Some of Sydney's best restaurants are at Circular
Quay, while a whole string of up-market restaurants
dot the landscape in the historic Rocks area, the
city centre and inner-city Kings Cross. Don't miss
Doyles on the Beach, a ferry ride away from the
city at Watsons Bay. It's one of the best
seafood eateries and has a fabulous seaside setting.
As for Bondi and Manly - they're almost bursting
at the seams.
Recent developments include East Circular Quay,
where up-market outdoor eateries line the boardwalk
to the Opera House. Elsewhere there's a harbour-side
feel to the quality restaurants at Finger Wharf
at Woolloomooloo, and at Cockle Bay and Darling
Harbour, where you can sit inside or out, and
enjoy the passing parade.
Sydney is fortunate too to have a healthy cafe
culture, due in part to its many ethnic influences.
Quality cafes are everywhere, with some of the
most atmospheric scattered around the suburb of
Darlinghurst, a short walk from Kings Cross CityRail
station.
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Australian
Style |
Sydneysiders love to strut their
stuff. They head for the newest really good restaurant,
cafe or bar, the grooviest new promenade, or the
smartest, nearest beach. They love to meet friends
to eat, drink and be merry. There's an energy and
boldness here that is irrepressible and uplifting.
It's urbane, but fresh and curious.
With its wonderful climate and carefree lifestyle,
Sydney has inspired some stunning young designers
who have taken the multi-layered cultural influences
and translated them into fashion.
The Mercedes Australian Fashion Week in Sydney sets
the stage and has proved to be a highly successful
venture, marketing Australian fashion to the world.
Designers such as Collette Dinnigan and Akira Isogawa
have become globally acclaimed.
Stroll up and down Oxford Street, Paddington, to
see the funkiest designers. For more formal fashion,
Double Bay is the place to shop. A trawl through
the city arcades and streets - Skygarden, the MLC
Centre, Chifley Square, Martin Place, the new Grace
Bros fashion floor - should bedazzle the
shopper with alternatives.
Down at Bondi, view the best of Australian surf
and beach wear that has blazed new trend trails
internationally. If you can't find a 'cossie'
(swimming costume) in Campbell Parade, there's
something wrong. Don't miss the Mambo store for
the ultimate in surf chic.
Sydney is a also an architectural dream. Many
homes overlook the water or nestle in the bush,
and are cantilevered over cliffs or dug back into
the scenery (featuring light and space, layers
of texture and looking outwards to the environment).
This Australian architectural idiom was pioneered
by Sydney architect Glenn Murcutt. It has been
translated and adapted by many who have followed
him.
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Superb city
beaches |
Sydney is positively awash with
beaches. From the far northern suburbs to the those
deep down in the south of the city a long string
of ocean beaches welcome sunworshippers. As well,
scattered around the harbour are hidden-away coves,
sleepy bays and swathes of golden sand.
Bondi, a bustling mecca for locals and international
tourists alike, is perhaps the most famous beach
of all. Only minutes from the centre of the city
its fine sweep of sand is known for its skimpily-clad
surf lifesavers and topless bathers. Also here is
a fine restaurant and cafe strip where you come
to see and be seen.
Next along the coast is Tamarama Beach - also known
as 'Glamourama' after its bathing beauties dressed
in the latest skimpy costumes, followed by Bronte,
popular with bathers.
Further south is Clovelly Beach, which sports a
large pool carved into the surrounding rock and
perfect for a dip if the sea looks too rough.
North of the Harbour Bridge you'll find Manly, a
long curve of golden sand edged with Norfolk Pines
which fill up at dusk with colourful flocks of lorikeets.
Manly's best reached by a ferry from Circular Quay,
or the rapid Jetcat,
which will hurry you there in only 15 minutes.
If you look out to sea to your right you'll spot
tiny Shelly Beach, where you can snorkel safe
from the waves.
From Manly, local buses lead to the northern beaches
of Curl Curl, Dee Why, Narrabeen, Mona Vale, Newport
and Avalon - all famous for their laid-back lifestyle
and surf. Eventually you'll reach Palm Beach,
a long and beautiful strip of sand edging onto
a golf course and dunes.
Many beaches edge onto harbour waters, but the
most popular of them all is gorgeous Balmoral.
Strung with cafes and a couple of fine restaurants,
Balmoral is a trendy and scenic north-shore suburb
with a resident flock of sulphur-crested cockatoos.
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Around the
clock |
Oxford Street, Kings Cross and
the area around Darlinghurst is the part of Sydney
that never sleeps. Around here you can find dozens
of bars, cafes, restaurants, pubs and nightclubs,
some of them open 24 hours.
Between Darlinghurst and Kings Cross is the Victoria
Street strip - by day a popular coffee venue. Try
varieties of Italian sandwich at Bar Coluzzi or
across the road at the Tropicana, also known for
its annual short film festival.
The area around Taylor Square is the epicentre of
Gay Sydney. Here, once a year, the Gay and Lesbian
Mardi Gras passes by, a gaudy, giddy, gyrating parade
that has become the focus for the lively arts and
lifestyle culture created by the active and out-there
gay community of the city.
See drag shows and dance late into the night at
the Imperial Hotel in Erskineville. Otherwise try
a local gay-orientated nightclub, like the Taxi
Club or Midnight Shift on Oxford Street.
Non-gay nightclubs are also congregated along Oxford
Street, as well as Kings Cross and Darlinghurst.
One of the most popular at present is Home, at Cockle
Bay
on the city side of Darling Harbour.
If it's jazz you fancy then try Soup Plus on George
Street, where you can tuck into bistro food while
you listen to the sweet melodies coming from a
sax. Another option is The Basement near Circular
Quay, which manages to squeeze in blues, folk
and funk as well as world-class jazz acts.
As for pubs and bars, Sydney's 24 hour drinking
laws mean you'll always find one open somewhere
or other. Popular areas for a drink or two include
the city centre and The Rocks - where you can
find Sydney's oldest pubs, the Hero of Waterloo
and the Lord Nelson Hotel. Otherwise, try Oxford
Street and Kings Cross, or the beachside suburbs
of Bondi and Manly.
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A jewel of
a harbour |
The glittering, emerald expanse
of waterway which makes up Sydney Harbour is the
city's focal point. It splits the city in two and
is crossed by the famous Harbour Bridge and the
Harbour Tunnel.
From the ocean you enter the harbour through The
Heads, dramatic cliff portals between Circular Quay
in the city and the beachside suburb of Manly. The
tops of The Heads are covered by Sydney Harbour
National Park, which stretches along the rugged
harbourside for kilometres. This haven for native
plants and birds really surprises visitors.
Visitors are also struck by the harbour's beauty,
especially at night when the high-rise towers around
Circular Quay, the girders of the Harbour Bridge
and the 'sails' of the Opera House are all lit up.
It's then that the harbour waters take on a magical
swirl of reflected colours - red, blue, green.
Green-and-yellow ferries ply the harbour until late
in the evening, looking like wind-up bath toys as
they trundle off to suburbs far and wide. Sleek
tourist craft, tall ships rigged with sails, giant
container vessels, water
taxis and private yachts flit around too, watched
by sunbathers on the harbour beaches.
In the centre of the harbour is a series of islands,
the most well known being Fort Denison, with its
tiny sandstone castle, which once housed the worst
of Sydney's convicts.
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