Booking.com


Visiting Canberra

The Australian Capital Territory is the site of Canberra, Australia’s capital city. As well as the seat of Government for the Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra has been developed as a celebration of and salute to Australia’s culture, its unique natural features and its notable sons and daughters.

The Australian Capital Territory is wholly surrounded by the state of New South Wales. Canberra, Australia’s largest inland city (population 340,000), is located at the northern end of the Territory near a portion of the Brindabella Ranges, approximately 150 km inland from Australia’s east coast. Being the 8th most populous city in the country, Canberra is smaller than any of the state capitals except Hobart.

Canberra’s residents live in a planned city originally designed by Walter Burley Griffin, although the Burley Griffin design has now been altered significantly. The inner city is laid out on two major perpendicular axes, a water axis that stretches along Lake Burley Griffin, and a ceremonial land axis stretching from Parliament House on Capital Hill north-eastward to the Australian War Memorial at the foot of Mt. Ainslie. As well as the unusual road system featuring many circular streets and roundabouts, Canberra’s highly planned nature has led to a striking absence of commerce on its major trafficked streets.

Planning Your Visit


Best Time To Go
Canberra is located at altitudes that range from 550m to 700m above sea level. This results in temperature ranges from -5° C to 35° C. The hottest days are generally in December and January. In wintertime, the days can get very chilly, and snow falls every few years.

Canberra has four distinct seasons, unlike many other Australian cities whose climates are moderated by the sea (it is Australia’s only inland capital city). Spring (September-November) is typified by cool days, lengthening sunlight, and periodic rain. The Canberra Spring is signalled by buds and blossoms on fruit trees, flower festivals, the return of Bogong Moths from their annual migration, and the annual Floriade flower festival.

In Summer, rain ceases before Christmas and humidity is generally low until March (or even April.) The light is stark, and hats are worn outside to protect from the sun.

Autumn brings freshening days and ANZAC Day (25th April) can be quite sharply cold for those attending the dawn service at the Australian War Memorial. The leaves of the many deciduous trees such as poplars, oaks and elms turn and fall, producing a colourful spectacle each May. Rain begins again at odd intervals.

Winter is typically the season of rain, but in 2003 and 2004 drought persisted. Fog frequently occurs during winter mornings, and can cause flight delays or cancellations at Canberra International Airport.

What to expect when visiting Canberra
It is important to remember that the city was created to be the seat of Government for the Commonwealth of Australia and the place where the thousands of public servants who work there also live. These are still its primary functions – and this is reflected in just about everything Canberra is and does and has to offer the visitor. Thus, even the attractions that are promoted to visitors as ‘must-sees’ are primarily the kind that one expects to find in a nation’s capital – things which showcase and/or symbolise the nation’s strengths, uniqueness and abilities, mixed with salutes to its people – past and present – who have contributed towards Australia being the nation it is today.

If you go to Canberra expecting to see anything else – which many visitors, particularly those from overseas, tend to do – you may, like many of them, be disappointed. Many who visit Canberra say it is sterile and boring, and that is how it appears if you go there expecting it to be something other than a purpose built, working national capital. Go there knowing what it is and why it is there and it will more than meet your expectations.



Transport
Canberra By Rail
Canberra By Road

Major Attractions


Cultural and Recreational


Museums and Galleries


Parks, Gardens, Reserves

Booking.com
Booking.com