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The park and mud flats from
The Esplanade in the centre of Cairns
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Cairns
(including Fitzroy Island, Green Island, Redlynch, Smithfield and
Yorkeys Knob)
The major centre in North Queensland and an ideal
starting point for travellers wanting to explore both the tropical
rainforest and the Great Barrier Reef.
If there is a city which sums up the aspirations of
North Queensland it has got to be Cairns. North Queenslanders may well
believe that they live in a tropical paradise with palm-fringed
beaches, balmy days, easy living, spectacular rainforests, exotic fauna
and flora and dramatic waterfalls, but they also want the riches that a
modern society can provide. They don't want to be Robinson Crusoes.
They want tourism, shopping malls, efficient transport, sophisticated
hotels, restaurants and nightclubs and a lifestyle that is in keeping
with a modern western city.
Cairns is a city driven by tourism. Its fundamental
raison d'etre is to attract tourists and to provide them with a wealth
of ways to spend their money - from gift shops, reef visits,
snorkelling, Aboriginal artefacts and culture, nightclubs and forays
into the hinterland to places like Kuranda and the Atherton Tablelands,
opal shops, deep-sea fishing, adventure holidays to Cape York, seafood
restaurants, white-water rafting, catamarans and helicopter joyrides.
Looking at Cairns today it is hard to imagine that
just 20 years ago it was a sleepy little port from whence primary
produce such as sugar, timber and beef were exported. It is located
1757 km north of Brisbane.
Captain Cook was the first European to see the site
which is now modern-day Cairns. In June 1770 he sailed into an inlet
which, because it was Trinity Sunday, he named Trinity Bay. A little
further north Cook's ship the Endeavour went aground on the reef and he
was forced to beach the vessel at the site now known as Cooktown.
Cook's landing obviously meant little as the area
wasn't settled by Europeans until October 1873. The discovery of gold
at Palmer River meant that port facilities were created at Cooktown.
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View across Cairns modern
port facilities
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In the next few
years there were a number of gold discoveries in Far North Queensland.
Cooktown was the only port servicing the area and the miners in the
south, particularly those on the Hodgkinson field, began to look for a
new and shorter route to the coast.
One miner, with the unimpressive name of Bill Smith,
had worked around Trinity Bay as a fisher of beche-de-mer (sea
cucumbers) before becoming a prospector. He was convinced that the bay
would prove a suitable port. In 1876 he successfully cut a track from
Trinity Bay across Freshwater and the Barron River to the Hodgkinson
River goldfields. Smithfield to the north of Cairns was named in his
honour.
At the same time the local policeman on the Hodgkinson field,
an Inspector Douglas, was instructed to cut a track down to the coast.
Douglas joined Smith on his return to Trinity Bay but he came down the
south side of the Douglas River. Within the space of two months there
were two tracks from the goldfields to the coast.
A small township was established on the present site of
Cairns in late 1876 but it was short-lived because the land was swampy.
Smithfield became the more important of the centres and within a year
it had blossomed with eleven stores and hotels. It quickly gained a
reputation as 'the wickedest town in Australia' and legend has it that
Bill Smith, who became a publican in the town, made so much money from
the gold miners that he had his horse shod with shoes of gold.
On 6 October 1876 the Porpoise arrived in Trinity Bay
with a postmaster and customs officers aboard. The government were not
slow in responding to the establishment of a new settlement. The public
servants cut out an area for themselves near where The Esplanade now
stands. At the time the whole area was covered with dense scrub.
On 1 November Trinity Bay was declared a port of entry and
clearance. It was renamed after the then-Governor of Queensland, Sir
William Cairns. In spite of these official actions Smithfield remained
the more popular of the two settlements. By November its population had
reached 150 and it was growing rapidly. The next year, however,
Smithfield was totally destroyed by a freak flood on the Barron River.
However, instead of moving to Cairns, most of the population resettled
in Port Douglas, which immediately took the bulk of the maritime
business away from Cairns.
By 1882 Cairns was suffering from a serious economic
depression. The figures tell the story of the city's decline at this
time. In 1877 £132 407 worth of gold passed through the port. Two
years had snared 100% of the gold trade.
The town's revival occurred with the establishment of the
sugar plantations in the Mulgrave and Russell River valleys in 1882.
This was followed by the building of a railway from Myola (just beyond
Kuranda) in 1886. The combination of a rail terminus and port sustained
Cairns until tourism achieved a momentum of its own around 1980. Cairns
was gazetted as a town in 1903, became a city in 1923 and the terminus
for the Brisbane railway line in 1924. It was an important air and
naval base during World War II. In 1984 the airport was upgraded to
international standard thus giving the city the boost it needed.
Things to see:
Check out this Site
Some locals have created a website
http://www.destinationex.com which is truly remarkable. It has no
advertising (at the moment) and yet boasts 800 pages of information on
Tropical Queensland and over 200 videos. Read us and check them out as well.
Buildings
There is enough of the
old Cairns left for the astute visitor to imagine what the city was
once like. The most interesting buildings in town are in the Wharf
Road, Abbott Street and Lake Street areas where you will find the
famous Barbary Coast collection of buildings which indicate the
maritime origins of Cairns. Their location close to the wharves, their
wide verandahs and awnings extending over the footpaths, make them an
important part of Cairns' streetscape. Principal among them are the two
inns - the Barrier Reef Hotel and the Oceanic Hotel on Wharf Street.
Closer to City Place, the new centre of the city, are two
outstanding buildings. The old Adelaide Steamship Company Building on
the corner of Lake and Spence Streets is now owned by Quaids Real
Estate but it retains its distinctive charm. The relief image of a
steamship on the Lake Street side of the building recalls its previous owners.
One block further up Lake Street (on a corner of City
Place) is Hides Hotel, a typical North Queensland grand hotel dating
back to the 1920s. Built out of a combination of timber and brick, it
once dominated the corner and was an important gathering point for the
people of Cairns before World War II.
The Cairns Historical Museum
Opposite Hides is the elegant School of Arts building.
Constructed in 1907 it now houses the excellent Cairns Historical
Museum which has a good display of history relating to Cairns and the
region. Its documentation of the town's history, from Cook's arrival
through its maritime history and the arrival of the railway, is
complemented by good displays of Aboriginal artefacts and an
interesting video on the Great Barrier Reef. The building itself with
its wide verandahs is an excellent example of the kind of architecture
which buttressed Cairns' reputation for elegance before World War I.
People interested in the history of Cairns should read Establishment
Trinity Bay: A Collection of Historical Episodes available from the
museum. It has interesting and well-illustrated chapters on aspects of
the city's history including beche-de-mer fishing, the building of the
railway to Kuranda, the racial mixture of Cairns and the establishment
of Smithfield.
The Botanical Gardens
The Flecker Botanic Gardens in Collins Avenue, Edge
Hill, are widely regarded as the most impressive botanical display in
North Queensland with over 10 000 species and excellent views over
Cairns. The gardens were started in 1886 and take their name from Dr
Hugo Flecker, a keen botanist and biologist who established the North
Queensland Naturalists' Club. Of particular interest is the Aboriginal
Plant Use garden which consists of plants utilised by local Aborigines
for medicine, food, weapons and shelter.
The Jack Barnes Bicentennial Mangrove Boardwalk
In 1988 another interesting botanical expedition
was added to the city's sights with the opening of the Jack Barnes
Bicentennial Mangrove Boardwalk. Located off Airport Avenue (the main
route out to the airport) it allows visitors to explore mangrove swamps
from elevated boardwalks.
The Cairns Marina
Another place in the city which is popular with
tourists is the Cairns Marina where the game fishermen bring their
marlin to be weighed. Cairns' long association with marlin fishing has
attracted anglers to the area for decades. Zane Grey, the writer of
American westerns, made a number of movies about game fishing off the
coast of Cairns and the actor Lee Marvin was a regular visitor during
the 1970s.
Other Sites in Town
There is also the Bulk Sugar Terminal, where tours are
conducted regularly, Windows on the Reef - a sensory theatre which
recreates the sounds and sensations of diving on the Great Barrier Reef
- and the audio-visual display at the Royal Flying Doctor Service at
Junction Street on Edge Hill.
Fitzroy Island
Fitzroy Island is a favourite with visitors. It has
some 324 hectares of tropical rainforest, is almost completely
surrounded by coral reef and possesses a mountainous peak which rises
271 metres above sea-level. There are a number of tours to the island
every day and people wishing to stay at the expensive Fitzroy Island
Reef Resort can arrange accommodation by contacting the resort on tel:
(07) 4051 9588, fax: (07) 4052 1335
Green Island
For many years Green Island was one of Cairns' primary
tourist attractions. A small, uninhabited island it once had nothing
more than a jetty and a marine viewing point at the end of the jetty.
The addition of a resort has detracted from its primitive charm. It now
has a Marineland, a Barrier Reef Theatre, snorkelling trails and a
range of eating facilities.
Green Island was the setting for an innocent
pre-marital holiday for Joe Harman and Jean Paget in Nevil Shute's
novel A Town Like Alice.
Accommodation on Green Island Reef Resort can be
arranged by contacting the resort on tel: (07) 4031 3300 , free call
1800 673 366
Redlynch
Only a few kilometres from Freshwater on the Kuranda Railway
line, Redlynch is famous in the literary life of Australia. The great
novelist, Xavier Herbert, lived here for 34 years during which time he
worked at the local pharmacy (on Saturday mornings) and wrote the
mammoth Poor Fellow My Country. Published in 1975 it is still
Australia's longest novel. Herbert lived opposite the railway station
and wrote the tale in a shed behind the house.
Kuranda Railway
The journey on the Kuranda Train is delightful. The
Kuranda railway is probably the most scenically beautiful railway line
in Australia with one section actually running across the face of the
Stony Creek Falls and other sections winding around the hillside and
through no fewer than 15 tunnels. At various points there are views
back across the Coral Sea. It was built by John Robb between 1886 and
1891 and is recognised as a masterpiece of railway engineering. In 1915
the Railway Station at Kuranda was completed.
Perhaps the perfect symbol of Kuranda's unswerving commitment
to tourism is the way the Barron Falls are used. In the dry season the
water over the falls reduces to a trickle. However, to provide the
tourists with good photos, just before the tourist train arrives at
Barron Falls Station someone opens one of the floodgates and, quite
miraculously, the falls begin to fall. This is a phenomenon which is
worth watching if you happen to travel to Kuranda by car.
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Skyrail rising up the
escarpment and passing over tropical
rainforest
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Skyrail
This
spectacular 7.5 kilometre journey over rainforest from the top of the
escarpment to Caravonica Lakes Station north of Cairns must rate as one
of Australia's most memorable tourist experiences. There is nowhere
else on earth where you can travel across a tropical river, beside a
huge waterfall and across untouched tropical rainforest and experience
the beauty without damaging the landscape.
The Skyrail became a reality after years of
on-going battles with environmentalists (it was argued that the
construction would irrepairably damage the rainforest). The result is
an experience which is beyond criticism. The Skyrail blends into the
environment and offers a once-in-a-lifetime experience as it moves
silently over the top of the rainforest canopy.
The first stop is the Barron Falls Station. Skyrail offers a
glorious panorama of the Barron Gorge. It is then possible to alight
from the cable car and walk to the cliffs for a better view of the
Barron Falls.
Returning to the cableway, the passenger then passes
over the top of the rainforest before arriving at Red Peak Station
where, again, it is possible to break the journey and inspect the
rainforest from a wooden walkway. The diversity of the rainforest is
evident with palms, ferns, epiphytes and towering rainforest trees
surrounding the station.
Tjapukai Cultural Theme Park
The Tjapukai Cultural Theme Park is a unique attempt to
explain Aboriginal culture (in this case the society of the Djabugay
and Yirrgandyji peoples) in a broad thematic way. It offers visitors a
rare opportunity to experience Aboriginal culture through a Cultural
Village (with Boomerang and Spear Throwing), a Creation Theatre (in
which the story of creation is told in the Tjapukai language - with
headset translations) , a History Theatre (an overview of Aboriginal
history in the past 120 years) and Magic Space with giant murals.
Visitors can experience all the performances in a 2 hour period at the
Theme Park.
The Theme Park is a powerful statement of what it means
to be an Aborigine.
The power of the experience rests on a strange
mixture of the educational (each dancer explains a particular aspect of
Aboriginal life ranging from the boomerang to the didgeridoo,
songsticks, spears and clothing), a clever blend of ancient and modern
in both the dancing and the singing, the enactment of a tribal legend
which is easy to follow, a genuine rapport which the troupe establishes
with the audience, a buoyant sense of humour, and a constantly
reiterated theme of 'Proud to be an Aborigine'. The result is an
entertainment which leaves the audience elated and educated.
Yorkeys Knob
The beaches to the north of Cairns are a delight. Once
separate communities they are now commuter suburbsof the city. Of them
all Yorkeys Knob has the most interesting history. It was named after a
one-armed beche-de-mer fisherman who used the point as a base for his
angling activities at the turn of the century. During World War II it
became a popular haunt for American servicemen on R & R leave. Today it
is one of Cairns more exclusive areas.
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Tourist Information
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The Gateway Discovery Centre
51 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 3588
Facsimile: (07) 4051 7509
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Motels
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A1 Motel
211 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4499
Rating: ***
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Acacia Court Motel
230a Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 5011
Rating: ***
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Adobe Motel
191 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 5511
Rating: ****
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Bay Village Tropical Retreat
Cnr Gatton & Lake Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4622
Rating: ***
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Beltana Motel
380 Mulgrave Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 3777
Rating: **
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Bungalow Motel
200 Aumuller St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 3277
Rating: **
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Cairns Holiday Lodge
Cnr Thomas & Sheridan Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4611
Rating: **
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Cairns Motor Inn
187 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 5166
Rating: **
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Cairns Tropical Garden Motel
312 Mulgrave Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 1777
Rating: ***
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Captain Cook Endeavour Inns
204 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 6811
Rating: **
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Club Crocodile Lake St
183 Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4988
Rating: ***
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Compass Motel
232 Mulgrave Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 5466
Rating: **
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Coolabah Motel
564 Mulgrave Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 2711
Rating: **
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Fairways Motor Inn
702 Bruce Hwy
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 4444
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Flying Horseshoe Motel and Holiday Apartments
281289 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 3022
Rating: **
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Glenlee Motel
560 Bruce Hwy
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 1009
Rating: **
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High Chaparral Motel
195 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 7155
Rating: ***
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Hospitality Inn Cairns
137 Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4933
Rating: ***
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Lyons Motor Inn
Cnr The Esplanade & Aplin St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 2311
Rating: ***
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Newmarket Motel
Pease St
Manoora
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4053 4811
Rating: **
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Poinsettia Motel
169 Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 2144
Rating: **
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Quality Harbourside Motel
209 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 8999
Rating: ****
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Rainbow Motor Inn
179 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 1022
Rating: **
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Royal Palm Villas
184 McLeod St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4052 1444
Rating: ***
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The Leichhardt Motel Cairns
468 Mulgrave Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 5499
Rating: **
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Tradewinds Outrigger Motel
Cnr Abbott & Florence Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 6188
Rating: ***
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Tradewinds Sunlodge
Cnr Lake & Florence Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 5733
Rating: ***
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Tree Tops Motel
7 Tanner Cres.
Stratford
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4055 1048
Rating: **
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Tuna Towers Motel
145 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4688
Rating: ***
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Village Resort Motel
Cnr Bruce Hwy & Anderson St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 7700
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All Round Motel Inn The Pink
263-269 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4800, 1800 818 626
Facsimile: (07) 4031 1526
Rating: ***
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Cairns Angler Motel
287 Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 1666
Facsimile: (07) 4031 1491
Rating: ***
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Reef Palms Motel
41 Digger St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 2599, 1800 815 421
Facsimile: (07) 4051 7676
Rating: ****
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Hotels
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Cairns International Hotel
17 Abbott St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 1300
Facsimile: (07) 4031 1465
Rating: *****
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Cape York
Cnr Spence & Bunda Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 2008
Rating: *
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Crown Hotel
35 Shields St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 1806
Rating: *
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Four Seasons Cairns
The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 2211
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Great Northern
69 Abbott St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 5966
Rating: **
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Hides Hotel
City Square
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 1266
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Hilton International Cairns
Wharf St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4052 1599
Facsimile: (07) 4052 1370
Rating: *****
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Il Palazzo Boutique Hotel
62 Abbott St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4041 2155
Rating: ****
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Mercure Harbourside Hotel
209-217 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 8999, 1800 079 131
Facsimile: (07) 4051 0317
Rating: ****
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Pacific International
The Esplanade
P.O. Box 2325
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 7888
Facsimile: (07) 4052 1385
Rating: ****
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Paradise Village Resort
119-121 Williams Esplanade, Palm Cove
Cairns
QLD
4879
Telephone: (07) 4055 3300
Facsimile: (07) 4055 3991
Rating: ***
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Radisson Plaza Hotel
Pierpoint Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 1411
Rating: *****
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Royal Harbour Condominium Hotel
73-75 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4080 8888
Facsimile: (07) 4041 4522
Rating: ****
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Rydges Plaza Cairns
Cnr Grafton & Spence Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4041 1022
Rating: ****
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The Reef Hotel Casino
35 Wharf St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4030 8888
Rating: *****
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Tradewinds Esplanade
137 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4053 0300
Facsimile: (07) 4041 8649
Rating: ****1/2
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Resorts
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Angsana Resort & Spa Great Barrier Reef
1 Veivers Rd
Palm Cove
Cairns
QLD
4879
Telephone: (07) 4055 3000
Facsimile: (07) 4055 3090
Rating: *****
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Paradise Village Resort
119-121 Williams Esplanade, Palm Cove
Cairns
QLD
4879
Telephone: (07) 4055 3300
Facsimile: (07) 4055 3991
Email: paradise.vil@bigpond.com
Web site: http://www.fortland.com.au
Rating: ***
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Leo's Budget Accommodation
100 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 1264
Rating: **
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Apartments
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181 The Esplanade
181 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4052 6888
Facsimile: (07) 4031 6227
Email: stay@181.com.au
Rating: ****1/2
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Bay Village Tropical Retreat Apartments
227 Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 4622
Rating: ***
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Cairns Aquarius Holiday Apartments
107 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 8444
Rating: ****
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Cairns Queenslander Holiday Apartments
Cnr Digger & Charles Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 0122
Rating: ***
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Cairns Tropical Garden Apartments
312 Mulgrave St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 1777
Rating: ***
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Paradise Village Resort
119-121 Williams Esplanade, Palm Cove
Cairns
QLD
4879
Telephone: (07) 4055 3300
Facsimile: (07) 4055 3991
Rating: ***
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Royal Harbour Condominium Hotel
73-75 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4080 8888
Facsimile: (07) 4041 4522
Rating: ****
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Holiday Homes & Units
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Coolabah
564 Mulgrave Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 2711
Rating: **
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Coral Cay Villa
267 Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 2377
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High Chaparral
195 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 7155
Rating: ***
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The Citysider
17A Upward St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 1777
Rating: ****
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Coral Towers
255 The Esplanade
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 9611, 1800 066 622
Facsimile: (07) 4031 2164
Rating: ***
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Lodges & Chalets
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Inn the Tropics
141 Sheridan St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4031 1088
Rating: **
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Caravan Parks
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By Ways Caravan Park
317 Kamerunga Rd
Freshwater
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4055 1378
Rating: **
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City Caravan Park
Cnr Little & James Sts
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 1467
Rating: **
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Freshwater Caravan Park
308 Kamerunga Rd
Freshwater
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4055 1253
Rating: *
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Sunland Carapark Inn
Cnr Pease St & Reservoir Rd
Manoora
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 1305
Rating: **
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Woree Caravan Park
664 Bruce Hwy
Woree
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 1305
Rating: **
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Cairns Coconut Caravan Resort
Bruce Hwy South
Woree
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 6644
Rating: *****
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Coles Villa & Leisure Park
28 Pease St
Manoora
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4053 7133
Rating: ***
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Cool Waters Caravan Park
Brinsmead Rd
Brinsmead
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4034 1949
Rating: ***
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Crystal Cascades Holiday Park
Intake Rd
Redlynch
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4039 1036
Rating: ***
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First City Caravilla Caravan Park
Kelly St
Earlville
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4054 1403
Rating: ***
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Lake Placid Caravan Park
Lake Placid Rd
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4039 2509
Rating: ***
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Camping & Other
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Cairns Colonial Club
18 Cannon St
Manunda
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4053 5111
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Restaurants
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El Dorado
243 Lake St
Cairns
QLD
4870
Telephone: (07) 4051 6981
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