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The fountain at the top of
King William Street
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Adelaide
(including Burnside, Fort Glanville, Glenelg)
Capital city of South Australia. A pleasant,
gracious city which still retains the feeling of a large country town.
Adelaide is so neat and regular. Spread out on either side
of the Torrens River on the flat coastal plain between Gulf St Vincent
and the Mount Lofty Ranges it lies, an overgrown country town, laid out
in a series of neat, easy to follow, grids. Of course it was planned -
even before it was settled.
In 1829 Edward Gibbon Wakefield proposed a scheme for
careful and systematic colonisation. The plan was to sell lots of Crown
Land and to use the money to pay for the emigration of labourers. After
two abortive attempts to activate the proposal it finally became a
reality in 1834 when the South Australian Association was formed. It
was soon after this that Wakefield quit the organisation arguing that
the price of land was too low. At this stage things were looking rather
unpromising for the new colony.
Still, in spite of these problems, a fleet of eight
ships captained by John Hindmarsh left England and arrived at Holdfast
Bay (now Glenelg) on 28 December 1836.
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The tram terminus at Glenelg
on the coast
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The settlers were
forced to camp at Holdfast Bay while Colonel William Light, the
colony's first Surveyor-General, chose a suitable site for the future settlement.
Light and Hindmarsh disagreed over the location of
the site. Light was accused of building the city away from the sea (to
the maritime-minded British this was an unforgivable error) on an
alluvial mud plain which was dusty in summer and muddy in winter.
He also designed the city along a clearly defined grid
pattern with the two major centres - Adelaide Central and North
Adelaide - surrounded by parklands. The effect was to be a city which
looked like a square figure eight. The result, still evident today, is
that Adelaide is carefully planned and neatly geometric.
He later replied to his critics: 'The reasons that
led me to fix Adelaide where it is I do not expect to be generally
understood or calmly judged of at the present. My enemies, however, by
disputing their validity in every particular, have done me the good
service of fixing the whole of the responsibility upon me. I am
perfectly willing to bear it; and I leave it to posterity, and not to
them, to decide whether I am entitled to praise or to blame.'
Today few would dispute the verdict that Light is
'entitled to praise'. However some have seen Light's sharp-edged street
plan as a symbol of the kinds of people who live in Adelaide. Randolph
Bedford, a politician and regular contributor to The Bulletin, wrote in
1905: 'Adelaide is...rectangular in its streets, and therefore precise
in its ways; its conduct a peculiar mixture of democratic progress and
Cornish religiousness - its austerity modified by the climate.
The next fifteen months saw the colony degenerate
into near-chaos. The land near the site of modern-day Adelaide had been
surveyed and sold by March 1837 but surveys of country areas were
delayed and simple supply and demand meant that property speculation
became the colony's main industry. Speculation meant that little land
was used for agricultural purposes and so a black market in imported
food and supplies flourished.
By 1840, only three years after first settlement,
the colony had a population of 14 000 free settlers but was totally
bankrupt. It was in this year that the South Australia Company,
determined that the city would succeed, developed the wharves and
warehouses at Port Adelaide, and built a road between the port and the
emerging city.
Fortunately the city was saved from economic ruin in
1842 when huge copper deposits were found at Kapunda. Three years later
more copper was discovered at Burra.
Today there is no city in Australia quite like
Adelaide. There are images of Adelaide with the slow-flowing River
Torrens, the beautiful parks and, inevitably, the churches. Dubbed 'the
city of churches' it is more the serenity of the city than the actual
number of churches which conjures up this notion of religious commitment.
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Looking up King William Street
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It has a country
town friendliness with an urbanity which gives it a distinctively
European feel. It is a city which can still be traversed, from north to
south and through the 'main street', King William Road, without having
to contend with traffic jams. Even at peak hour it is possible to drive
into the city with a minimum of delay and anxiety.
With a population of nearly a million people Adelaide
is Australia's fourth largest city. It is one of Australia's few
planned cities and its broad streets give it a sense of openness and
cleanliness which is missing from the more haphazardous developments of
Sydney and Melbourne.
It is a typical Mediterranean-style city. Not only
does it enjoy a typical Mediterranean climate with an average rainfall
of 560 mm and a temperature range from 15°C (July) to 29°C (February)
- it typically experiences at least 18 days above 35°C in the summer
months - but it is designed for outdoor living. Its malls, parks, and
the Torrens River flowing through its centre are all conducive to
leisurely walks, picnics and 'promenading'.
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Jolley¹s Boathouse on the
River Torrens
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In the last half
century, like all Australian cities, Adelaide has sprawled. Its suburbs
now spread for nearly 40 km to the south reaching almost to the McLaren
Vale wine growing area. To the east they nestle into the Adelaide Hills
and, to the north, they spill into the industrialised sprawl of
Elizabeth (named after the reigning monarch and developed in the
mid-1950s) and Salisbury.
Adelaide was originally a 'farinaceous village'
meaning that it originally was the centre of a successful wheat growing
area. By the 1850s its economic base had expanded and the hinterland
was producing wool, fruit and wines which were being shipped out
through the port.
The twentieth century has seen this city, named after
King William IV's wife Queen Adelaide, become a typical multi-purpose
modern city. It boasts a strong manufacturing base - chemicals,
electrical goods, textiles, motor vehicles, steel tubes; has its own
oil refinery at Port Stanvac thirty km to the south; is the state's
administrative and cultural centre; and is an ideal location for sport,
recreation and tourism.
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The statue of John McDouall
Stuart at the end of King William Street
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But all this misses
the heart of Adelaide which is its urbanity and sophistication. Often
the brunt of jokes - Max Gillies used to portray the typical Adelaide
dweller a chap with a rather plummy accent wearing a pink shirt and
cravat and speaking of 'things cultural' in a restaurant while sipping
from a glass of white wine - Adelaide really has managed to capture the
cultural high ground in recent years. Its Festival Centre, on the banks
of the River Torrens, boasts three theatres and an outdoor
amphitheatre. The Adelaide Festival of Arts has attracted major artists
from all over the world. And Adelaide, for its population, has more
restaurants than any other Australian city.
Its attractiveness seems to have been perfectly captured
by the little known novelist Doris Egerton Jones who wrote: 'Adelaide
is just a beautiful place; we drove through its nice broad streets and
past the Parklands. I think the big stretches of green bordered with
trees look so cool and countrified within three minutes of the heart of
the city. And then the little gardens of scarlet and purple dotted
amongst the close-kept lawns and the bank of colour on the Torrens
side, and the low riot of gold and green in the shade of the
plane-trees before the Oval.'
Things to see:
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Adelaide from a lookout in
the Adelaide Hills
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Adelaide's Main Attractions
Any visit to Adelaide is really a three-pronged
exercise. There are the historic buildings, the parks and malls, and
the interesting outlying suburbs.
Art Gallery
Located in North Terrace the Art Gallery of South
Australia is open from 10.00 a.m. - 5.00 a.m. daily. Admission is free.
It is known particularly for its wide range of early prints and
drawings. It also has excellent displays of south-east Asian ceramics.
Ayers House
Situated at 288 North Terrace, Ayers House is an
elegant Regency building which was built in 1846 for William Paxton. In
1855 the building was acquired by Sir Henry Ayers, the prominent South
Australian businessman and politician (he was State premier), who
carried out substantial extensions to the original structure. In 1858
he added a library and built a number of bedrooms at the back and in
1859 he added the large eastern drawing room (used sometimes as a
ballroom) and the two bow windows at the front. The extensions were
finally completed in 1874 when the western wing was added. Ayers
continued to live in the house until his death in 1897. During that
time Ayers House was used as a residence where he entertained large
numbers of prominent dignitaries. Today the house, which has been
restored by the South Australian Government, is open for inspection. It
houses the National Trust of South Australia.
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View across Adelaide from
North Terrace
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Botanic Gardens
One of the most delightful botanic gardens in
Australia, this historic garden was established in 1855. Open from 7.00
am until a variable closing time it is a cool escape beside the Torrens
River. Among the most impressive displays is the Museum of Economic
Botany, a new glasshouse (reputedly the largest in the southern
hemisphere it offers a display of tropical rainforest complete with a
permanently dripping roof), a magnificent wisteria arbour and an avenue
of Moreton Bay figs which were originally planted in 1866. Of equal
interest is the State Herbarium, an institute for research which boasts
a collection of more than half a million dried plants from all over the
world. The collection of South Australian orchids and mushrooms is
considered to be of national importance. The Herbarium is located in
the south-east corner of the Botanic Garden. For further information
contact the Adelaide Botanic Garden on (08) 8222 9311.
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Festival Hall across the
River Torrens
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Festival Centre
An impressive arts complex on the banks of the Torrens
River, the Festival Centre comprises a drama theatre, a lyric theatre,
an open air amphitheatre, an experimental theatre and a multipurpose
concert hall. The centre of the Adelaide Arts Festival the complex
offers a range of interesting cultural activities throughout the year.
Tours of the complex are offered. Contact (08) 8216 8713.
Adelaide Gaol
Located off Port Road which runs west from North
Terrace, the old Adelaide Gaol is open to visitors for self-guided
tours Sunday through to Friday between 11.00 a.m. and 3.30 p.m. Guided
tours are available on Sundays at 11.00 a.m., midday and 1.00 p.m. The
brochure available on the gaol offers a succinct history: 'Adelaide
Gaol is more than 147 years old. It was one of the public buildings
constructed by Governor George Gawler which marked the transformation
of early Adelaide into a permanent settlement.
'The first stage of the building was opened in
1841, with the remainder of the half decagon design completed in 1847
... Both remand and sentenced prisoners were accommodated at the
Adelaide Gaol. Female prisoners were housed in the gaol until 1969 ...
Adelaide Gaol was used for the confinement of prisoners as recently as
February, 1988. Their graffiti adorns the walls and their magazines are
still scattered in the cells.' 45 hangings took place at the gaol, at
four separate locations. Notable in the gaol is the original bell which
dates from 1837 (it was made in 1837 and arrived in Adelaide in 1841),
the graves area where all inmates hanged at the gaol are buried, and
the unusual carved faces at the entrance.
Holy Trinity Church
Located at 87 North Terrace this Anglican church is
known as 'The pioneer church of South Australia'. The foundation stone
was laid by Governor Hindmarsh in 1838. It was rebuilt and enlarged in
1844 and again in 1888. The church clock was made by Vulliamy, the
clockmaker to King William IV and Queen Adelaide. More information
about the church is available by contacting (08) 8212 2311
Migration Museum
Located at 82 Kintore Avenue off North Terrace and
open from 10.00-5.00 (Monday and Friday) and 1.00 p.m. -5.00 p.m.
(weekends), the Migration Museum is 'a social history of South
Australian immigration and settlement'. A combination of photographs,
computerised information, recreated hostel rooms, and audio visual
displays it offers a rare and interesting overview of Australia's
migration programs since the early nineteenth century. The only museum
of its kind in Australia it was opened in 1986. Entry is free.
South Australian Museum
One of the substantial nineteenth century buildings on
the northern side of North Terrace, the South Australian Museum
contains five floors of natural and cultural history with particular
emphasis on the fossils, animals and minerals of South Australia. It
also has impressive collections of Aboriginal and Pacific Island
artifacts ranging from a Trobriand Island Trading vessel to a special
Aboriginal Dreaming exhibition.
Parliament House
The Old Parliament House is located on North Terrace
just west of King William Street. Open from 10.00 a.m. - 5.00 p.m.
Monday - Friday and 12.00 - 5.00 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, this award
winning museum with its sophisticated audio visual displays, its 'South
Australia Story' show and shop and restaurant offers an excellent over
view of the political and social history of South Australia. The
building itself, nestled between the current Parliament House and the
Adelaide Railway Station was built in 1855 and is a fine example of one
of Adelaide's early public buildings.
St Francis Xavier's Cathedral
Located in Wakefield Street, this impressive
building is the centre for Roman Catholic worship in Adelaide. It was
built progressively between 1856 and 1926. Like St Mary's Cathedral in
Sydney it has never been completed. The absence of the spire is
notable. For more information about times of mass contact (08) 8231 3551
Tandanya
Tandanya is the home of
the National Aboriginal Cultural Institute and is located in the East
End Precinct of the city. The brochure explains that it 'provides a
unique opportunity in Australia for visitors to experience living
Aboriginal culture in its historic context. Visitors may observe the
production of artifacts, enjoy traditional and contemporary music,
theatre and dance, and purchase Aboriginal art and craft of integrity -
all on the one site.' Managed and controlled by local Aborigines
Tandanya is an excellent opportunity to explore the culture of South
Australian Aborigines while remaining within the Adelaide city limits.
The name 'Tandanya' means 'place of the kangaroo', the original name
for the Adelaide city area used by the Kaurna people, the original land
owners of the region.
Telecommunications Museum
A genuinely fascinating and unusual museum
conveniently located in the city centre at 131 King William Street
(tel: (08) 8230 6601) it has separated sections devoted to Wireless
Telegraphy, Beyond 2000, Early Home Receivers, Telephony, External
Plant, Radio Transmission, Optical Fibre, Telegraphy and Machine
Telegraphy. Given South Australia's importance in the history of
Australian telecommunications (particularly the connection of the
Overland Telegraph Line with Europe) it is appropriate that this
museum, which is open from 10.30 a.m. - 3.30 p.m. (admission free)
should be housed in Adelaide.
Adelaide Zoo
Located close to the city centre on the banks of the
Torrens River and surrounded by the city's superb Botanic Park, the Zoo
is over 100 years old. Inevitably this means that its 1500 exotic and
native mammals, birds and reptiles are housed in a setting
characterised by its Victorian elegance. Its popular attractions
include an Australian Wetlands Exhibit, a walk-through Australian
Rainforest Exhibit and a recreation of Seal Bay on Kangaroo Island. The
zoo prides itself in its collection of endangered species which include
the Golden-lion Tamarin, Red Panda, Scimitar-horned Oryx and Persian
leopard. It is open from 9.30 a.m. - 5.00 p.m. every day of the year.
This is, inevitably, a brief list of the city centre's
highlights. Beyond these are literally dozens of interesting buildings
and the visitor will certain want to explore the Rundle Mall and
perhaps experience Hindley Street at night, Adelaide's answer to Kings
Cross. Further information can most readily be obtained from the city's
Information Centre on the corner of King William Street and North
Terrace, directly opposite the South Australian Parliament.
Suburban Adelaide
Fort Glanville
Located 14 km north-west of the city Fort Glanville
is an extraordinary collection of buildings which serve as a reminder
of our colonial commitment to Britain. Throughout the nineteenth
century the Australian colonies had always been eager to involve
themselves in Britain's military adventures. It was this eagerness
which resulted in the joint decision by the Governor of South
Australia, Sir William Jervois (a military engineer and expert on
coastal defence) and Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Scratchley, to build a
number of defensive forts along the coast of Gulf St Vincent.
Fort Glanville was designed by Scratchley, the
contract for its construction was £15,893/12/7, and building
commenced in 1878. By the end of 1880 the fort was completed and the
guns had been mounted and fired. Its life was short. By 1900 it was
being maintained by a caretaker.
The fort declined rapidly. It was used briefly
during World War I, by the 1930s it was a campsite for Boy Scouts and,
in 1937, most of the metal on the site was removed for scrap. It was
sold to the State Government in 1951 and in 1981 was opened to the
public. Today this interesting building with its barracks, stores,
ramparts and guns, is a fascinating reminder of an interesting footnote
in our colonial history. It is open the third Sunday of each month from
1.00 p.m. - 5.00 p.m. For more information contact (08) 8337 0077.
Burnside
6 km east of the city is
the suburban district known as the City of Burnside. Located in the
foothills of the Mount Lofty Ranges the area was first settled by Peter
Anderson in 1839. Anderson took up a land grant at Second Creek and
built a house which he called 'Burnside' (the Scottish word 'burn'
means 'creek' or 'river'). In 1840 the settlement consisted of four
houses. Things changed dramatically when, in 1849, the South Australian
Company laid out the future township. The lots were auctioned on 6
September 1849 with the area being sold as 'A limpid stream meanders
through it, producing luxuriant, diversified and perennial verdure.
Amid the wattle and other native flower shrubs, appear the gorgeous
rose, the clinging honeysuckle, the wayward strawberry, a forest of
Cape gooseberries and even the weeping willow inclines its graceful
form and extends its valedictory arms over the stream which has
nurtured it since the foundation of the Colony.'
The city of Burnside has produced four excellent tour
guides to Rose Park, Knightsbridge and Waterfall Gully. They are all
available at the Burnside Library and cover, in excellent detail, the
district's main historic features.
Marble Hill, which was the former summer residence
of the South Australian governors, was built in 1879 and destroyed by
bushfires in 1955. It is open Saturdays and Public Holidays 1.00 a.m. -
5.00 p.m., Sundays 10.00 a.m. - 5.00 p.m. and Wednesdays 1.00 p.m. -
5.00 p.m.
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The Buffalo, a tourist
attraction sailing boat at
Glenelg
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Glenelg
No
visit to Adelaide is complete without a 10 km trip down to Glenelg.
Today it is a typical seaside resort, all-the-fun-of-the-fair, place
for Adelaide people to visit. Historically it was where Adelaide really
started. This was the place where, on 28 December 1836 Governor
Hindmarsh proclaimed South Australia a British province. It was
originally named Holdfast Bay (apparently because some ships
successfully rode out a gale) but this was changed to Glenelg, after
Lord Glenelg, the Secretary of State for Colonies, in 1837.
Early life at Glenelg (while Colonel Light decided on
Adelaide as the major settlement) was impossibly hard. The settlers
lived in mud huts and tents for nearly six months. It is hard to
imagine this as you marvel at the ornateness of the Town Hall, walk
along the jetty, play mini-golf in the huge Amusement Park, or watch
the trams come and go along Jetty Road.
Of particular historic interest is the Old Gum Tree (now
bent so that it forms an arch) where Governor Hindmarsh reputedly read
the proclamation declaring South Australia a British colony.
A replica of the HMS Buffalo, the ship in which
Governor Hindmarsh arrived, is located north of the centre of Glenelg.
It is used as a restaurant Contact (08) 8294 7000 for bookings.
ACCOMMODATION
Detailed
information on Adelaide's wide range of hotels, motels and private
accommodation is available from the Tourism South Australia Travel
Centre which is located in the centre of the city at 1 King William
Street. Tel: (08) 8212 1505. It is important to remember that even such
outlying suburbs as Glenelg and Port Adelaide are no more than 20
minutes from the city centre - even in peak hour. Therefore the visitor
should not restrict their accommodation options to the city centre
unless they need to be located there.
EATING
Many of Adelaide's hotels
and motels have copies of Dining Adelaide a list of 'Forty of
Adelaide's Most Popular Menus'. The emphasis is on 'menus' which are
actually reproduced in the publication.
More information is available from Tourism South
Australia Travel Centre which is located in the centre of the city at 1
King William Street. Tel: (08) 8212 1505. Their small booklet Your
Guide to Adelaide & Attractions (which is provided free) has an
extensive of city restaurants and eateries
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Tourist Information
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Glenelg Tourism & Promotion Centre
Moseley Square
Glenelg
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8294 5833
Facsimile: (08) 8376 1940
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Rundle Mall Information Centre
Rundle Mall
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 4070
Facsimile: (08) 9203 7508
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The South Australia Travel Centre
1 King William St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8303 2033, 1300 366 770
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Motels
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Adelaide City Parklands Motel
471 Pulteney St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 223 1444
Rating: **
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Adelaide Paringa Motel
15 Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 1000
Rating: ***
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Adelaide South Park Motel
Cnr South & West Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 1277
Rating: ****
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Adelaide Travelodge-Tower Wing
208 South Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 2744
Rating: ****
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Barron Town House Motel
164 Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8211 8255
Rating: ****
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Country Comfort Inn Adelaide
226 South Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 4355
Rating: ****
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Festival Lodge Motel
140 North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 7877
Rating: ***
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Riviera Motor Inn
31 North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 8000
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Ambassadors Hotel
107 King William St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 4331
Rating: **
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Clarion Hotel Soho
264 Flinders St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8412 5600
Facsimile: (08) 8412 5511
Web site: http://www.clarionhotelsoho.com.au
Rating: *****
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Restaurants
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Decant (Clarion Hotel Soho)
264 Flinders St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8412 5600
Facsimile: (08) 8412 5511
Web site: http://www.clarionhotelsoho.com.au
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Hotels
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Directors Studio Hotel
259 Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 3572
Rating: ***
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Earl Of Aberdeen Hotel
Pulteney St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 6433
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Grosvenor Hotel
125 North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8407 8888
Rating: ***
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Hilton International Adelaide
233 Victoria Square
P.O. Box 1871
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8217 2000
Rating: *****
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Hyatt Regency Adelaide
North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 1234
Rating: *****
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Novotel Adelaide
65 Hindley St
P.O. Box 8144
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 5552
Rating: ****
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Richmond Hotel
128 Rundle Mall
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 4044
Rating: ***
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Stamford Plaza Adelaide
150 North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8461 1111
Rating: *****
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Strathmore Hotel
129 North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 6911
Rating: ***
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Apartments
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City Apartments
70 Glen Osmond Rd
Parkside 5063
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8274 1222, 1800 888 501
Facsimile: (08) 8272 7371
Rating: ****
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Old Lion Apartments
274 South Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8334 7799, 1800 882 774
Facsimile: (08) 8334 7788
Rating: ****
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Saville Park Suites Adelaide
255 Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 8333
Rating: ****
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Tynte Street Apartments
82 Tynte Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 0582
Facsimile: (08) 8334 7788
Rating: ****
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Adelaide Meridien Apartments
21-37 Melbourne St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8267 3033, 1800 888 228
Facsimile: (08) 8239 0275
Rating: ****
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Adelaide Parklands City Townhouse
5/376 South Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 1832
Rating: ****
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Adelaide Terrace Apartments
80 Sturt St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8294 5004
Rating: ****
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Apartments on the Park
274 South Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 0599, 1800 882 774
Facsimile: (08) 8223 0588
Rating: ****
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Cottages & Cabins
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The Old Terrace Town House
108 South Terrace
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8364 5437
Facsimile: (08) 8364 6961
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Treacles Row Cottages
11-19 Gray St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8299 9092
Facsimile: (08) 8373 2114
Email: jandersen@treacles.com.au
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Restaurants
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A Pavilion On The Park
South Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 1991
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Adelaide Barron Townhouse Motor Inn
Cnr Morphett & Hindley Sts
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8211 8255
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Adelaide Hilton International
Victoria Sq.
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8217 2000
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Adelaide South Park
South Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: 1800 67 8180
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Al Fresco East End Gelateria & Pasticceria
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 4589
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Alphutte Restaurant
Pulteney St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 4717
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Amadora Restaurant
Leigh St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 7611
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Amalfi Pizzeria Ristorante
Frome St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 1948
|
| |
| |
| |
Amici's
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 3651
|
| |
| |
| |
Ananyeta's Gypsy Taverne
Sturt St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8410 4759
|
| |
| |
| |
Antonio's Restaurant
Waymouth St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 7098
|
| |
| |
| |
Arabian Night
Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 6185
|
| |
| |
| |
Astor Restaurant & Bar
Pulteney St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 2442
|
| |
| |
| |
Ayers House Restaurant's & Catering
North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8224 0666
|
| |
| |
| |
Bangkok Restaurant
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 5406
|
| |
| |
| |
Barbecue Inn Restaurant The Original
Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 3033
|
| |
| |
| |
Beijing Chinese Restaurant
Angas St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 1388
|
| |
| |
| |
Berties Southern Cross
52 - 54 Southern Cross Arcade King William
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 9836
|
| |
| |
| |
Bhan Lao Thai Restaurant
Flinders St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 1899
|
| |
| |
| |
Bin 273 Restaurant
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8359 2222
|
| |
| |
| |
Blake's Restaurant
North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8238 2381
|
| |
| |
| |
Botticelli Restaurant
Flinders St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 2036
|
| |
| |
| |
Brasserie Irodori
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 6799
|
| |
| |
| |
Bull & Bear Ale House
King William St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 5795
|
| |
| |
| |
Bunga Raya Malaysian Restaurant
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 7790
|
| |
| |
| |
Casa Nostra Restaurant
Waymouth St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8410 1109
|
| |
| |
| |
Casino Grill Restaurant
North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8218 4273
|
| |
| |
| |
Ceylon Hut
Bank St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 2034
|
| |
| |
| |
Checkmates Restaurant
289 Pirie St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 7714
|
| |
| |
| |
Chianti Restaurant
Waymouth St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 4000
|
| |
| |
| |
Chinatown Restaurant
Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 2501
|
| |
| |
| |
Choy Sin Restaurant
James Place
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 4388
|
| |
| |
| |
Ciao Restaurant
Pirie St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 4804
|
| |
| |
| |
Citrus & The Green Olive Restaurant
Hutt St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8224 0100
|
| |
| |
| |
Cobbs Restaurant
Light Sq.
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 2066
|
| |
| |
| |
Comix Comedy Cellar Restaurant
Grenfell St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 5688
|
| |
| |
| |
Cucina Italiana City Cross
City Cross Arc.
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 6129
|
| |
| |
| |
Dragon Inn
Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 6401
|
| |
| |
| |
Dynasty Restaurant
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8211 7036
|
| |
| |
| |
Earl Of Aberdeen Hotel
Pulteney St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 6433
|
| |
| |
| |
Eros Ouzeri Kafe
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 4022
|
| |
| |
| |
Fasta Pasta
Pirie St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8224 0320
|
| |
| |
| |
Flamingo Restaurant
Cnr Morphett & Hindley Sts
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8211 8255
|
| |
| |
| |
Florentine's Restaurant
Pirie St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 2646
|
| |
| |
| |
Fontana Di Trevi Restaurant
Pirie St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 7923
|
| |
| |
| |
Frequent Restaurant
Grote St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8212 3188
|
| |
| |
| |
Gaucho's Argentinian Restaurant
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 2299
|
| |
| |
| |
George's Seafood Restaurant
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 2950
|
| |
| |
| |
German Restaurant & Coffee Shop
Flinders St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 3376
|
| |
| |
| |
Giovanni's Don Restaurant & Pizza House
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 2125
|
| |
| |
| |
Glutton's Corner Restaurant
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 1836
|
| |
| |
| |
Gouger Palace
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8410 5180
|
| |
| |
| |
Govindas Hare Krishna Food For Life Restaurant
Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 5258
|
| |
| |
| |
Great River Korean BBQ Restaurant
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8221 6866
|
| |
| |
| |
Griffins Head Tavern
Hindmarsh Sq.
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 7954
|
| |
| |
| |
Henry Ayers Restaurant
North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8224 0666
|
| |
| |
| |
Henry's Brasserie & Wine Bar
North Tce
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8224 0666
|
| |
| |
| |
Hilton International Adelaide
Adelaide Victoria Sq.
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8217 2000
|
| |
| |
| |
Hindley Olympia Restaurant
Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 9093
|
| |
| |
| |
Hindley Pasta Palace
Hindley St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 9500
|
| |
| |
| |
Hong Fat BBQ Restaurant
Grote St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8410 0908
|
| |
| |
| |
Hong Kong Kitchen
Renaissance Arc.
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 2357
|
| |
| |
| |
The Chesser Cellars
Chesser St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 3791
|
| |
| |
| |
The Grange Restaurant
Victoria Sq.
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8217 2000
|
| |
| |
Cafés
|
| |
| |
Adona's Cafe
Gilles St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 3005
|
| |
| |
| |
Boltz Cafe And Bar
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 5234
|
| |
| |
| |
Buongiorno Cafe
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 2221
|
| |
| |
| |
Cactus Mexican Cafe
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8224 0631
|
| |
| |
| |
Cafe Buongiorno
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 2221
|
| |
| |
| |
Clearlight Cafe
Rundle St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 5994
|
| |
| |
| |
Fabio's Licensed Cafe
Pirie St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 2919
|
| |
| |
| |
Fishcaf
Flinders St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8232 3660
|
| |
| |
| |
Fleet Street Cafe
Pulteney St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8223 1907
|
| |
| |
| |
Gouger Fish Cafe
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8231 2320
|
| |
| |
| |
The Great Aussie Fish Cafe
Gouger St
Adelaide
SA
5000
Telephone: (08) 8410 0909
|
| |