Potts Point
Potts Point
Potts Point is one of the classier suburbs of inner Sydney, with a host of shops and restaurants for those special nights out. Potts Point is accessible to all things – the city, Harbour, Harbour Bridge, Botanical Gardens and many bars, nightclubs and cafes.
It’s a great central location to start and finish your night. While your there, check out the surrounding suburbs of Woolloomooloo Bay, Elizabeth Bay and Rushcutters Bay. (more…)
Kings Cross
Kings Cross
Kings Cross is one of the most densely populated are in Australia. This place rocks with adult entertainment, nightclubs, live music, and more than two hundred of the city’s finest restaurants, bars and cafes. Kings Cross is one of the few places that continue to sparkle and throb throughout the night.
Here, along the narrow strip that is Darlinghurst Rd and which becomes Macleay St at Fitzroy Gardens, souvenir shops, McDonald’s, pubs, ice cream stands and strip joints stand cheek by jowl in a part of Sydney that never sleeps. Kings Cross is also home to one of Sydneys oldest areas, Wooloomooloo. Here, opposite the Artspace Gallery, you will find Harry’s Cafe de Wheels, open for 18 hours a day, started in 1945. It is a must visit on the way home after a night out. (more…)
Darling Harbour
Darling Harbour
Darling Harbour is intended to be one of Sydney’s “buzzâ€? places. To Reach Darling Harbour you can take a train to Town Hall station, after leaving the station, turn right into Druit Street, walk down two blocks and turn right into Sussex Street. Then, walk a further block to Market Street, turn left and walk across the pedestrian bridge. Alternatively, you can catch the monorail service from near the corners of Pitt and Market Streets. (more…)
Circular Quay
Circular Quay
Circular Quay is a located between The Rocks and Opera Quays. It is situated at a small inlet called Sydney Cove, the founding site for Sydney and Australia. The area is always filled with vibrant tourists, commuters and buskers.
On the southern side of Circular Quay is a walkway that leads to The Sydney Opera House and Royal Botanical Gardens. On the northern side, a short walk along lovely landscaped walkways takes you to the Harbour Bridge and The Rocks.
There is a major railway station at the quay, which is part of the underground City Circle, which skirts around the CBD. Alongside the ferry terminals are a number of small outdoor cafes and the area is a magnet for buskers of every description.
Chinatown and Haymarket
Chinatown and Haymarket
Chinatown is just adjacent to Darling Harbour and Haymarket is home to Sydney’s Chinatown. The area is renowned for its pop culture pleasures, with Her Majesty’s Theatre on Quay Street and the ugly concrete bunker of the Sydney Entertainment Centre, the city’s mainstream concert venue, on the other side of Chinatown. Chinatown takes over the Haymarket area west of George Street between Liverpool Street and Hay Street, up to the edges of Darling Harbour. It’s centred on Dixon Street Mall, entered through Chinese gates, and buzzes day and night as people swarm into numerous restaurants, pubs, cafes, cinemas, food stalls, Asian grocery stores and funky fashion shops.
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