3 Hours
Daily Tour
Unlimited
English, French, German, Italian, Spanish
Walk through Canberra and see how power, culture, and everyday life fit together—on a calm, well-planned route that actually makes sense on foot. Canberra was designed before it was built, and this self-guided walking tour lets you experience that intention firsthand. Over a relaxed few hours, you’ll move from lively i... Read more
Welcome to Northbourne Avenue Canberra—Canberra’s ceremonial catwalk. Wide roads, straight lines, and serious planning energy, softened by trees, light rail, and a calm “we meant this” vibe.
Hello braddon canberra, where warehouses learned about coffee and never looked back. Lively, walkable, and buzzing—this is Canberra loosening its tie and ordering oat milk.
Lonsdale Street is Braddon’s social engine—cafés, colour, chatter, and just enough chaos to feel alive. Once industrial, now irresistible. Warning: strong brunch opinions form here.
Bunda street is where Civic gets chatty. Pedestrian-first, tree-lined, and perfect for lingering, people-watching, and let’s just sit here moments.
Slip into tocumwal lane—a bold little laneway packed with murals, attitude, and Canberra’s first proper flirtation with street-art cool. Blink and you’ll miss it. Linger and you’ll love it.
Welcome to Canberra City Centre, where Civic finally learned to stay awake after 5 pm. Cafés, art, wandering locals, and proof that planning and fun can coexist.
Civic Square is Canberra’s living room—art, libraries, theatres, and power sharing space politely. This is where the city gathers, debates, celebrates, and occasionally claps.
A literal city on a hill moment. City Hill is Civic’s pause button—green, open, and refreshingly calm, crowned with a centenary marker that quietly says, We planned this.
This is Canberra’s origin story—Ngunnawal land, bold geometry, and a capital imagined before it existed. Walk straight ahead through a city built by rulers, debates, and determination.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia is Canberra’s memory vault—films, voices, music, and nostalgia housed in a former anatomy building with serious Art Deco flair.
Black Mountain watches everything. Ancient Ngunnawal knowledge, Griffin’s planning anchor, and a skyline debate magnet—all rolled into one quietly powerful green presence.
Step into the Australian National Botanic Gardens—all native plants, zero jet-lag. Think rainforest gullies, desert drama and glowing Australian National Botanic Gardens reviews, energy.
Meet the Molonglo—the river beneath the river, or simply beneath the river. Once wild, now reshaped, it’s Canberra’s quiet backbone flowing beneath calm lake confidence.
Cross Mark Oliphant Bridge—science, serenity, and water views bundled into one thoughtful crossing. A perfect pause between city logic and lakeside calm.
West Lake is Canberra exhaling. Calm water, joggers, reflections, and life thoughts sorted quietly. Scenic multitasking at its finest.
Gardens with sculptures meet bushland vibes here—Canberra’s International Sculpture Park. Think unexpected art moments, like a calmer cousin of Point Leo Sculpture Park.
Old Canberra House predates the capital’s confidence. First Governor-General residence, later a school—proof Canberra has always been excellent at reinvention.
Lake Burley Griffin Canberra is the city’s centrepiece. Perfect for a Lake Burley Griffin walk, sunset staring, and realising the city finally nailed the plan.
The Captain Cook Memorial pairs a spinning globe with the dramatic jet nearby—history, reflection, and big splash energy. Also a favourite Captain Cook lookout moment.
Menzies strolls by the lake like he’s late to a meeting. A grounded tribute to Australia’s longest-serving PM—history walking beside you, literally.
Anzac Parade through the Anzac portal of memory is a slow, powerful walk of remembrance—each memorial adding weight, reflection, and quiet respect with every step.
The Australian War Memorial isn’t about glory—it’s about people. Names, stories, silence, and space to feel. The Australian War Memorial photos never quite capture the weight.
From Mount Ainslie, Canberra finally explains itself. Land axis, lake, memorials, and meaning—this view isn’t just pretty, it’s the city’s master plan saying hello.
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