Hobart

 


With daring art, a dynamic food scene and a wealth of natural attractions, Hobart is a small city with big ideas.


Climb a mountain and view confronting modern art in the same day. Eat fish and chips from a floating fish punt in the docks, or dine in the finest and freshest of restaurants. Add thriving markets, an unsurpassed natural setting and a tangible sense of history, and Tasmania's capital city pretty much has it all. 


Hobart has direct flights from the cities of Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. From Hobart Airport it's a 20 minute drive into the city.


 DON'T MISS

•Sample extraordinary Tasmanian produce at great restaurants

•Shop at weekend markets in Salamanca and the city centre

•Get an art fix at extraordinary MONA 

 Join the locals along the popular dining strips in historic Salamanca or North Hobart. Or choose from a selection of quality city and waterfront restaurants. Positioned inside an old newspaper building, the chic Franklin was selected in Australia's Top 10 Restaurants awards for 2016. Along the city's docks, try South American-inspired Frank, or fine dining over the water at Aloft.


Board a ferry at Hobart's Brooke Street Pier and sail upstream to the daring Museum of Old and New Art, or MONA. Australia's largest privately owned museum is cut into sandstone cliffs in the northern suburbs, with an art collection as eclectic as it is provocative. The food might almost qualify as art at MONA's onsite restaurant, Source. Directly beneath the restaurant is the cellar door for MONA's Moorilla winery, with wines produced from the vineyards that adjoin the gallery. Be sure to try MONA's Moo Brew beer range while here also.

With daring art, a dynamic food scene and a wealth of natural attractions, Hobart is a small city with big ideas.
Climb a mountain and view confronting modern art in the same day. Eat fish and chips from a floating fish punt in the docks, or dine in the finest and freshest of restaurants. Add thriving markets, an unsurpassed natural setting and a tangible sense of history, and Tasmania's capital city pretty much has it all. 
Hobart has direct flights from the cities of Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. From Hobart Airport it's a 20 minute drive into the city.
 DON'T MISS
•Sample extraordinary Tasmanian produce at great restaurants
•Shop at weekend markets in Salamanca and the city centre
•Get an art fix at extraordinary MONA 

Take a 30-minute drive from the city centre to reach the summit of Mount Wellington, almost 1300 metres (4265 feet) above the city. The view of Hobart and its surrounds is exceptional. Grab a coffee halfway up the mountain at the Bentwood Coffee caravan, and make a stop at Australia's oldest brewery, Cascade, on the way back down.


Hobart's main waterfront area, Constitution Dock, is lined with fish punts selling seafood, and the best way to arrive for some food is by kayak. Roaring 40s Kayaking runs a half-day Hobart City trip that will have you paddling along the edge of the city's most historic suburb, Battery Point, and into the docks for a floating fish-and-chip experience.


Tasmania's most famous convict penitentiary, Port Arthur, is just 90 minutes drive from Hobart, but you can find traces of the state's convict past without even leaving the city. In South Hobart, near the Cascade Brewery, is the World Heritage-listed Cascades Female Factory, where thousands of women were imprisoned. In the city centre take a tour of the Tench prisoner barracks.

Get a taste of Tasmania's burgeoning whisky industry at the cosy Lark Distillery, where distillery tours are available, and the classy Nant Whisky Bar and Kitchen. The award-winning Sullivans Cove Whisky is in Cambridge, near Hobart Airport. For a craft beer at the source, pull up a stool at the central Shambles Brewery or the Hobart Brewing Company.


Hobart truly shines along its beautiful working waterfront. From the old sandstone warehouses of Salamanca Place a stroll along the docks will take you past the floating Brooke Street Pier and a replica of Australian explorer Douglas Mawson's huts in Antarctica. Every year, in the week after Christmas, the docks fill with yachts from the classic Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race.


The outdoor Salamanca Market, held each Saturday, is beloved by visitors and locals. More than 300 stalls selling arts, crafts, homewares and produce fill Salamanca Place. On Sunday morning, central Bathurst Street closes for the tasty Farm Gate Market, a showcase of Tasmanian produce and artisan producers.



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