Canberra, Australia

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Canberra is Australia's purpose-built capital — a city of national institutions, embassy crescents around Yarralumla, and a lake at its centre, designed from a blank sheet by an American architect who never saw it finished.

Parliamentary heritage

Free tours of Parliament House, Old Parliament House and the Aboriginal Tent Embassy lawn — the architectural and political spine of the federation.

National museums quarter

Free entry to the National Gallery, National Museum, National Library, National Portrait Gallery and Questacon — five world-class institutions within walking distance of one another on the lakeshore.

Embassy walk

Yarralumla, Forrest and Deakin host more than eighty missions in their own national architectural styles — a unique two-hour walk through diplomatic Canberra.

Australian War Memorial

Closes the Anzac Parade axis with a daily Last Post ceremony at 4:55 PM. Free entry; a half-day minimum.

Cool-climate wines

Murrumbateman and Hall cellar doors — Riesling, Shiraz-Viognier, biodynamic Pinot Noir at 500–850 metres altitude, 30–45 minutes from the city.

Floriade & seasonality

Spring flower festival in Commonwealth Park, autumn colour through the Parliamentary Triangle, frost on Lake Burley Griffin in winter — a city that actually has four seasons.

History

After Federation in 1901, the new Commonwealth needed a capital that was neither Sydney nor Melbourne — the Constitution required it to be in New South Wales but at least a hundred miles from Sydney. The site between the Brindabellas and the Yass plains was selected in 1908 from more than forty contenders, the foundation stone was laid in 1913, and an international design competition won by the Chicago architect Walter Burley Griffin and his partner Marion Mahony Griffin gave the city its lake-and-axes geometry. Federal government formally relocated from Melbourne in 1927 to the Provisional (now Old) Parliament House. Lake Burley Griffin was filled in 1964, the National Gallery and most of the museum infrastructure went up between the late 1970s and early 2000s, and the new Parliament House on Capital Hill opened in 1988 for the bicentennial. The land, before all of this, belonged and continues to belong to the Ngunnawal and Ngambri peoples — a fact that is now acknowledged on every public building's welcome plaque and that the Aboriginal Tent Embassy on the lawn opposite Old Parliament House has been making politically visible since 1972.

Culture

Lonsdale Street (Braddon) and Kingston Foreshore are the dining strips; Asian, Middle Eastern and modern-Australian cooking is strong. The Old Bus Depot Markets (Kingston) run on Sundays. The Canberra District wine region around Murrumbateman is 30–45 minutes from the city — Clonakilla, Helm and Lark Hill are the regional benchmarks. Coffee culture is unusually serious for the city's size, concentrated around Lonsdale Street and Manuka. Festivals: Floriade (Commonwealth Park, mid-September to mid-October — Australia's largest spring flower festival), National Multicultural Festival (Civic, February), Enlighten Festival (March, projection and night-time program), Anzac Day Dawn Service (Australian War Memorial, 25 April), Canberra and Region Heritage Festival (April–May). Museums: National Gallery of Australia, National Museum of Australia, Australian War Memorial, National Portrait Gallery, National Library of Australia, Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House, Questacon.

Practical Info

Safety: Canberra is consistently ranked among the safest cities in Australia. Standard urban precautions are sufficient — petty crime is low and violent crime is rare. Wildlife caution applies on bush walks (snakes in summer, particularly on Mount Ainslie and Black Mountain — keep to the trails) and on roads after dusk in the outer suburbs (kangaroos). Emergency: 000 (police, ambulance, fire). Language: English is the working language. Significant multicultural communities — particularly in the public service and the diplomatic community — mean Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean, Vietnamese, Arabic, Greek and Italian are widely spoken in their respective neighbourhoods. Currency: AUD (Australian dollar). Cards are accepted everywhere including contactless on the light rail and most buses; cash use is in steep decline.
Travel Overview

Canberra exists because Sydney and Melbourne could not agree which of them deserved to be the federal capital, so the new Commonwealth of Australia chose neutral ground roughly equidistant between them and held an international design competition. The Chicago architect Walter Burley Griffin and his partner Marion Mahony Griffin won it in 1912 with a plan organised around a central artificial lake and three radiating land axes — the geometry that still governs how the city reads today. Federal government formally moved from Melbourne in 1927, Lake Burley Griffin was filled in 1964, the new Parliament House on Capital Hill opened in 1988, and the city has slowly accumulated the national institutions that define a visit: the Australian War Memorial closing the land axis at Mount Ainslie's foot, the National Gallery and National Library on the lake's southern shore, the National Museum on Acton Peninsula, and the embassy quarter spreading southwest from Capital Hill across Yarralumla, Forrest and Deakin in suburbs of single-storey ambassadorial residences set behind hedges. Canberra is small (population around 470,000), green (a deliberate garden-city plan with native bush corridors threading between suburbs), and famously seasonal in a way most Australian cities are not — proper cold-air winters with frost on the lake's edges, dry hot summers, autumn colour in the Eurasian tree plantings around the Parliamentary Triangle, and a spring marked by Floriade, the month-long flower festival in Commonwealth Park. The light rail line R1 from Gungahlin through the city centre opened in 2019 and is being extended south to Woden; the rest of the city runs on the Transport Canberra bus network with the MyWay+ tap card. Canberra is a 25-minute drive from its airport (CBR), a three-hour drive or coach from Sydney, and the gateway to the cool-climate Canberra District wine region in the rolling country between Murrumbateman and Hall — and to the Snowy Mountains and Kosciuszko National Park, which begin two hours south.

Discover Canberra

The Parliamentary Triangle is the ceremonial heart of the Griffin plan — the strip of land between Capital Hill, the Russell defence precinct and the City Hill commercial district, with Lake Burley Griffin running through the middle. Parliament House (1988), set into Capital Hill rather than perched on top of it, was designed by Romaldo Giurgola so that the public could literally walk over the legislature on the grass-covered roof. The marble forecourt mosaic by the Western Desert artist Michael Nelson Jagamara is one of the largest pieces of Indigenous public art in Australia. Inside, free guided tours run daily — the 25-minute Heart of the House and the 45-minute Best of Parliament cover the Members' Hall, the Senate (red, Westminster-derived) and the House of Representatives (eucalyptus green) — and on sitting days you can sit in the public galleries and watch question time. Old Parliament House (1927), now the Museum of Australian Democracy (MoADOPH), preserves the building Australia governed itself from for sixty years; the chambers, prime ministerial offices and press gallery are kept as they were left in 1988, and the museum frames the building's history without idealising it. The Aboriginal Tent Embassy on the lawn opposite Old Parliament House, established in 1972, is one of the longest-running protest sites in the world and remains a working political space.

Diplomatic missions in Canberra

13 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.