48 hours in Melbourne | Daily Mail Online


Melbourne has a laidback vibe, fantastic food and a thriving music and cultural scene.  

Combine that with beaches and mountains within striking distance, it’s not difficult to see why it is such a magnet for tourists. 

Here is how to see the city in just 48 hours.

Coolest spot: The Melbourne skyline looks special at dusk

DAY ONE 

MORNING

Get the lie of the land from Eureka Tower, where the Skydeck on the 88th floor (the lift journey takes just 38 seconds) offers wraparound views over Port Phillip Bay and across the Yarra River to the Central Business District (CBD). It’s a highlight here in a city not otherwise brimming with mainstream attractions. Book tickets for A$23/£11.50 at eurekaskydeck.com.au.

Afterwards, explore one of Melbourne’s worst-kept secrets: its labyrinthine lanes that link the CBD’s main streets. Start in Degraves Street (filled with cafes and lunch spots) and continue via Centre Place to find fashion boutiques and hidden-away bars.

Hidden treasures: Centre Place has fashion boutiques and tucked-away bars

Hidden treasures: Centre Place has fashion boutiques and tucked-away bars

You could even join a walking tour with Hidden Secrets (hiddensecretstours.com) to get the most from these vibrant but easy- to-overlook backstreets (A$138/£70pp, including lunch).

AFTERNOON

Melbourne is a city fuelled on good coffee, where it’s all about single-origin beans, micro-roasting and aero-pressing. Get your fix at Pelligrini’s Espresso Bar, a local institution and home of the city’s first Italian coffee machine.

If sport is your thing, you won’t be disappointed by the sprawling precinct on the north side of the Yarra, which is home to the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Park and AAMI Park, where you can catch cricket, tennis, Aussie Rules or rugby, depending on the season.

Alternatively, visit the recently revamped National Sports Museum to see memorabilia including items from the 1956 Melbourne and 2000 Sydney Olympics (A$30/£15pp, australiansportsmuseum.org.au).

EVENING

The city is home to an incredibly diverse dining scene, with everything from Indonesian to French, so even the fussiest of eaters will find something.

Among the most talked-about spots is Sunda (sunda.com.au), where the Asian-inspired menu also features Aussie ingredients such as rock oysters, scarlet prawns or bush tomatoes. Ask for the signature dish of Vegemite curry served with buttermilk roti. Mains cost about A$40/£20 each.

For after-dinner drinks, head to Bar Margaux (barmargaux.com.au), which is tucked away in a basement. The CBD is awash with scores of such unconventional places. Order a cocktail (try the Margaux-rita, A$23/£11.50), sit back and toast a brilliant first day.

DAY TWO

MORNING

Take a break from the streets and head for the peaceful Royal Botanic Gardens (free admission). Its 94 green acres are a pleasure to explore, but especially so in the company of an Aboriginal guide (A$35/£17.50pp). The walk includes a traditional smoke ceremony to welcome participants to these ancestral lands.

Punting on the Ornamental Lake at the Royal Botanic Gardens

Punting on the Ornamental Lake at the Royal Botanic Gardens

Follow the historic theme back over the river to the Old Treasury Building (oldtreasurybuilding.org.au, free admission) – the exhibits tell of Melbourne’s founding in 1835 and the subsequent Gold Rush, when this city became the wealthiest in the world. Don’t miss the replica of The Welcome Stranger gold nugget in the vaults: unearthed in 1869 and weighing 150 lb, the original is the largest ever found.

From here, it’s only a short walk down Flinders Lane for lunch at the sleek Mrs Singh (mrssingh.com.au), which opened earlier this year. Get the widest taste of its authentic North Indian cuisine by ordering the very reasonably priced thali of different curries (A$25/£12.50) to mop up with outrageously tasty kulcha flatbreads.

AFTERNOON

Melbourne has a high concentration of commercial art galleries so draws plenty of art-lovers. Follow Hosier Lane, admiring its colourful and ever-changing street art as you go, to Federation Square. Here you’ll find the National Gallery of Victoria (ngv.vic.gov.au), founded in 1861. Australia’s oldest and most popular art museum is huge, so you’ll need to spend a good hour or two here if you want to appreciate the nation’s largest collection of Australian art.

Its other location across the bridge has edgier exhibitions: the current showstopper celebrating graffiti artists Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat runs until mid-April.

Alternatively, do some sightseeing by boat along the Yarra. You could choose to captain your own electric GoBoat via the South Bank and sports precinct. Expect to pay A$109/£55 for an hour (goboat.com.au). Alternatively, hire a rowing boat in leafy Yarra Bend Park (A$40/£20), where fruit bats roosting in riverside trees or even the occasional platypus will entertain you.

EVENING

MIX things up by checking out some of the city’s inner suburbs. Immediately north of the CBD lie Carlton (Melbourne’s Little Italy), hipster Fitzroy and bohemian Collingwood. Follow in the footsteps of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex with fine dining at Charcoal Lane in Fitzroy, famous for its trainee programme for Aboriginal and disadvantaged young people. Expect innovative dishes such as pepperberry spiced kangaroo fillet with paperbark and smoked tomato.

Browse Fitzroy’s boutique shops, then hit Carlton for drinks at Lord Lygon, a wine bar big on organic varieties, or cocktails at the rooftop Johnny’s Green Room (johnnys greenroom.com). Its comfy banquettes are perfectly placed for admiring the city skyline, so sit back and savour a magical moment in Australia’s coolest city.

TRAVEL FACTS 

James Litston was a guest of Visit Melbourne (visitmelbourne.com). Qantas (qantas.com) flies twice daily from Heathrow to Melbourne. Audley Travel (audleytravel.com) offers flights, three nights in Melbourne and a five-night Great Ocean Road self-drive from £2,330pp.

 



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