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Featured Travel & Lifestyle Blog | Leave Your Daily Hell

Why You Must Visit Melbourne – featured post by blogger Robert Schrader – leaveyourdailyhell.com

Melbourne is a place constantly filled with energy and movement. The only way to keep up, is to be part of the lively scene. Robert Schrader shares a piece of Melbourne with tips and places to go.

Moving from streets to beaches, Robert captures scenes of Melbourne with his camera. Let Robert be your guide as he shows you the vibrance of this city through his photo essay.

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Find out more about the blogger, Robert below or check out his Blog, Facebook and Twitter!

Blog: Leave Your Daily Hell Facebook: LeaveYourDailyHell on Facebook

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“Why You Must Visit Melbourne”

By Leave Your Daily Hell (Robert Schrader, The United States of America)

Australia’s perennial “second” city, Melbourne usually plays second fiddle to larger Sydney, whose picturesque harbor, bridge and Opera House (its having hosted the 2000 Olympic Games notwithstanding) have made it the country’s de-facto representative on the world stage.

Melbourne might not be as massive, well-known or as in-your-face beautiful as Sydney, but the city is without a doubt Australia’s capital of cool. Colorful, hip and in spots downright futuristic, Melbourne should be at the top of every Australia traveler’s itinerary. Here’s a preview of what you can expect to find there.

 

Picture of Flinders Street Station it Melbourne at night
Historical Flinders Street station in Melbourne’s CBD

 

You’ll quickly learn upon visiting Australia that a city’s central business districts or “CBD” area is far from the “place to be,” particularly at night. Melbourne is perhaps more than any other Australian city an exception to this rule, if only for the juxtaposition of colonial architecture with some of the most modern skyscrapers on the planet.

 

Melbourne's Smith Street
Smith Street in the heart of trendy Fitzroy

 

If you don’t happen to be feeling the CBD, hop on any tram labeled “86 – Bundoora/RMIT” and ask the driver to notify you when you’ve arrived in Smith Street, the hip main artery of super-cool Fitzroy, the arguable coolest of Melbourne’s many cool neighborhoods. Although the avenue is dotted with awesome bars and restaurants — my personal favorite is Huxtaburger, a burger grill themed to “The Cosby Show” — you can opt to simply stroll along Smith Street and let the hipness wash over you.

 

Red street art at Brunswick Street in Melbourne
Brunswick Street, which runs parallel to Smith Street, is washed with psychedelic street art

 

Once you’ve had your fill of Smith Street, which defines the eastern border of Fitzroy, head west toward Brunswick Street, the moon to Smith Street’s sun. Although incredible street art is also present on Smith Street, I find Brunswick’s to be more colorful, nuanced and funky, as the café scene above illustrates.

 

Bathing boxes at Brighton Beach in Melbourne, Australia
Melbourne’s funkiness extends outside its immediate city center, as these “bathing boxes” in the coastal suburb of Brighton illustrate

 

Sydneysiders who diss Melbourne often use the fact that city doesn’t have a harbor to bolster their feelings of superiority, but they often neglect the fact the Melbourne does, in fact, have beaches. Is the capital of Victoria home to any coastline as pristine and beautiful as those you find in Sydney’s Bondi, Coogee or Manley neighborhoods? Absolutely not. But in true funky Melbourne fashion, the colorful bathing boxes in suburban Brighton more than make up for the less-than-surfworthy sea.

 

Skyline of Melbourne, Australia as seen from Brighton Beach
Of course, a day at Brighton Beach doesn’t require you to travel too far from central Melbourne

 

Brighton is located just 15 minutes from Flinders Street Station by train, which means that you can take in stunning skyline views as you soak up the sun, which admittedly shines only fleetingly during even the hottest part of the city’s summer. Brighton is also located in close proximity to St. Kilda, another interesting coastal suburb, whose historical Chapel Street becomes one of the city’s hottest spots as soon as night falls.

 

Photo of Federation Square in Melbourne at night
Federation Square, located just opposite Flinders Street station, is home to a performing arts venue, dining, bars, entertainment and the city’s official tourist information center

 

Heading back to Melbourne’s CBD for a second, do make sure and at least walk through Federation Square when you visit the city. In addition to the fact that the square offers incredible skyline views, particularly at night, you’ll find awesome dining, bars and even the helpful tourist information booth located in close proximity to it.

 

Photo of Croft Alley in Melbourne, Australia at night
A trip down the hard-to-find Croft Alley takes you to the aptly-named Croft Institution, a bar that was previously a mental institution

 

Looking for a unique place to spend a night out? Walk or take a cab to Melbourne’s Chinatown, then ask any local where you can find Croft Alley, which is hard to spot if you don’t know where to look. If the street art that papers most of the alley’s walls isn’t bizarre enough, what you find at its dead end should positively freak you out. The Croft Institute was, well, a mental institution in the 1950s and although it’s a trendy bar now, relics of the tests that went on there half a century ago will creep you out, particularly if you’re there early, when the bar is nearly empty.

 

Busy bar on Gertrude Street in Melbourne at night
If you’re feeling less adventurous, head back to Fitzroy’s Gertrude Street, where establishments that were coffee shops by day transform into lively bars

 

Of course, Melbourne is also home to its share of “normal” bars. Remember Gertrude Street in Fitzroy, lined with boutiques, hairstylists and coffee shops? Many of the places where you’d enjoy a “flat white” or “long black” during the day convert into busy bars and pubs by night, so if you want to throw back a few — but don’t want to risk being haunted by the ghosts of psychiatric torture victims — head on up to Gertrude Street, join a table with empty chairs and start a conversation with a hipster.

 

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