Sunday 27 January 2013

Hobart, Tasmania: a colonial Thule in south Pacific

This winter is going wild and harsh in Europe, too windy, too cold, too much rainy. So instead of a northern arctic post, I've chosen to go South, where summer is at its best, and search a warmer place on the Pacific Ocean, but one which is connected to the Antarctic.




So Ultima Thule sails now to the antipodes, to the southernmost island of Australia: the island of  Tasmania, with its lively capital  Hobart, which was a few years ago a underdeveloped and rather unknown town; the wealth in recent years provided for renovation, less isolation, increasing culture offer and demand, and presently Hobart is a major deep-water port for Southern Ocean shipping and a home port for Antarctic operations, a travel hub to Antarctica.

Hobart, the capital and largest city of Tasmania, was founded in 1804 as a British colony. It's Australia's second oldest city.

Population ~ 220 000
Coordinates: 42°52′ S, 147°19′ E


The city is located on the estuary of the Derwent River. The skyline is dominated by Mount Wellington, at 1 271 m.


The historic area is mainly down by the bay, where the wharfs and docks are located. The main streets are Elizabeth street and Mall, Collins street, Macquarie Street (Town Hall and Cathedral) and Campbell Street with the Theatre Royal.



Elizabeth street and Mall are the heart of commercial Hobart


St David's Cathedral, in Macquarie Street:

The Theatre Royal :

Hobart has an intense cultural life: museums, a theater and concert season, and a resident orchestra, the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra.

The 46 tramway, the only remaining authentic carriage of the Hobart tramway system , a pioneer transport in Australia, is now in display at the Transport Museum:

Hobart has two main attractions:

1 - The waterfront around Sullivan´s bay, on both North and South sides.

2 - The architecture, including many art-deco buildings from the 20th cent., several Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian buildings, many of them hotels nowadays. They are to be found in Collins and Elizabeth Streets.

The waterfront by Sullivan´s bay

On the South side, the famous Salamanca Place where Salamanca Market takes place, attracting a crowd from the country and from outside:



Sandstone warehouses from the 1840's were recently renovated.


At night this is the liveliest area in town, with bars, restaurants and cafés.


Sullivan's Cove on the River Derwent was the site of the initial European settlement.

Hunter Street, on the north side, has some old warehouses aligned with cafés and outdoor terraces, facing Victoria Docks; that's the oldest part of Hobart, where the first colonial settlement was founded.



Hunter Street


Battery Point

This is an elegant and fashion neighbourhood, with nice wooden houses painted in lively colours. The ambiance is retro.



Café and terrace in Battery point


The architecture in Hobart

Brunswick Hotel, 1827, Liverpool St.

Old P.O. building, 1913

Colonial Mutual Life Building

Fire Brigade building

The Shamrock hotel

Montgomery's Hobart Hotel, Macquarie steet

The waterfront by night


The inland beauty of Tasmania


Bruny Island is a small island on the southeast of Tasmania, a truly exquisite paradise!

Bruny Island is actually two land masses - North Bruny and South Bruny - that are joined by a long, narrow sandy isthmus.

To know more:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Hobart

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Thanks to so many visitors from Hobart to Ultima Thule!