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Our travel guides are free to read and explore online. If you want to get your own copy, the full travel guide for this destination is available to you offline* to bring along anywhere or print for your trip.
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Glenelg
The guide was updated:Glenelg is Adelaide’s most popular beach destination, always buzzing with people browsing through shops, dining at sidewalk cafes, and enjoying the beach, of course. Be sure to also visit the port and check out the many events going on there all year round.
Useful Information
- Address: Glenelg, Adelaide
Digital Travel Guide Download
Our travel guides are free to read and explore online. If you want to get your own copy, the full travel guide for this destination is available to you offline* to bring along anywhere or print for your trip.
*this will be downloaded as a PDF.Price
€4,95
Explore the beauty and diversity of plants from across Australia and around the world at the Adelaide Botanic Garden. Spanning 50 hectares, this public garden is a great place to relax surrounded by nature right in the heart of the city. The Bicentennial Conservatory that towers over the gardens houses a tropical rainforest environment, and it is the largest glasshouse in Australia.
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South Australian Museum
The main focus of this museum is the astonishingly ancient history of the land of Australia, with the Origin Energy Fossil Gallery displaying some of the oldest fossils in the world. Here you will also find extensive exhibitions on Aboriginal history.
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Glenelg
Glenelg is Adelaide’s most popular beach destination, always buzzing with people browsing through shops, dining at sidewalk cafes, and enjoying the beach, of course. Be sure to also visit the port and check out the many events going on there all year round.
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Migration Museum
To get a real picture of the stories of the diverse ethnic groups that now make up the South Australian people, pay a visit to this museum full of fascinating personal stories of arrival in the new colony. Plus, the story of the Aboriginal people.
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Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute
The oldest indigenous-owned and managed arts centre in Australia, the Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute features exhibitions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders art from across Australia.
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National Wine Centre of Australia
The nearby Barossa Valley is Australia’s wine-producing heartland, and this centre offers interactive exhibitions explaining the whole winemaking process, along with wines to taste and buy. In addition, the surrounding wine yards are just beautiful to see and photograph.
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Adelaide Festival Centre
The Festival Centre was built in 1973, as the venue for the Adelaide Festival of Arts, which is the city’s major arts event since its inception in 1960. The large modernist theatre complex is still the heart of the festival, and its theatres are open all year, hosting different events and activities. Check out their schedule and stay tuned.
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Cleland Wildlife Park
Cleland Wildlife Park has been a popular tourist attraction since 1967, and it is a Conservation Park where you can interact with Australian wildlife. Here, you can cuddle with a koala bear or hand-feed kangaroos and wallabies while also seeing the famous waterfall Gully-Mount.
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Art Gallery of South Australia
In the heart of the austere and monumental Victorian grandeur of Adelaide's official buildings, you will find the Art Gallery of South Australia. It houses nearly 45,000 works of art spanning 2000 years. From paintings, prints and drawings, photographs and videos to sculpture, textiles, ceramics, jewellery and furniture. It's a vast collection, which covers Aboriginal art, colonial and modern Australian, European art, and much more.
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Adelaide Oval
One of the most picturesque cricket grounds in the world, the Adelaide Oval, is home to the West End Redbacks, South Australia’s cricket team. It also hosts Aussie Rules football, rugby matches, and concerts.
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Adelaide Zoo
With over 1,800 animals and 300 species, you will find yourself quite busy at the Adelaide Zoo, learning more about animals like African lions, giant pandas, sea lions, kangaroos, and American alligators, to name a few. It is also interesting to know that the zoo focuses on endangered and rare animals.
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Wine cellars
Some of the most famous wine regions in the world are lined across South Australia. From Shiraz in the Barossa and Riesling in the Clare Valley to the big reds of the Coonawarra—your wine holiday will be as rich and seamless as the wines themselves. You will find more than 200 cellar doors open for you within an hour's drive from Adelaide.
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South Australian Maritime Museum
Explore SA Maritime Museum’s great nautical collection, which already began in 1872. Here you will get a better picture of the life at sea for those immigrating to Australia in the early years, as there is also a replica of a ship with lots of artefacts and passenger stories to hear.
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Dolphin Swim & Watch
Temptation Sailing is a boat tour agency located in Glenelg that takes you to the sea with a sailing catamaran, where you will get the chance to swim with wild dolphins or simply watch these fascinating creatures in their natural habitat. As this is a once-in-a-lifetime experience, be sure to bring your camera along!
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Coopers Brewery Tour
Well established (not only) in the Australian beer market, Coopers is a family business with several different beers, stouts, or lagers in its assortment. Six generations back, Thomas Cooper brewed his first batch of ale in 1862 and until today, the very same methods are still used in the production. During the tour here, you will learn more about its 150 years of history, and you will get the chance to taste different Cooper brews.
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