City Botanic Gardens (Brisbane City Botanic Garden) is located in the Queensland capital of Brisbane urban area, Brisbane River (Brisbane River), north of the garden corner (Garden Point), covers an area of about 20 hectares.
City Botanic Gardens, the first city park in Brisbane, was officially opened to the public in 1855. The botanical garden is located on the winding Brisbane River, adjacent to (QUT Gardens Point Campus), Queensland University of Technology's garden corner campus, and (Parliament House), the Capitol Building, to (Brisbane South Bank Parkland), Brisbane's South Bank Park, through the Goodwill Bridge (Goodwill Bridge).
City Botanic Gardens has Australia's first artificially planted tree: Hawaiian nut tree, first planted blue couplet tree, and bamboo forest (Bamboo Grove), Waterhill Fountain (Walter Hill Fountain), vertical figs boulevard (Weeping Fig Avenue), Mangrove wooden road (Mangrove Boardwalk) and other attractions, together with carefully maintained flowers and plants, every spring and summer two seasons, botanical garden colorful, birds will also gather here, a vibrant scene.
City Botanic Gardens is a scenic, green tree-lined, path-lined, covered with large lawns, bamboo gardens, large-leaved South American fir, macadamia, and banyan trees that can be seen blooming for most of the year. Brisbane locals like to come here for leisure and often see nearby students and office workers walking. Take a stroll through the botanical garden, enjoy a leisurely time, rent a bike and walk through the garden, or have a picnic on the grass with food. The botanical garden east side has beautiful mangrove plank road along the river, along the way street lamp will shine till late at night.
Traffic:
Take bus No. 40 on Ring Line, get off at Alice Street, take bus No. 102105108112113114118, get off at Alice Street, and arrive at the bus at No. 102105108112113114118. From Queensland University of Technology Ferry Station or Eagle Street Ferry Station, walk about 100 meters along the river walkway, City Reach Broadwalk.
Tickets:
Free
Open time: