The
Gold Coast
is a coastal region approximately 70 km south of Brisbane,
Australia that, over the past 50 years, has coalesced from a
collection of scattered villages into a city of
approximately 500,000 people—making it Australia's seventh
largest city—and Australia's largest tourist resort. The
South Coast Town Council changed its name to the Gold Coast
Town Council in 1958, and Queensland officially proclaimed
it the city of Gold Coast on May 16, 1959. The mayor of the
Gold Coast is the former Olympic middle distance athlete Ron
Clarke.
BRISBANE
By far the largest city in Queensland,
BRISBANE is
not quite what you'd expect from a state capital with almost
one-and-a-half million residents. Although there is urban
sprawl, and high-rise buildings, slow-moving traffic,
crowded streets and the other trappings of a business and
trade centre, there's little of the pushiness that usually
accompanies them. To urbanites used to a more aggressive
approach, the atmosphere is slow, even backward (a
reputation the city would be pleased to lose), but to others
the languid pace is a welcome change and reflects relaxed
rather than regressive attitudes.
In 1823, responding to political pressure to shift the
"worst type of felons" away from Sydney and the southeast -
the further the better - the New South Wales government sent
the Surveyor General John Oxley north to find a suitable
site for a new prison colony. Sailing into Moreton Bay , he
encountered three shipwrecked convicts who had been living
with Aborigines for several months; they introduced Oxley to
a previously unknown river. He explored it briefly, named it
"Brisbane" after the governor, and the next year established
a convict settlement at Redcliffe on the coast. This was
immediately abandoned in favour of better anchorage further
upstream, and by the end of 1824 today's city centre had
become the site of
Brisbane Town.
Ashmore
Broadbeach
Gold Coast
Surfers Paradise
Twenty years on, a land shortage down south persuaded the
government to move out the convicts and free up the Moreton
Bay area to settlers. Immigrants on government-assisted
passages poured in and Brisbane began to shape up as a busy
port - an unattractive, awkward settlement of rutted streets
and wooden shacks. By far the largest regional settlement of
the times, Brisbane was the obvious choice as capital of the
new state of Queensland on its formation in 1859, though the
city's first substantial buildings were constructed only in
the late 1860s, after fire had destroyed the original centre
and state bankruptcy was averted by Queensland's first gold
strikes at Gympie. Even so, development was slow and uneven:
new townships were founded around the centre at Fortitude
Valley, Kangaroo Point and Breakfast Creek, gradually
merging into a city.
After World War II, when General Douglas MacArthur used
Brisbane as his headquarters to co-ordinate attacks on
Japanese forces based throughout the Pacific, Brisbane
stagnated, earning a reputation as a dull, underdeveloped
backwater - not least thanks to the Bjelke-Petersen regime.
As if to remove all trace of his rule, Brisbane underwent a
thorough facelift before hosting the 1988 World Expo , when
eighteen million visitors came to experience "Leisure in the
Age of Technology". Not least for locals, who treated it as
something of a coming-out party, the Expo provided a real
boost after years of tedium and through the 1990s, under the
public-spirited mayor Jim Soorely , the city became an
increasingly busy and pleasant place to spend some time.
Seen from the river or the top of Mount Coot-tha, Brisbane
is attractive enough, with the typical features of any
Australian city of a comparable age and size: a historic
precinct, museums and botanic gardens. There's a confused
blur of old and new, crammed in side by side rather than
split into distinct districts, while new suburbs are
blithely added to the shapeless edges as the need arises.
The residents, too, have a spontaneous manner, partly
because many are new to the area. In the early 1990s,
economic malaise in Australia's southern states resulted in
a steady northward migration of people seeking work - or at
least finding Queensland a better place to be unemployed -
and Brisbane was the obvious first stop. It's still a fairly
easy place to find casual, short-term employment, and
there's a healthy, unpredictable social scene , tempting
many travellers to spend longer here than they had planned.
As for exploring further afield, you'll find empty beaches
and surf on North Stradbroke Island and Moreton Island -
both easy to reach from the city - as well as subtropical
woods in Brisbane Forest Park , a twenty-minute drive from
the centre.
CAIRNS was pegged out over the site of a sea-slug
fishing camp when gold was found to the north in 1876,
though it was the Atherton Tablelands' tin and timber
resources that established the town and kept it ahead of its
nearby rival, Port Douglas. The harbour is the focus of the
north's fish and prawn concerns, and tourism began modestly
when marlin fishing became popular after World War II. But
with the "discovery" of the reef in the 1970s and the appeal
of the local climate, tourism snowballed, and high-profile
development has now replaced what everyone originally came
to Cairns to enjoy: a beautiful, unspoiled, lazy tropical
atmosphere .
For many visitors primed by hype, the city falls far short
of expectations. However, if you can accept the tourist
industry's shocking glibness and the fact that you're
unlikely to escape the crowds, you'll find a great deal on
offer and easy access to the surrounding area - the Atherton
Tablelands, Cape York and, naturally, the Great Barrier Reef
and islands. Used as a base to explore these regions, Cairns
can be fun, as long as you accept its limitations
Australia
is massive, and very sparsely peopled:
in size it rivals the USA, yet its population is just over
eighteen million - little more than that of the Netherlands.
This is an ancient land, and often looks it: in places, it's
the most eroded, denuded and driest of continents, with much
of central and western Australia - the bulk of the country -
overwhelmingly arid and flat. In contrast, its cities - most
of which were founded as recently as the mid-nineteenth
century - express a youthful energy.
The most memorable scenery is in the Outback, the vast
desert in the interior of the country west of the Great
Dividing Range. Here, vivid blue skies, cinnamon-red earth,
deserted gorges and other striking geological features as
well as bizarre wildlife comprise a unique ecology - one
that has played host to the oldest surviving human culture
for at least fifty thousand years.
The harshness of the interior has forced modern Australia to
become a coastal country. Most of the population lives
within 20km of the ocean, occupying a suburban, southeastern
arc extending from southern Queensland to Adelaide. These
urban Australians celebrate the typical New World values of
material self-improvement through hard work and hard play,
with an easy-going vitality that visitors, especially
Europeans, often find refreshingly hedonistic. A sunny
climate also contributes to this exuberance, with an outdoor
life in which a thriving beach culture and the congenial
backyard "barbie" are central.
While visitors might eventually find this Home and Away
lifestyle rather prosaic, there are opportunities -
particularly in the Northern Territory - to gain some
experience of Australia's indigenous peoples and their
culture, through visiting ancient art sites, taking tours
and, less easily, making personal contact. Many Aboriginal
people - especially in central Australia - have managed to
maintain their traditional way of life (albeit with some
modern accoutrements), speaking their own languages and
living according to their law (the tjukurpa). Conversely,
most Aboriginal people you'll come across in country towns
and cities are victims of what is scathingly referred to as
"welfare colonialism" - a disempowering system in which,
supported by dole cheques and other subsidies, they often
fall prey to a destructive cycle of poverty, ill-health and
alcoholism. There's still a long way to go before black and
white people in Australia can exist on genuinely equal
terms.