Adelaide, Australia
Adelaide, South Australia was recently granted Australia ’s highest heritage honor with its inclusion on the National Heritage List. Named after Queen Adelaide, the consort of King William IV, this enchanting coastal city situated on the eastern side of Gulf St. Vincent was founded by the controversial Colonel William Light as a “planned capital” in 1836 for the only freely settled British province in Australia. A leader in world-first reforms, Adelaide was shaped by religious freedom, civil liberties and political progressivism.
Today, Adelaide is the seat of South Australia ’s government and the major commercial site of regional governmental and financial institutions. But before British settlement and “Light’s Vision,” as it was known, came along, Adelaide was mostly bushland, swamps and marshes. Its traditional owners and inhabitants were the now extinct Koruna aboriginal peoples whose already tiny population was decimated by an early 19th century smallpox epidemic. Adelaide was originally called “Tandanya” which translates as “place of the Red Kangaroo”.
Much of Adelaide ’s original vegetation has been cleared but preserved in such nearby sanctuaries as Belair National Park and Cleland Conservation Park . Adelaide is easily accessible by bicycle to native bushland hiking in the Mount Lofty Ranges . Adelaide has a Mediterranean climate with most rainfall in the winter months of June through August and little to no snowfall.
Light’s Vision — which was originally very unpopular with not only early settlers by South Australia’s first Governor — set out Adelaide in a grid, interspaced by large public squares and wide boulevards all entirely surrounded by parkland. The benefits of Light’s Vision immediately became apparent commercially and aesthetically. Adelaide had easily navigable, wide multi-lane roads from its very beginning, along with a beautiful green ring around the city center. Also from its original design, there are two sets of “ring roads” within Adelaide , the inner ring route bordering parklands and the outer route completely bypassing the inner city. Where mostly bushland had been before, now a number of creeks and rivers flow through the Adelaide region. As the free settling, early European colonists and other diverse cultures began to arrive in 1836, Adelaide blossomed into a vibrant, European-style Mecca that nearly two centuries later has become known throughout the world as an epicurean, artistic playground with eclectic cuisines, magnificent wines and an unparalleled arts and culture scene.
Today as a state capital, Adelaide is home to a great number of cultural institutions. But in the 1970s, after more puritanical restrictions on cultural activities all over Australia were finally being lifted, Adelaide began emerging in its own right as a capital of the arts. In these years the world-renowned Adelaide Festival of the Arts and the Fringe Festival were established. Along with “Tasting Australia,” a biennial food and wine celebration, Adelaide can also boast that is home to the Adelaide Christmas Pageant, the world’s largest Christmas parade, attracting crowds of over 400,000 and televised to millions more.
For more information on Australia, visit http://www.adelaidemicroblog.com and http://www.sydneymicroblog.com.
John Parks
http://www.articlesbase.com/culture-articles/adelaide-australia-688406.html
May 2nd, 2010 at 8:30 pm
Adelaide, Australia?
Hi,
We are swaying with moving to either New South Wales (outskirts not in Sydney as house prices too expensive) or Adelaide. Please could anyone tell me if the beaches are just as nice as they are in New South Wales and also is Adelaide a family orientated place to live.
I look forward to any information you have to offer.
Thankyou for your time.
May 3rd, 2010 at 1:32 am
adelaide is very family orientated, I have lived south of adelaide for 37 years i have been to every state in aus and always glad to get back to adelaide. the beaches are fantastic not as crowed as easten staes. hope this helps
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May 3rd, 2010 at 1:34 am
Adelaide is a very family orientated place. The beaches in Adelaide are nice, but your kids might complain of the lack of waves. You might also find that in a decade or so they will want to move interstate because thats where all the good jobs are, and so on…and the night life in Adelaide isnt that great. Public transport isnt the best, however if you stay in the Adelaide metropolitan area, it should be ok.
However back on a positive note, Adelaide is a cheap place to live, traffic on the roads is better than Sydney, and therefore getting around is nice and fast.
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May 3rd, 2010 at 1:36 am
Adelaide is much slower paced, with great beaches. They call it the City of the Churches, which suits it well. If you like the quiet life, Adelaide is the place to be, even though I prefer and Love Sydney.
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May 3rd, 2010 at 1:38 am
Adelaide is a beautiful city and the beaches are great.
If you’re after a comfortable pace of life and a family friendly city, Adelaide is the one for you and your family.
It’s nothing like your other choices of Virginia in the USA or Cheshire in Britain. I hope you won’t be diaappointed, Adelaide is much drier and less green than either of the other two areas.
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May 3rd, 2010 at 1:40 am
The beaches in Adelaide could be described as a lot better than the beaches in Sydney, less crowds, lots less pollution, easier access, more beaches and bigger beaches. There are a couple of drawbacks though, some of the Adelaide beaches have sea-grass beds just offshore, so a lot of sea-weed/grass can get washed up on to some beaches, and the city beaches are situated on a protected gulf, so the waves aren’t usually very big.
Live virtually anywhere in Adelaide and the roads/trains/trams and buses will get you to a beach in 20 minutes direct or maybe an hour after changing services in the city. In my experience of Sydney, the outskirts can be a long, long way from a beach. But if you are prepared to live on the South or Central coasts of NSW you can still be very close to some great beaches and not too far from the big smoke and haze of central Sydney. The other coastal cities of NSW probably provide a far better opportunity for a beach lifestyle than Sydney.
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