Royal Botanic Gardens

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Together with the Domain, the Royal Botanic Gardens form one large green oasis in the heart of Sydney along Farm Cove, between the Central Business District and the harbor.

Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
Royal Botanic Gardens

The thirty hectare (75 acres) large Botanic Gardens is surrounded by the Domain, which acts as a buffer between the landscaped gardens and the city.

Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
Royal Botanic Gardens
Monument of Lysicrates,Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
Monument of Lysicrates

The Gardens

This is a very visitor-friendly park, it even has signs stating ‘please walk on the grass’. It makes the Botanic Garden a great place for picnics, but it also allows you to walk close to the many magnificent trees and plants. The gardens feature numerous plant species from Australia and abroad, displayed across a number of thematic gardens like the Palm Grove, Oriental Garden and Herb Garden.

Some of the plants are very rare, like the recently discovered Wollemi Pine – the ‘Dinosaur tree’ – and the cycads. There are also many birds and bats in the park. And there’s more than just nature: you’ll also come across some architectural attractions, including the Government House and a copy of the Monument of Lysicrates in Athens, sculpted by Walter McGill and erected here in 1870.

The Botanic Gardens are enclosed by fences and is only accessible during daytime. The Domain however, can be accessed at any time.

Foundation

The Royal Botanic Gardens were founded in 1816 by Governor Macquarie as part of the governor’s domain. The appointment of the first Botanist, Charles Fraser, in 1817, marked the establishment of Australia’s oldest scientific institution. The gardens were expanded in 1830 with the construction of a sea wall, and in 1831 they were opened to the public.

Sights

Palm Grove

Fruit Bats aka Flying Foxes, Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
Fruit Bats
Palm tree in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
Palm tree

Over the years, different sections of the gardens developed. One of the first was the Palm Grove, established in 1851. It is one of the world’s finest collections of palm trees, with more than 140 different species, including the cabbage tree palm, a Sydney native. Many of the gardens’ numerous fruit bats (aka flying foxes) choose a spot high up one of these palm trees.
Near the Palm Grove is the First Farm, the site of the colony’s very first cultivated farmland. In 1862 Sydney’s first zoo opened in the Botanic Gardens, but it relocated to Moore Park in 1883.

Garden Exhibition Palace

For Sydney’s International Exhibition of 1879 the Garden Exhibition Palace – an enormous Victorian building with central dome – was constructed on the Domain. After the timber framed Palace was destroyed by fire in 1882 the two hectares of land – known as the Palace Gardens – were added to the Botanic Gardens.

Stagnation and more gardens

In 1901 a new herbarium opened, but the beginning of the 20th century marked the start of a long period of stagnation for the Botanic Gardens. It took until the last decades of the century before several more sections were developed like the Rose Garden (1988), the Herb Garden (1994) and the Oriental Garden (1997). There are many more topical gardens: the Rare and Threatened Plants Garden features plants that are rare or even on the brink of extinction; the Native Rockery displays a number of Australian native plants; the Succulent Garden features desert landscapes with plenty of cacti and the Rainforest Walk shows a variety of plants from the rain forest.

Tropical Centre

Tropical Centre, Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
Tropical Centre
Main Pond, Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
Main Pond

The Tropical Centre, which opened in 1990, consists of two glasshouses, one shaped as a pyramid and the other one as an arc. The glasshouse in the shape of an arc is devoted to exotic plants from tropical areas around the world. The pyramidically shaped glasshouse holds Australian tropical plants.

National Herbarium

At the eastern edge of the gardens is the National Herbarium, an important research institution which holds about a million different dried plants, including some specimens from 1770 collected by Joseph Banks, Captain Cook’s botanist.

The Pond

The Botanic Gardens also feature a large pond where the many ducks and other birds are fed by tourists ignoring the request to not feed them. Some of the birds found in the park are the Sacred Ibis, the Sulphur Crested Cockatoo, the White-faced Heron and the Rainbow Lorikeet.

Government House

Also on the grounds of the Royal Botanic Gardens is the Government House, the former residence of the Governor of New South Wales. The Government House grounds are open to the public. There are also architectural tours of the house, a mock castle built in 1845. Entry to the botanic gardens is free, except for the Tropical Centre.

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