Chinese Garden of Friendship
click to manageBuilt to mark Australia's 1988 Bicentenary, the Chinese Garden of Friendship is a walled classical garden at the southern end of Darling Harbour, created as a gift of friendship between the state of New South Wales and its sister province of Guangdong. Designed by landscape architects from Guangzhou and modelled on the private scholar gardens of imperial China, it was the first garden of its kind in the southern hemisphere when it opened in January 1988, and it remains a rare and carefully maintained example outside China. Within little more than a hectare the garden compresses a whole landscape, following Taoist ideas of balance between yin and yang and arranging water, stone, plants and buildings so that a new view opens at almost every turn. Winding paths lead past a central lake stocked with koi, waterfalls, rockeries built to suggest mountains, and pavilions with sweeping tiled roofs, including a twin pavilion and a teahouse where visitors can pause over tea and dumplings. Willows, bamboo, lotus and seasonal blossom soften the architecture and change the mood through the year. The high walls deliberately shut out the surrounding city, so that the noise of Darling Harbour falls away and the garden becomes a quiet retreat in the middle of Sydney. It is used for weddings, cultural festivals and quiet wandering alike, and signage explains the symbolism woven through the design, from the dragon and lion motifs to the meanings attached to particular plants. For visitors it offers both a calm break from sightseeing and an accessible introduction to a centuries-old garden tradition, set a short walk from Chinatown and the harbour attractions. Lantern displays and festival events mark the lunar calendar through the year. A small admission fee applies, and the on-site teahouse serves Chinese tea and snacks on a terrace overlooking the lake, where visitors can sit and take in the garden at a slow pace. Traditional costume hire, calligraphy and seasonal cultural programs add to the experience, particularly around the Lunar New Year and the Mid-Autumn Festival, when the garden is decorated and busy with events. Its compact size means a visit can be as short as half an hour or stretched over an afternoon, and its position beside Darling Square and a short walk from Chinatown makes it easy to combine with a meal. For many visitors the garden is a welcome pause, a pocket of stillness and greenery that contrasts sharply with the glass towers and busy waterfront just beyond its walls.
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Type: Outdoors
Address: Cnr Pier & Harbour Streets, Darling Harbour, Sydney, Australia
Telephone: (02) 9240 8888
Website: https://www.darlingharbour.com/precincts/chinese-garden
Opening Date: 17/01/1988
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