Things to do in Broken Hill
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Café Alfresco's
The service ticks along at an outback pace but this place still pulls an unfussy crowd pining for plates of pancakes, roasts, salads, pasta dishes and gourmet pizzas.
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Sculpture Symposium
A striking range of work on a hilltop northwest of town was created in 1993 by 12 international sculptors. They were responding to the limitless landscape, using some 52 tonnes of Wilcannia sandstone, borrowing the local miners' old tungsten carbide chisels to dent the tough rock, and camping in tents near their work.
The Sculpture Symposium took shape with names like Under the Jaguar Sun and Moon Goddess. The colours of the stone change constantly with the light. Bring water in summer, and consider visiting at dawn or sunset, to add another dimension to the romance of this wonderful place. The sculptures are signposted off to the right along Nine Mile Rd. Get the keys fo…
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Day Dream Mine
The first mines were walk-in, pick-and-shovel horrors. For an amazing experience, tour this historic mine where you squeeze down the steps with your helmet-light quivering on your head. Sturdy footwear is essential. It's a scenic 20-minute dirt drive off the Silverton road, 28km from Broken Hill.
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Miners Memorial
The huge silver skimp dump, which makes up Broken Hill's stark backdrop, also features the moving Miners Memorial. The memorial commemorates the deaths of over 800 men who have died in the mines since 1883. The list of the dead includes Dario Palumbo, an architecture student from the University of South Australia, who died suddenly during his work on the project, and whose story truly captures the emotions. The Broken Earth Café & Restaurant is attached.
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Pro Hart Gallery
Pro Hart, who died early in 2006, was a former miner and is Broken Hill's best-known artist. Aside from housing his work, the gallery holds a superb collection of Australian art (such as Brett Whiteley's Nude, Norman Lindsay's Selena and Albert Tucker's Australian Girl in Paris) and several works by international artists such as Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalí.
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Line of Lode Miners Memorial
Teetering atop the huge silver skimp dump is this moving memorial. It houses the impressively stark Cor-Ten steel memorial to the 900 miners who have died since Broken Hill first became a mining town. Inside the monument, a sobering series of plaques for each year itemise an appalling litany of gruesome deaths. The neighbouring Line of Lode Visitor Centre makes an excellent sunrise or sunset vantage point over Broken Hill, and the Broken Earth Café & Restaurant is next door.
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Argent St Café & Restaurant
Bright and shiny new, with Badger Bates' protégés' art works on display, this features an artists studio throughout summer. There's good old Aussie tucker (like lamb shanks Italian style!), and a great range of dairy-, lactose-, gluten- or meat-free meals. Great all-day breakfast, BYO and Dine-and-Wine. And coffee to walk a mile for.
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Musicians Club
A jolly place with a heaving mix of young and old. Country-music bands play on the weekends while the drinks flow. Two-up (gambling on the fall of two coins) is played on Friday and Saturday night from 22:00 to 02:00 - Broken Hill claims to have retained the atmosphere of a real two-up school and the locals are happy to give you lessons.
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Guided Walks
Two-hour Guided Walks of Broken Hill commence from the tourist centre on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Plenty of companies offer tours of the town and nearby attractions, some going further out to White Cliffs, Mutawintji National Park and other outback destinations. The visitors centre has information and takes bookings.
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Railway, Mineral & Train Museum
There is more local history at the Railway, Mineral & Train Museum. The museum is in the Silverton Tramway Company's old station. The tramway was a private railway running between Cockburn (SA) and Broken Hill via Silverton until 1970.
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Silver City Mint & Art Centre
This is home to a chocolate factory and the Big Picture (admission $5), the largest continuous canvas in Australia, an amazing 100m-by-12m diorama of the Broken Hill outback.
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Royal Flying Doctor Service
This iconic Australian Institution exhibition includes the fascinating Mantle of Safety Museum, with lots of quirky stories and things to see. Tours run during the week, or visit the museum at any time.
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Delprat's Mine
There's an excellent underground tour at Delprat's Mine where you don miners gear and descend 130m in a cage for a two-hour tour of stopes and working equipment. Delprat's is signposted across the railway tracks.
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Broken Hill Regional Art Gallery
This must-see gallery is housed in the beautifully restored Sully's Emporium. It is the oldest regional gallery in NSW and holds 1500 works in its permanent collection. Tours on request.
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Thankakali Art Gallery
Thankakali Art Gallery is the Aboriginal cultural centre, located in an old brewery. It has an extensive gallery and a range of hand-painted arts, crafts and didgeridoos by local artists.
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Tri State Safaris
Half- to 18-day tours to places such as Corner Country, Birdsville and the Simpson Desert.
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GeoCentre
This is an interactive geology museum, with beautiful and rare minerals and crystals on display and lots of touch-and-feel exhibits. It's also home to a 42kg silver nugget.
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Bells Milk Bar & Museum
On the other side of the hill, the old commercial hub of Patton St is a slice of 1950s nostalgia. Sip on a 'soda spider' in a high-topped glass.
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Noodle Sushi Bar
Every country town should have one of these. This clean and friendly eat-in or takeaway restaurant dishes up a vast array of noodles – Hokkien, Mongolian and Singapore to name a few – plus nasi goreng, curry laksa and stir-fried veg.
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Afghan Mosque
This simple corrugated-iron building was erected around 1891. Afghani cameleers helped open up the outback; the mosque was built on the site of a camel camp.
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South Broken Hill Golf Course
Check out the fun South Broken Hill Golf Course, which has gravel fairways and sand-scrape greens. It's open the same hours as the Broken Hill Golf Course and will lend you some clubs.
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Trades Hall
Trades Hall, built between 1898 and 1904, houses the Barrier Industrial Council. It features a pressed-iron ceiling over its elaborately detailed interior, restored in 1988.
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Thom, Dick & Harry's
A narrow shop cluttered with stylish kitchenware and gourmet produce. Sit in among it for a decent coffee and delicious baguette, sanger, wrap or Turkish (around $9).
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Bush Mail Run
The 4WD outback mail-delivery service covers 550km, stopping at isolated homesteads for the occasional cuppa.
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Astra
This restaurant and wine bar with tables and chairs outside has a diverse menu including eye fillet steak, duck confit stack and chicken schnitzel. Service is good.
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