The Queensland Club is so exclusive that even its website is members-only. While you may not be schmoozing in its hallowed rooms any time soon, the building is still worth a quick look for its heritage-listed, Italianate architecture. Hailing back to the 1880s, the building was designed by Scottish-born architect Francis Drummond Greville Stanley, himself a member of the esteemed gentlemen's club.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Brisbane attractions

1. Mansions

0.05 MILES

At the junction or George St and Margaret St is the Mansions, an unusual three-storey, red-brick Romanesque terrace which was cobbled together in 1890…

2. Parliament House

0.07 MILES

With a roof clad in Mt Isa copper, this lovely blanched-white stone, French Renaissance–style building dates from 1868 and overlooks the City Botanic…

3. QUT Art Museum

0.15 MILES

Head to this little champ for regularly changing exhibits of contemporary Australian art and works by Brisbane art students, plus temporary exhibits, some…

4. City Botanic Gardens

0.18 MILES

Originally a collection of food crops planted by convicts in 1825, this is Brisbane’s favourite green space. Descending gently from the Queensland…

5. Commissariat Store Museum

0.22 MILES

Built by convicts in 1829, this former government storehouse is the oldest occupied building in Brisbane. Inside is an immaculate little museum whose main…

6. Old Government House

0.23 MILES

Queensland's most important heritage building, this 1862 showpiece was designed by estimable government architect Charles Tiffin as a residence for Sir…

7. Treasury Building

0.31 MILES

At the western end of the Queen St Mall is the magnificent Italian Renaissance–style Treasury Building, dating from 1889. No tax collectors inside – just…

8. South Bank Parklands

0.37 MILES

Should you sunbake on a sandy beach, saunter through a rainforest, or eye-up a Nepalese peace pagoda? You can do all three in this 17.5-hectare park…