Spiky Bridge

Top choice in The East Coast


About 7km south of Swansea is the rather amazing Spiky Bridge, built by convicts in the early 1840s using thousands of local fieldstones (yes, they're spiky). The main east-coast road used to truck right across it, but these days it's set beside the highway. Nearby Kelvedon Beach, Spiky Beach and Cressy Beach have deep golden sand and rarely a footprint.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby The East Coast attractions

1. All Saints Anglican Church

4.27 MILES

There are many still-functioning historic buildings in Swansea, including the 1871 All Saints Anglican Church.

2. Waterloo Beach

4.33 MILES

The bigger of Swansea's two town beaches has more sand than the other one (Jubilee Beach), but the bay here is still fairly shallow and seaweed-prone. If…

3. East Coast Heritage Museum

4.37 MILES

Inside Swansea’s original schoolhouse, this engaging little museum covers Aboriginal artefacts, colonial and convict history, whaling and the plight of…

4. Morris' General Store

4.41 MILES

A multi-storey bluestone-and-brick special, the 1838 Morris’ General Store is the biggest object in Swansea. And it's still selling stuff – these days it…

5. Jubilee Beach

4.44 MILES

Swansea's central town beach (the smaller of two beaches here) is a fairly demure affair – shallow, with lots of seaweed. But hey, a beach is a beach if…

6. Bark Mill Museum

4.52 MILES

Out the back of the Bark Mill Tavern & Bakery, this museum explains the processing of black wattle bark to obtain tannin for tanning leathers. The mill…

7. Lemana Lookout

10.33 MILES

Lookout on the Hazards Beach Track, along the western side of Freycinet National Park.

8. Spring Vale Wines

11.08 MILES

Down a looong driveway in Cranbrook, 15km north of Swansea, this winery is on land owned by the same family since 1875. The cellar door is housed in an…