Guidebook for Rose Bay

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Guidebook for Rose Bay

Food Scene

Everyone's Italian restaurant in Rose Bay, the food wine and atmosphere is to die for!
18 moradores locais recomendam
Mangia e Bevi
702 New South Head Rd
18 moradores locais recomendam
Everyone's Italian restaurant in Rose Bay, the food wine and atmosphere is to die for!

Drinks & Nightlife

Perfect place for a drink after a long day out in the sun or just to hang out with the Rose Bay locals!
17 moradores locais recomendam
Hotel Rose Bay
807 New South Head Rd
17 moradores locais recomendam
Perfect place for a drink after a long day out in the sun or just to hang out with the Rose Bay locals!

Sightseeing

Little hidden secret beach in the Eastern Suburbs with stunning views of the harbour, where most people go crowding in Bondi, Bronte or Coogee Beach, Rose Bay beach is perfect for those who want to avoid the crowds, its so quiet, so chilled, so beautiful and its right on your back yard! Paddle boarding, sailing, kayak, swim, picnic or just people watching!
41 moradores locais recomendam
Rose Bay Beach
41 moradores locais recomendam
Little hidden secret beach in the Eastern Suburbs with stunning views of the harbour, where most people go crowding in Bondi, Bronte or Coogee Beach, Rose Bay beach is perfect for those who want to avoid the crowds, its so quiet, so chilled, so beautiful and its right on your back yard! Paddle boarding, sailing, kayak, swim, picnic or just people watching!

Parks & Nature

If you fancy a short stroll and a little adventure this is where to go, Nielsen Park is a part of Sydney Harbour National Park It offers sublime views, the lovely Shark Beach, a harbour side café and three great picnic areas. It’s also one of the most picturesque places for a picnic, boasting three large, sheltered picnic areas. Relax on the grass and enjoy your lunch beneath a shady fig tree. Stroll along the scenic foreshore walking track or explore the area by kayak.
98 moradores locais recomendam
Nielsen Park
6 Steele Point Rd
98 moradores locais recomendam
If you fancy a short stroll and a little adventure this is where to go, Nielsen Park is a part of Sydney Harbour National Park It offers sublime views, the lovely Shark Beach, a harbour side café and three great picnic areas. It’s also one of the most picturesque places for a picnic, boasting three large, sheltered picnic areas. Relax on the grass and enjoy your lunch beneath a shady fig tree. Stroll along the scenic foreshore walking track or explore the area by kayak.

Shopping

7 moradores locais recomendam
Edgecliff
7 moradores locais recomendam

Essentials

From groceries, laundry, cafes, shops, Gym, Doctor, Convenient store, Off licence, beauty, hair dressers all 2 minutes away!
58 moradores locais recomendam
Rose Bay
58 moradores locais recomendam
From groceries, laundry, cafes, shops, Gym, Doctor, Convenient store, Off licence, beauty, hair dressers all 2 minutes away!

Arts & Culture

Vaucluse House is one of Sydney's few 19th-century mansions still surrounded by its original gardens and wooded grounds. When the towering colonial explorer, barrister and politician William Charles Wentworth bought the house in 1827, it was a single-storey cottage in a secluded valley of partly cleared coastal scrub. Vaucluse House began as a stone cottage, built in 1805 by Sir Henry Browne Hayes, an eccentric Irish knight of ‘grotesque appearance’.2​ Originally from Cork, he was transported to NSW for kidnapping a local heiress and attempting to marry her by force. It is thought that he surrounded the cottage with Irish peat to protect it from snakes: it was Brown Hayes’ belief that St Pa
13 moradores locais recomendam
Estate Vaucluse House
69A Wentworth Rd
13 moradores locais recomendam
Vaucluse House is one of Sydney's few 19th-century mansions still surrounded by its original gardens and wooded grounds. When the towering colonial explorer, barrister and politician William Charles Wentworth bought the house in 1827, it was a single-storey cottage in a secluded valley of partly cleared coastal scrub. Vaucluse House began as a stone cottage, built in 1805 by Sir Henry Browne Hayes, an eccentric Irish knight of ‘grotesque appearance’.2​ Originally from Cork, he was transported to NSW for kidnapping a local heiress and attempting to marry her by force. It is thought that he surrounded the cottage with Irish peat to protect it from snakes: it was Brown Hayes’ belief that St Pa