Here I am not going to introduce you to famous attractions such as the Sydney Opera House, Harbor Bridge, Darling Harbor, and the Three Sisters of the Blue Mountains.
In order to make your photo album full of Bigger, we recommend 10 niche shooting spots in Sydney. Each place has its own characteristics. I believe it will bring you a different photography and travel experience.
Wedding Cake Rock gets its name from its appearance, with its sharp edges and deep cracks giving it its unique shape.
It was originally a flat piece of white sandstone. Due to long-term erosion by waves and sea breeze, the other half suddenly broke and collapsed, leaving a relatively neat section. After years of wind and rain, it became what it is now. It is a miraculous workmanship of nature.
Amazing.
Its shape is very similar to a wedding cake, and the Chinese are more accustomed to calling it tofu stone.
Wedding Cake Rock is located on the coastal hiking route of the Royal National Park. The hiking starting point is the town of Bundeena in the Royal National Park. It takes about an hour's drive from Sydney city to the town of Bundeena.
Because the rock is cracked and has a very high risk of collapse.
Park staff patrol the area around the Cake Rock and will fine visitors who ignore warnings and climb safety barriers onto the Cake Rock.
The main building of the University of Technology Sydney Business School is located in Sydney CBD and is named after Dr Chau Chak Wing, an Australian Chinese businessman and philanthropist.
The 11th floor of the building shows an almost crazy pleated state from the outside to the inside. Coupled with the brown facade color, it looks like an oversized McDonald's kraft paper belt from a distance.
It is reported that 320,000 custom-made bricks were used in the folded part of the building and all were laid by hand, further enhancing the folded texture of the "paper bag".
The design of Dr. Chau Chak Wing Building is inspired by a tree house, which visually reflects the innovative thinking in teaching and research of the Business School and UTS as a whole.
On the day of the opening ceremony, Mr. Peter Cosgrove, the Governor-General of Australia, praised: "This is the most beautiful wrinkled kraft paper bag I have ever seen..." The Museum of Contemporary Art MCA is located next to the Opera House and close to the Circular Quay subway station.
Although not large in scale, it is rich in content.
Some exhibitions require the purchase of tickets.
The art exhibition is not permanent, and every once in a while, the theme will be updated.
International art pioneers flock here regularly to exhibit.
Every visitor will be shocked by the artistic atmosphere here.
It is also a must-visit place for literary and artistic young people to visit Sydney.
This is one of Sydney's newest gardens, and the locals haven't quite uncovered its secrets yet.
The garden has a unique location at the bottom of an old reservoir.
The reservoir was built in 1866 and decommissioned in 1899. It was later converted into a warehouse, with a parking garage and a small park built on it. Until 1990, due to the collapse of the roof, it became a graffiti grotto.
Now it has a new identity: a landscaped park, dotted with ponds and small pendant gardens, where traces of graffiti can still be seen, adding a lot of life to the garden.
Deep inside, it's like returning to a Roman garden, or a paradise far away from the hustle and bustle of the world.
In your free time on weekends, you can either read in a daze on the lawn chairs here, or take photos and play with your family here. It is a comfortable and relaxing arrangement.
This is also a good place for young people to take wedding photos.
This may not be a natural forest, but the trees are surprisingly tall and majestic.
Their planting pattern and coverage create a fairy tale-like scene.
If you are super interested in photography, you will love this place.
The walk is short, no stairs, no inclines, but covered in pine needles underfoot.
You can enter the destination Sugarpines Walk in the driving navigation. When driving nearby, be sure to slow down because it is easy to miss it.
Cowra is a small town in the central and western region of New South Wales, about 300 kilometers east of Sydney and about 190 kilometers east of Canberra, the Capital Territory.
Cowra is rich in rapeseed flowers. From September every year, the rapeseed flowers begin to turn yellow in large areas, turning into a sea of ??golden flowers.
Cowra has become a golden town and already has the title of Australia's largest and most beautiful rapeseed field.
After admiring the world-class rapeseed flowers, are you still not satisfied?
Then you can also stop by the famous Japanese Garden for a stroll.
Why does this town have such a connection with Japanese culture? Because Cowra was once the site of a prisoner-of-war camp where Japanese war criminals were held during World War II. In August 1944, more than 500 Japanese prisoners tried to escape from the prison camp, and the remaining prisoners committed collective suicide.
It eventually led to the death of 231 prisoners and 4 other Australians. This is the famous "The Cowra Breakout". This true history was also put on the screen by Australians in 1991.
Kiama is a beautiful coastal town about 120 kilometers from Sydney.
Kiama's beaches have remained pristine, with sparse crowds, green grass, historical buildings and outstanding natural scenery.