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Kings Park: One of the World's Great Urban Parks

The 400-hectare park above the Swan River is Perth's most visited destination.

By The Daily Perth · Published 24 June 2026, 6:16 pm

2 min read

UpdatedUpdated 3 July 2026, 11:09 pm

Kings Park: One of the World's Great Urban Parks
Photo: Photo by Andy Wang on Unsplash

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Kings Park sits on Mount Eliza above the Swan River, a 400-hectare reserve that combines native bushland, the Western Australian Botanic Garden, war memorials, and panoramic views of the Perth CBD and the Swan River estuary. The park's size, its combination of manicured garden areas with genuine bushland containing native plants flowering throughout the year, and its accessibility from the CBD via the riverside paths have made it one of the most visited urban parks in Australia and a point of civic pride for Perth residents.

The Western Australian Botanic Garden within Kings Park contains more than 3,000 plant species native to Western Australia, representing the extraordinary botanical diversity of a state that is one of the world's great plant biodiversity hotspots. The spring wildflower displays, when the native species bloom in succession from August to October, are a major tourism drawcard that brings visitors from across Australia and internationally to witness a botanical spectacle that has no equivalent anywhere else in the world.

The DNA Tower, a helical observation structure inspired by the DNA double helix, provides an elevated perspective on the park and the city beyond that rewards the climb with views extending to the Darling Range to the east and the Indian Ocean to the west. The tower's design captures the park's scientific and educational character as well as its recreational and commemorative functions.

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The park's Lotterywest Federation Walkway provides a treetop canopy walk that allows visitors to experience the banksia woodland at canopy level rather than from the ground plane that terrestrial viewing provides. The walk's 222 metres through the treetops, combined with the educational interpretation of the species visible from the elevated walkway, provides an engagement with the native bush environment that has made it one of the park's most popular features since its opening.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Perth

This article was produced by the The Daily Perth editorial desk and covers community in Perth. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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