Craig's Royal Hotel
On Lydiard Street in Ballarat East, where the gold rush once transformed a dusty landscape into something resembling a European city, Craig's Royal Hotel stands with the assurance of a building that has earned its grandeur. Constructed in 1862 from Italianate stone, it rose on ground already consecrated by the town's first licensed pub—Bath's Hotel—which had slaked the thirst of prospectors and diggers before this more ambitious structure claimed its place. That lineage matters here. A pub built atop a pub carries something of the earlier establishment's purpose forward, a continuity of hospitality that survives even the remaking of its architecture. The hotel has hosted those whose fame briefly illuminated it: a prince in 1867, a celebrated soprano who sang from its balcony in 1908. These moments are now woven into the fabric of the place, unremarkable in the way that history becomes unremarkable when enough time has passed. What remains is more durable than celebrity—the feel of rooms that have settled into themselves over generations, the particular quality of light through old windows, the sense of a building that knows its purpose. Since its recent restoration, the pub has opened its various chambers to visitors: a corner bar, an atrium for lighter meals and coffee, the public bar where the essential business of an Australian pub continues uninterrupted. High tea comes once a month, and rooms upstairs offer accommodation for those who wish to linger. The building doesn't announce itself as heritage so much as embody it—in the solidity of its proportions, in the fact that you can walk through its doors and find yourself in a space that has remained fundamentally itself across more than a century and a half. That constancy, in a country still young, is its own form of rarity.