Richmond Arms Hotel
On Bridge Street in Richmond, where sandstone buildings stand witness to nearly two centuries of Tasmanian life, the Richmond Arms Hotel occupies the kind of corner that seems to anchor a town's sense of itself. The present structure rose in 1888, rebuilt after fire consumed its predecessor, the Lennox Arms—though the original stables from that 1827 establishment still remain, now serving as accommodation units, their Georgian lines a quiet reminder of what endures. The hotel itself carries the particular patina of a long-licensed room: the kind of place where the bar has absorbed countless conversations, where regulars know the measure of their welcome, and where a cold beer tastes the way it should after a day's travel through Tasmania's back roads. The rhythms here follow the unhurried logic of a country pub. The bistro lounge serves hearty counter meals and the kind of comfort food that settles well at a timber table—local seafood and meats, cheese boards that speak to the region's producers, children's meals for families passing through. Devonshire tea flows all day from eleven, and the bar stocks ten beers on tap alongside local Riversdale Estate wines, each choice reflecting something of the landscape surrounding this small town. It is the sort of establishment where afternoon light falls across worn floorboards while the world outside moves at its own pace. Richmond itself seems designed for wandering—convict-era stone work visible in the old bridge and gaol nearby, the historic village precinct holding its ground against the steady march of decades. The Richmond Arms sits naturally within this geography, neither performing its history nor ignoring it, simply continuing to do what pubs do: offer shelter, sustenance, and the unremarkable kindness of a room kept warm and lit for visitors and locals alike.