Paronella Park

Photo: Neegzistuoja / CC BY-SA 4.0

Deep in the Queensland cane fields, Paronella Park is one of Australia’s most enchanting and improbable sights – a Spanish-style castle built by a single immigrant with a dream, now reclaimed by a lush tropical rainforest. José Paronella, a Catalan cane cutter, began constructing his fantasy in the 1930s, using concrete and local materials to create a terraced garden, ballroom, and picnic grounds around the Mena Creek waterfall. Today, the park is a magical ruin where moss-covered staircases, vine-draped arches, and the constant roar of the waterfall create an atmosphere that feels part Gothic novel, part lost world. It’s a place that rewards slow exploration, especially on a guided twilight tour when the gardens are lit by fairy lights and the resident bats take flight.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

Plan for at least 2–3 hours to explore the gardens and waterfall thoroughly. To get the full experience, combine a daytime self-guided walk with the 45-minute guided night tour (booked separately). If you’re a keen photographer or history buff, allow a half-day – the park is compact but dense with detail. Most visitors find that a late-afternoon arrival, followed by the twilight tour, is the perfect way to see the site transform from day to night.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

Please check official sources for current details.

Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.