About

How it works

A lifestyle for the curious. Discover the Melbourne many locals have never seen, keep your fitness up, learn new skills β€” and actually feel the difference. You don't need luxury to live richly.

Photo: Unsplash

The idea

Melbourne's parallel map.

Every city has two maps. The first one is everywhere β€” the guidebooks, the Instagram posts, the things people tell you to see before you die. The second map is harder to find. It's the city underneath the tourist layer: the western suburb the inner-city locals have never crossed to, the creek corridor through the middle of the industrial suburbs, the neighbourhood that's been quietly extraordinary for twenty years while nobody was looking.

Kiez Traveller is the second map. Thirty-six locations that don't appear on the first one.

The bigger picture

36 locations. A different city.

Most people don't realise what completing Kiez Traveller actually adds up to. It's not just 36 nice days out. However long it takes you β€” 18 weeks, six months, a year β€” when you finish, you will have:

  • πŸ—Ί
    Explored 36 places in your own city you'd never have found on your own β€” bay beaches, creek trails, working-class suburbs, forgotten industrial corners, regional Victoria day trips
  • πŸ“š
    Learned the city properly β€” the history, the layers, the stories behind streets you drive past every day. You'll know Melbourne better than most people who've lived here their whole lives
  • πŸ’ͺ
    Got fitter β€” 36 walks, runs, swims and outdoor workouts. Done consistently over a year that's a real physical difference, without a gym membership
  • πŸ₯ͺ
    Learned new cooking skills β€” 36 packed lunches, new recipes, better food habits. Under A$3 a time, eaten somewhere worth sitting down for
  • πŸ’»
    Worked better β€” 18 Fridays in a new cafΓ©, new scene, new energy. Change of environment is one of the best things you can do for focus and creativity
  • πŸ’΅
    Saved money β€” compared to weekends away, gym memberships, expensive brunches and tourist activities. The whole thing costs almost nothing
  • πŸ““
    Achieved something real β€” a completed journal, a full progress map, 36 places visited. A stretch of time with something to show for it

That's not a travel guide. That's a personal challenge with a clear structure, measurable progress, and results you'll actually notice β€” however long it takes to get there.

None of this is compulsory. You don't have to work out or prep meals if that's not your thing. But for those who want a routine β€” something consistent to build around β€” this is what the structure is for. Do as much or as little as works for you. Just don't stop.

Where this started

It began in Berlin.

Kiez Traveller started somewhere else. I've lived in Weißensee for years and somewhere along the way I stopped exploring. The same coffee shop, the same park, the same walk to the U-Bahn. Berlin is one of the most interesting cities on earth and I was seeing about 400 metres of it.

So I made a rule: one new place every week, no more than €2 in transport, no days off work. Just relocate a Friday β€” bring the laptop, find a cafΓ© in a neighbourhood I'd never been to, let the streets do the rest. Thirty weeks later I had 60 locations, a lot of notes, and a completely different relationship with the city I thought I already knew. That was the first Kiez Traveller field guide.

Melbourne is the same idea on a different continent. A city this size β€” with this much going on in its suburbs and surrounding region β€” deserves the same treatment.

First and foremost β€” it's for locals.

Melbourne is one of the most liveable and culturally rich cities on earth and most people who live here see about 2 kilometres of it. The same commute, the same suburb, the same Saturday coffee on the same strip. Kiez Traveller exists to fix that. It's a field guide for people who already live here and want to actually know the city β€” the creek corridor through the suburb you've never walked, the bay beach the weekend crowds haven't found, the western suburb whose food scene is better than anything in the inner north.

You don't need to take a day off. You don't need to spend money. You don't need to plan anything. Every episode gives you the route, the history and the context β€” the discovery is yours. Two new neighbourhoods a fortnight, a packed lunch under A$3, and Melbourne starts to feel enormous again.

The locations in this guide are places Tourism Victoria doesn't cover: a bayside suburb with a working harbour that most Melburnians have never visited, a creek trail through the industrial north that connects six suburbs without touching a main road, a regional Victorian day trip within 90 minutes of the city that feels like another world. Not hidden β€” just overlooked. Melbourne rewards the curious.

It's also for a certain kind of visitor.

Not the Federation Square crowd. The adventurous, health-conscious traveller who does this wherever they go β€” who finds the Footscray pho place instead of the tourist restaurant, who runs the Tan Track before breakfast, who wants to swim somewhere in Port Phillip that nobody else on their flight has heard of. The kind of person who wants to keep their fitness up while travelling, go somewhere genuinely off the map, and come home having actually learned something β€” a new recipe, a new neighbourhood, a new way of moving through a city. If that's how you travel, Melbourne is one of the best cities on earth for it. And this is your guide to it.

Not a highlight reel.

A completely different product from anything Tourism Victoria, Lonely Planet, or any influencer is selling. They sell the highlight reel. Kiez Traveller gives you something that outlasts the trip β€” the experience of becoming someone who knows how to find their own highlights. Anywhere. In any city. For the rest of your life.

Another way entirely

Let the city decide.

You didn't choose this neighbourhood. Something else did. That's the point.

Surprise me β€” one button. No plan, no deliberation, no second-guessing. The city picks somewhere and you go. You won't know what you'll find until you're there. You won't know who you'll meet, what you'll stumble into, what will happen on the way. Some of the best days in any city only happen because you stopped choosing. There's something almost like instinct in it β€” the card falls where it falls, and you follow. Chance locations. Chance meetings. The kind of afternoon that could only have happened today, in that place, because something sent you there.

The Kiez Deck works the same way β€” a physical card drawn at random, a neighbourhood you've never thought about, a reason to go. Like tarot, but the city is the reading. You don't know what it means until you arrive. The card might send you somewhere you know very well. It's telling you to go back. There's something there you haven't seen yet.

What's on β€” instead of choosing a location and finding what's there, you start with what's happening right now. A street art opening in Collingwood this afternoon. A pop-up market at the Abbotsford Convent until 5pm. A free gig in Edinburgh Gardens. Real-time events, the kind of thing you only find if you're already looking. The city is always moving. Some days you just join it.

Use the challenge when you want structure. Use Surprise me when you want to be led. Use What's on when the city is already calling. You never know till you go.

A neighbourhood is more than a pin on a map.

Most travel guides give you a list of spots. Kiez Traveller tries to give you something harder to package: a sense of a place. Every episode is built around four layers.

The people. The corner store owner whose family has been there since the 1970s. The retired wharfie who walks the same bay path every morning. The Vietnamese baker who opens at 5am and sells out by 9. A neighbourhood without its cast is just architecture.

The history. What was on this corner during the gold rush, after the first wave of post-war immigration, when the factories closed in the 1980s, now. Melbourne carries more layers than it shows β€” you can read a hundred and fifty years of working-class history in a single street if you know what to look for.

How to read it. What a heritage overlay on a terrace house means. Which pub has been serving the same street since before the suburb had a tram line. Why that warehouse has been empty for twenty years when everything around it has been converted. The signals a neighbourhood gives off once you start paying attention.

The rhythm. The same street at 7am and 11pm is two different places. You already know your own suburb's rhythm. Part of exploring a new one is learning when to go.

Pick your day. Make it count.

For locals working from a laptop, the killer feature is that the work doesn't care where you are. Relocate a Friday β€” bring the laptop, find a cafΓ© in a neighbourhood you've never been to, let the streets do the rest. For visitors, any day works. The principle is the same: instead of a tourist agenda, you have a Kiez agenda.

Kiez Traveller is designed to remove the planning. Every episode gives you the route, the cafΓ© options, the Wi-Fi situation, the workability notes, and what's worth the detour on the walk back to the train. The rest is up to you.

Bring a packed lunch. Spend the day somewhere new. Be back in time for dinner. That's it.

Monday + Friday β€” the recommended rhythm.

The guide is structured around two episodes per week. Monday is nature β€” bay beaches, creek trails, national parks, reservoir walks, and the Victorian countryside within reach of a train. Friday is urban β€” industrial suburbs, historic working-class streets, forgotten corners that didn't make the lifestyle magazine.

Monday and Friday work well because they create two fixed points in the week that become a habit. Nature on a Monday resets the week. Urban on a Friday gives the end of the week somewhere worth being. Done this way, 18 weeks and you're done. That's the ideal.

But the days are yours. Do both on a Sunday if that's what works. Do a Monday episode on a Wednesday. Do two in the same weekend when you have the time. The labels describe the type of episode and the spirit it was written in β€” not the day you're allowed to go.

Monday episodes are free. Friday episodes are for subscribers β€” they go deeper, include full workability notes, and cover the places worth being protective of.

The only rule

Don't stop. That's it.

The challenge is 36 locations. Not 36 locations in 18 weeks. If six months is the pace your life allows β€” one episode a fortnight, both on a slow Sunday, a gap when things get busy β€” that's a Kiez Traveller. The city isn't going anywhere.

Most challenges fail because people miss a week and feel like they've already lost. Kiez Traveller doesn't work that way. There's no streak to protect, no schedule to fall behind on, no version of this where you've failed as long as you're still going. Pick it back up. The next episode is always there.

The people who finish are the ones who didn't quit β€” not necessarily the ones who went every Monday and every Friday without exception. Eighteen weeks or a year: when you hit thirty-six locations, you've done it. Same map. Same patch. Same city that now feels like it belongs to you.

Getting there from where you are.

Every episode includes transit directions and an approximate travel time. Use these as a guide β€” Melbourne's myki network (trains, trams, and buses) means most locations are reachable from anywhere in the inner city within 30–60 minutes. Outer locations may take longer β€” treat the journey as part of the episode. Find your nearest connection and the journey time will be similar.

The "Near me" button on the homepage will sort locations by distance from wherever you currently are, so you can always find what's closest.

Track where you've been.

Use the My progress page to mark locations as visited, write your thoughts and upload your own photos from each visit. It saves on your device β€” no account needed. Over 18 weeks you'll build a personal map and journal of the city you actually explored, not just the city you meant to.

Start exploring β†’
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