Brisbane City Hall, located on Albert Avenue in the centre of the city, faces King George Square. It is the symbol of Brisbane, Australia's largest and most magnificent city hall. This prismatic tower with Italian Renaissance style was built in 1930. It is built with brown and yellow sandstone and 92 meters high. The lobby of the city hall is tall and its magnificent pillars remind you of the temples of ancient Greece. The tower on the top of the tower is quite Southern European. The design of the tower is based on the Bell Tower of Saint Mark in Venice, Italy, and it is divided into four sides. Visitors "Directional Guide" can see it anywhere in the city; the bell on the bell tower rings every fifteen minutes, sounding and ringing in the same way as the British Parliament bell. It is said that it is to remind the leisurely and slow-paced Australians to cherish time and not waste their time. Before the Sydney Opera House was built in 1971, Brisbane City Hall was Australia's most expensive building, so it was called Million Pound Town Hall. From 2010 to 2013, the city hall was closed for three years to rebuild. We arrived at the City Hall around 10 a.m. and went to the Museum of Brisbane on the third floor to collect tickets for the Bell Tower View Desk. We visited the Bell Tower View Desk at 10:15:16:45 every day for free. The tickets could not be booked in advance. Every day we arrived first, first served, the quota was full, the appointed time was out of date. We were arranged for the 11:15 batch, and there were only 6 people in each batch. About the same time, some staff led us to take an old-fashioned elevator that looked very old and climbed up to the viewing platform slowly. It is said that all the staff here are Brisbane natives. They climbed the viewing platform and looked around at the street scenery of Brisbane, feeling different from the ground view. Subsequently, we visited Museum of Brisbane on the third floor, Sister Cities Room on the second floor and Lord Mayor" s Foyer on the first floor. The Mayor's Hall displays giant photos of 16 former Mayors of Bu; the sister city exhibition hall not only lists the list of friendly cities, but also presents gifts from friendly cities to Bu City, which are included in Shenzhen and Chongqing of China; the exhibition hall of the museum introduces the changes of the city over the past 100 years, through oil paintings, photographs, images and so on, and especially introduces Buli. There is also an interactive place for visitors to record for 60 seconds, called Brisbane Memory, which can record your stories about Brisbane and share them with you. Of course, the city hall's office space and special purpose places are not open to the public. It will take another hour and a half to circle it like this.