Overview
The Story Bridge is Brisbane's defining structural landmark β a cantilever truss bridge spanning the Brisbane River between Kangaroo Point and Fortitude Valley, completed in 1940 after five years of construction during the Great Depression. It was designed by John Bradfield β the engineer who also designed the Sydney Harbour Bridge β and built using 18,000 tonnes of steel fabricated in Newcastle and erected piece by piece across the river channel. The bridge carries traffic on its upper deck and now also offers a guided climb that has become one of Australia's most popular adventure tourism experiences.
The bridge's name honours Queensland politician and education minister John Douglas Story, who championed the project in its early planning stages. Its cantilever design β chosen over alternatives to allow construction to proceed from both banks simultaneously without falsework over the river channel β creates the distinctive stepped profile visible from riverside parks and the South Bank Parklands across the water. At 74 metres above the river at its highest accessible point, the bridge offers a vantage position from which the full sweep of Brisbane's geography is visible: the river's meandering path from the D'Aguilar Range to Moreton Bay, the suburban sprawl across the Darling Downs, and the dense CBD towers clustering around the inner bend below.
The Story Bridge Adventure Climb was established in 2005 and now operates daily across four time slots β dawn, day, twilight, and night β with certified guide leaders who cover the bridge's engineering history, the Great Depression construction story, and the panoramic geography visible from the summit. Participants wear harness and clip-on equipment at all heights.
When to Visit
Climbs operate 365 days a year in four time slots: dawn (approximately 4:30β6 AM, seasonal), day (9 AMβ4 PM), twilight (approximately 5β7 PM, seasonal), and night (7β9 PM). Each session lasts 2 to 2.5 hours. Bookings are essential and typically open several weeks in advance; peak demand for dawn and twilight climbs on weekends means booking 2β3 weeks ahead is advisable. Climbs proceed in most weather β lightning within 10 km is the only cancellation criterion. Check the Story Bridge Adventure Climb website for the current seasonal times.
Admission and Costs
Day climb: A$99 per person (adults). Dawn or twilight climb: A$119β149 per person (premium time slots). Night climb: A$109β119 per person. Bookings: Online via the Story Bridge Adventure Climb website; small booking fee may apply. Children (aged 10+, minimum 30 kg): typically A$75β99 depending on time slot. A private small-group climb for corporate or special occasion events can be arranged at premium rates. The experience is self-guided with an assigned leader β no separate guide fee required.
The Case for a Guide
- Engineering narrative β the bridge's Depression-era construction story involves layoffs, industrial politics, and engineering innovations that make the structure far more interesting than its visual simplicity suggests
- Geographical orientation β the view from the summit is spectacular but the guide's ability to name and contextualise what is visible β identifying which suburb is which, why the river bends where it does, where Moreton Bay lies β doubles the informational value
- Brisbane history β the bridge's completion in 1940, just before Brisbane became a major US military base in the Pacific War, connects it to a chapter of the city's history rarely discussed in mainstream tourism
- Safety confidence β first-time climbers often appreciate the guide's calm pacing and reassurance at height; the professional harness system is robust, but a confident guide makes the experience comfortable rather than anxious
Tips for Visitors
Book the dawn climb for extraordinary light quality and near-guaranteed solitude compared to day sessions. Wear enclosed shoes β sandals and thongs are not permitted on the climb. The twilight session provides the most spectacular visual transition β arriving in daylight and descending after the city lights come on and the river reflects the CBD towers. The climb base is in Fortitude Valley on the northern end of the bridge; public parking is available in the surrounding streets. After descending, the Kangaroo Point Cliffs on the southern shore offer a ground-level viewing platform for the bridge from across the river β particularly good for photography in the late afternoon light.
