For immediate release: 17 April 2007
World Heritage Day is Wednesday
18th April
Up for national list: National Trust nominates rare
forest, crane and railway workshops as state’s most
endangered items
What
does a 40,000 year old blue gum forest have in common with 19th century railway workshops and a 1940s cantilever crane that
serviced Australia’s navy ships?
They are all unique NSW heritage items that are at
risk of being lost forever.
To draw attention to their plight, the National
Trust of Australia (NSW) has announced that for World Heritage Day on Wednesday, 18 April, it is nominating three items for the National 2007
Heritage at Risk List. They are Ku-ring-gai’s Blue Gum High Forest and Urban Conservation Area, the Hammerhead Crane on Garden Island, and the
Eveleigh Railway Workshop at Redfern.
“The Ku-ring-gai Blue Gum High Forest in St. Ives on Sydney’s North Shore goes back 40,000
years and is prized for its rarity and beauty. Sadly, intensive land use has severely affected it. Less than 5% of the forest survives as
intact bushland but remnant trees occur throughout the Ku-ring-gai ridge tops and still beautify this unique landscape. These existing
bushland remnants and surviving trees continue to be threatened by insensitive development and weed invasion,” said Trust Executive Director,
Tina Jackson.
A prominent landmark in Sydney Harbour, the
Hammerhead Crane was, when built during World War ll, the largest crane in the Southern Hemisphere and it remains unique in Australia. Built
to lift up to 250 tons, it serviced the British Navy fleet and demonstrates Australia’s position in the former British Empire and the peak of
mid-20th century electrical technology. It has been idle for more than a decade and neglected.
“This is very sad. The Hammerhead Crane is an
excellent example of engineering design in its time. There are only 15 of these cranes still left
in the world and those left in Scotland have the highest protection, unlike here,” said Ms. Jackson.
Eveleigh Workshops is considered by the Trust to be
one of Australia’s finest industrial heritage items. They are the largest surviving intact railway workshops dating from the steam era in
Australia and possibly the world. The Smithsonian Institute has commented on their rareness and called for their preservation.
Eveleigh consists of some of the finest historic
railway engineering workshops in the world complete with late 19th century forge installations, cranes and power
systems.
The workshops have been suggested for the Heritage
at Risk list as several buildings within the site have already been redeveloped and adapted to a range of non-railway uses while others have
been rezoned for multi-storey development under the Redfern Waterloo Authority’s Built Environment Plan.
“The Trust is concerned about the proposals for
multi-storey development and urges the retention of those workshops and a continuation of their role in training skilled apprentices and in
rebuilding our state’s steam engines,” said Ms. Jackson.
The Heritage at Risk program was begun to build
public awareness of heritage assets. State and territories lists are being released for World Heritage Day while a National Top 10 ‘Heritage
Most at Risk’ list will be determined by the Australian Council of National Trusts (ACNT) from the state/territory lists and announced on
1st July 2007.
Heritage at Risk is an initiative of the National
Trusts of Australia along with Engineers Australia (Historic Section), Museums Australia and the Royal Australian Institute of
Architects.
For more
information:
THE NATIONAL TRUST OF AUSTRALIA (NSW)
Watson Road, Observatory Hill, Sydney NSW 2000
GPO Box 518, Sydney NSW 2001
Kim Carter/National Trust Media Relations
(02) 9258 0131 or 0407 771 698
|