Date: 18/08/2021 17:19:45
From: Speedy
ID: 1779477
Subject: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

Link

Australian Alps Iconic Heritage Huts
There are over 200 historic huts, buildings and structures across the National Heritage listed Australian Alps National Parks and Reserves of the ACT, NSW and Victoria.

These huts and structures represent the diversity of previous land uses and help tell part of the historic and continuing story of the evolution and human interaction of this remarkable landscape. Whilst many of the huts are associated with past periods of pastoralism, many are also associated with mining, surveying, logging and milling, hydro-electric development, scientific research, conservation and park management or recreation such as skiing, bushwalking or fishing.

While the intact huts, ruins and sites of former huts are associated with a more recent part of this story, their presence in particular locations also act as markers for a far older and continuing landscape story of the Australian Alps Aboriginal Traditional Owners and first inhabitants. Aboriginal people came to the region at least 21,000 years ago, creating networks of pathways through the mountains, along ridges and valley floors. These cultural pathways link ceremonial sites along the mountain ranges as well as camps, settlements and other sites rich in natural resources and are still valued and still have strong associations with Aboriginal people and communities today.

The huts also are associated with the modern day story of volunteers through the Kosciuszko Huts Association (KHA) and Victorian High Country Huts Association (VHCHA), being two community voluntary associations formed to assist with the conservation, management and reconstruction of huts, homesteads and surrounds within the Australian Alps. You can help care for the huts and there associated heritage by joining or supporting these volunteer groups and by following the Hut Code when visiting any of the huts and learning more about the values and how huts of the Australian Alps are managed here.

The Australian Alps Iconic Heritage Huts 3D Digital Tours Project provides a unique visitor and interpretive experience for members of the public & community who may not be able to visit these locations due to access difficulties or the remote nature of many of these historic hut sites through 3D virtual tours & walk-throughs incorporating interpretive material such as drone footage, videos and historic information about each hut. Click on the interactive map below and each of the 13 huts captured so far to take a digital tour.

Link

Reply Quote

Date: 18/08/2021 17:39:29
From: Peak Warming Man
ID: 1779481
Subject: re: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

Thanks Speedy, that’s a good find.

Reply Quote

Date: 18/08/2021 18:00:44
From: Michael V
ID: 1779489
Subject: re: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

One of the NSW huts has a two-seater long-drop dunny. Is that documented?

Reply Quote

Date: 18/08/2021 18:04:37
From: Peak Warming Man
ID: 1779490
Subject: re: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

Michael V said:


One of the NSW huts has a two-seater long-drop dunny. Is that documented?

LOL

Reply Quote

Date: 18/08/2021 18:08:37
From: Speedy
ID: 1779493
Subject: re: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

Michael V said:


One of the NSW huts has a two-seater long-drop dunny. Is that documented?

Many of them used to. I think this was so that they could close off one while using the other, and vice-versa, but that’s not how they were used most times. As a little kid, it was good fun to actually go to the toilet with my friends :)

Reply Quote

Date: 18/08/2021 18:24:17
From: Michael V
ID: 1779495
Subject: re: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

Speedy said:


Michael V said:

One of the NSW huts has a two-seater long-drop dunny. Is that documented?

Many of them used to. I think this was so that they could close off one while using the other, and vice-versa, but that’s not how they were used most times. As a little kid, it was good fun to actually go to the toilet with my friends :)

This was side-by-side with two holes carved from one plank of timber. No door.

Reply Quote

Date: 18/08/2021 18:26:49
From: JudgeMental
ID: 1779497
Subject: re: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

we stayed in a few huts up around Heyfield in Victoria. used to fish the streams up there. Freezing cold usually as we weren’t there in summer.

Reply Quote

Date: 19/08/2021 09:22:57
From: Speedy
ID: 1779622
Subject: re: Heritage Huts 3D Tours

Michael V said:


Speedy said:

Michael V said:

One of the NSW huts has a two-seater long-drop dunny. Is that documented?

Many of them used to. I think this was so that they could close off one while using the other, and vice-versa, but that’s not how they were used most times. As a little kid, it was good fun to actually go to the toilet with my friends :)

This was side-by-side with two holes carved from one plank of timber. No door.

No door? Pfft. The one we used to use had a door, but the top half of the front wall was just fly mesh. Twin toilets with a view!

The toilets are no longer there, being removed by about 1983. I was actually back there around Easter this year and spent some time looking for the foundations of the block and found nothing, however I suspect that I was expecting to find them further into the bush, when the little ruins in the clearing near the hut, that I had dismissed, were likely the ones I was looking for.

Reply Quote