Monday, March 10, 2014

Centenary column ticks off some unfinished business for Canberra - The Canberra Times


Nine-month-old Julia Liso and parents Agnieszka and Andrew of Watson.

Nine-month-old Julia Liso and parents Agnieszka and Andrew of Watson. Photo: Elesa Kurtz



Canberrans ticked off some unfinished business dating back 100 years on Tuesday morning when Chief Minister, Katy Gallagher, dedicated the Canberra Centenary Column on the slopes of City Hill.


The $200,000, 8.5 metre tall structure contains a time capsule which will provide Canberrans 100 years from now an insight into how the current generation lived, worked and played.


Both Ms Gallagher and territory historian, David Headon, linked the centenary column to the as yet unbuilt "commencement column" envisaged by King O'Malley for the city a century ago.


Official sealing of the Canberra Centenary Time Capsule on City Hill Park.

Official sealing of the Canberra Centenary Time Capsule on City Hill Park. Photo: Elesa Kurtz



The plinth for that column, which was to serve as Canberra's "ceremonial heart" and celebrate the Empire, was the backdrop against which Lady Denman unveiled the name of the national capital on March 12, 1913.


"We have had federal governments that have waxed and waned about their love for Canberra but that is not true of the people of the city (themselves)," Ms Gallagher said.


"We have finished off what should have happened 100 years ago."


Chief Minister Katy Gallagher and Canberra City Heart Business Association and CBD Ltd chairman Emmanuel Nataras.

Chief Minister Katy Gallagher and Canberra City Heart Business Association and CBD Ltd chairman Emmanuel Nataras. Photo: Elesa Kurtz



The centenary column is a community based initiative, conceived and paid for by Canberra CBD Ltd. It has been built on the lower northern slopes of City Hill and is the work of artist Geoff Farquhar-Still.


A stainless steel obelisk rising from a granite-dressed concrete base, the column's surrounds are decorated with etched images celebrating the national capital's last 100 years.


Ms Gallagher said she was hopeful that the addition of the column and time capsule to the City Hill precinct would attract more visitors to the spot.


Safe access to City Hill is by the traffic lights on Northbourne Avenue and London Circuit. Sightseers can walk south along the Northbourne Avenue nature strip until they reach the monument at the gateway to the hill precinct.


The existing gravel path is to be replaced with a permanent concrete walkway in the near future.


While the costs for the improved access are being paid for by the ACT Government, the time capsule and column have been funded by the commercial property owners of Civic, Braddon and Turner.


Manny Notaras, the chairman of Canberra CBD Ltd, said the column meant far more to him than just a monument on City Hill.


''I would be one of the oldest Canberrans here today,'' he said. ''My late father came to Canberra just 14 years after the original foundation stone (for the unfinished commenced column) was laid.''


Centenary baby Julia Liso, aged just nine months, represented the other end of the age spectrum.


She was also considered the person present most likely to be able to attend the opening of the time capsule 100 years hence.


''We'll definitely have it on her to-do list,'' proud parents Agnieszka and Andrew Liso said.


One bystander, who preferred to remain anonymous, said City Hill was an eminently appropriate place to mark the birth of a great city.


''While I'm not aware of any Canberrans being born on City Hill I'm pretty certain that over the years quite a few have been conceived here.''


Tuesday marked the official end of the Canberra Centenary Year that commenced on March 12, 2013.



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