Walter Burley Griffin Incinerator
Built in 1934 the Walter Burley Griffin Incinerator was originally the Willoughby Municipal Incinerator. Its purpose was to dispose of Willoughby Council’s municipal waste rather than dumping it at the tip. As the name suggests, Walter Burley Griffin designed the building, the same architect responsible for the winning design of the city Canberra in the ACT.
Designed to use the Australian designed and patented Reverberatory Refuse Incinerator, it was very efficient for its time. Essentially, it used and inclined vibrating conveyor to move waste from the feed to the furnace. As the conveyor moved, waste was heated using excess furnace heat generated from the burning waste. This dried the incoming feed, making it more efficient to burn.
Over time, council neglected the incinerator, failing to upgrade its capacity as waste volumes grew until it closed in 1967.
In 2011 the Willoughby Incinerator re-opened to operate as an art space and artist studios on the lower section, while a café operates at street level. Run by Willoughby Council, the art space and studios present a diverse range of exhibitions each year.
We had a coffee at the café and then had a look through the gallery. As well as the art, the building interior was interesting, because of the industrial architecture still visible. Unfortunatley, much has been removed, but some still remains.
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To see what else there is to do in New South Wales, please see some of our other stories.
Recycling at its best! Very interesting post.
It really is a great way to reuse an old building. Much better than demolishing the old one. And a great public art space created!
cool that such an interesting structure was repurposed
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YEs, isn’t it great when an old building can be repurposed for something useful
Absolutely!