Current update

Construction started in February 2024 to deliver upgrades to the playground at the Point Hut Pond District Park.

Construction starts: February 2024

Construction ends: mid-2024

Page last reviewed 05 Apr 2024

Project description

Construction is underway on Gordon play space.

Point Hut Pond playground in Gordon is being upgraded to provide better places to play for the local community.

In 2022 we invited feedback on elements for inclusion and the preliminary design. For more information on the consultation that took place, including a What We Heard Report (PDF) summarising the feedback, visit YourSay.

Key features

Junior play area

  • Nature play including stone and timber steppers with artwork and timber balancing stilts.
  • Play opportunities including a vortex climber and a rocker.
  • New softfall throughout the play area.
  • Retaining all existing equipment from the playground.

Maliyan nest area

  • Maliyan nest climber with slide, suitable for junior, pre-teen and teen play.
  • Slide and scramble slope.
  • Nature play elements including timber and boulder steppers.
  • Informal seating opportunities with sandstone blocks.

This upgrade also includes additional seating at the basketball court, interpretive signage and landscaping. All existing trees will be retained, one native tree will be planted as well as new groundcover, native grasses and shrubs.

Construction

Construction activities started on site in February 2024. Work is being carried out as dayworks only between the hours of 7 am and 5 pm Monday to Friday. If required, work may be undertaken on weekends between 8 am and 4 pm.

Point Hut Pond District Park will remain open and accessible during the construction period with discrete work zones created to minimise impacts to the community as much as possible.

The public toilets, picnic facilities and barbecues will remain open at all times. The basketball court will remain accessible with partial closures only needed to install cultural artwork on the existing backboards.

The region where the Point Hut Pond play space upgrade is located holds an ancient cultural and spiritual connection to the Ngunnawal people and has for thousands of years.

This region is traditionally known to the Ngunnawal people as Tuggeranong meaning ‘cold place’ and is rich in cultural resources like the Murrumbidgee River.

The region also holds multiple songlines created and maintained by the Ngunnawal people to access various significant cultural sacred sites and locations such as the Yankee Hat Rock Art at Namadgi, the Rock Shelters at Birrigai, Tidbinbilla and Jedbinbilla ‘where boys become men’ initiation grounds and the Brindabella Mountains where the Ngunnawal people would invite neighbouring nations to participate in the annual Bogong Moth ceremony.

The Murrimbidgee river, which is cared for and occupied by the Ngunnawal peoples for a variety of reasons, underpins cultural and land management practices supporting trade, ceremony, hunting and land boundary systems.

Point Hut Crossing has been used for many years to sustain the local ecosystem which also incorporates local aquatic species and vegetation.

The cultural theme for the play space upgrade is Dhawura Ngunnawal - Ngunnawal Country.

The artwork by Bradley Mapiva Brown, artist and cultural consultant, reflects Dhawura Ngunnawal by featuring the culturally sacred Murrumbidgee River, creation of songlines (pathways) and ceremony. Bagariin Ngunnawal Cultural Consulting provided recommendations to showcase the play space theme.

Those in the final design are:

  • artwork applied to play equipment
  • Maliyan Nest (Wedge tail eagle protector)
  • slides representing the Murrumbidgee River
  • natural elements
  • climbing net representing the use of fishing traps on the Murrumbidgee River.

Related links

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