2. Shear Outback The Australian Shearers’ Hall of Fame Hay, NSW
3. DESIGN Architects: Paul Berkemeier Pty Ltd Landscape: Jane Irwin Landscapes Exhibition: Bannyan Wood Pty Ltd Graphic Design: Marianne Hawke Lighting: Peter McLean Project Director: Sara Hector
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5. WINNER 2002 Royal Australian Institute of Architects National Awards Best commercial building. BHP Colorbond Steel Award.
6. "the building is formally powerful and essentially rural in character without resorting to cliché. The building has a beautiful economy of materials and form - it could not have been conceived in any material other than steel and the exuberant use of it throughout the building has created a regional landmark". RAIA National Awards citation
7. WINNER 2002 Royal Australian Institute of Architects NSW Awards Commendation Public and Commercial Buildings category. BHP Colorbond Award for the Innovative Use of Steel in Architecture.
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9. Shear Outback was built to honour Australia’s shearers, their past, present and future. Developed with assistance from a $4.66 million Centenary of Federation grant, it opened on the 26 th of January 2002. In its first year of operation the museum has welcomed 40,000 visitors.
20. The building was designed to boldly break the flatness of the plain with its massive steel blades,
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22. And reflect the vaulting open spaces and shafting light of the shearing shed.
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25. The use of wood and metal mirrors historic sheds, complementing John Sulman’s innovative iron house, Bishop’s Lodge, built in Hay in 1888.
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27. Like Bishop’s Lodge, Shear Outback was built to combat the region’s fierce climate and be environmentally-sustainable
28. The tall blades protect the museum from highway noise, while vents mounted on the back regulate air flow and pressure in the Hall of Fame.
29. The broad, gutterless roof acts as a rainwater collector. Runoff gathers in a drain and flows into the dam.
30. It is then pumped by the windmill to water the garden and revegetated saltbush plains.
31. The museum’s design emerged from a fruitful collaboration between the architect, landscape designer, exhibition team, project director and Hay community.