![]() “Every customer wants to feel and be treated like they are the most important customer in the world. At the forefront of that strategy is Customer Satisfaction.īoth gents being in the boating industry for many years, they know what a customer expects from a marine repair and maintenance facility. Mark and Rob have developed the facility into a full service boat yard that will handle any make or type of boat/yacht, and that would EXCEED the expectations of the most exacting boat/yacht owner. Rob has extensive experience in all facets of shipwright services with over 26 years in the industry, working initially on Sydney Harbour and then more recently on Pittwater where he has been based for the past 10 years. Mark comes from a long line of shipwrights, being from the renowned Barry-Cotter family, and has been a well-known identity on Pittwater for over 35 years. Watching the skill of the excavator operators working with buckets beneath the surface of the muddy water highlighted the commitment of the entire team to care and conserve this valuable evidence of the site’s history.Bayview Slipway is owned by Mark Barry-Cotter and Rob McKechnie. ICS was present on site during the excavation of the surrounds to Munn’s Slipway, including installation of bored piles and a reinforced concrete ring beam to contain the remains and support the surrounding shoreline stonework. ![]() ICS provided detailed documentation and design for the conservation of the sandstone blocks forming the remains of Munn’s Slipway, including selection and approval of materials for bedding and jointing of the small number of blocks which required reinstatement after construction of the new shoreline stonework. Multiple iterations of the complex geometry for the shoreline stonework ultimately identified that the optimum solution required omitting two portions of the new sandstone shoreline in a ‘cut-out’, thus revealing the slipway remains. During this phase, ICS was involved in a design exercise to determine how best to conserve the remains. Initially the remains of Munn’s Slipway were reburied to protect them during bulk earthworks required to excavate Nawi Cove and construct the headland. The outcome of this assessment identified that whilst the remains would be best preserved by reburial, exposure of some or all of the remains would be a viable conservation outcome, particularly given the potential for interpretation, and the way the remains confirmed the accuracy of the location for the newly constructed shoreline. ![]() ICS was commissioned to undertake a condition assessment of the archaeological remains of Munn’s Slipway and to advise on options for conservation of the remains. Munn’s Slipway was incorporated into the proposed new sandstone shoreline of the reserve, on the northern shore of Nawi Cove. Comprising an area of flat sandstone units forming the ramp of the slipway, with semi-dressed stones along either edge, a decayed timber rail was also found running down the centre of the slipway. The reserve has been designed to complement the other headland parks of the harbour (such as Mrs Macquarie's Chair and Goat Island) and aims to let visitors get up close to the water of the harbour.Īrchaeological excavations at the start of the project found the remains of a slipway from James Munn’s 1820s boatyard on the site. From 1836 onwards the original headland and foreshore was cut away to make space for wharves and docking activities. The topography of the new park was inspired by the shape of the pre-1836 shoreline. The six-hectare parkland has transformed one of Sydney's oldest industrial sites, stretching back two centuries. The opening of Barangaroo Reserve in 2015 has allowed Sydneysiders to walk around a part of the Sydney harbour foreshore that had been closed off to the public for more than 100 years.
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