Brisbane Water County Council

Last updated

Brisbane Water County Council
Agency overview
Formed16 October 1942
Dissolved1 January 1980
Superseding agency

Brisbane Water County Council (BWCC) was a county council in the Australian state of New South Wales, responsible for electricity distribution. Named after the Brisbane Water, it was established on 16 October 1942 by a proclamation of the Governor of New South Wales made under the Local Government Act 1919. Its members (constituent councils) were Erina Shire, Woy Woy Shire and the municipality of Gosford. On 1 January 1980 it was merged into Sydney County Council and hence ceased to exist. [1]

BWCC's headquarters, constructed in 1957, [2] were at 50 Mann St, Gosford; after its abolition they became derelict and by 2017 had been occupied by squatters, delaying their planned demolition for redevelopment; [3] an academic study cited the site as an example of "ruin porn". [2] In 2024, the property development firm Aland purchased the site, with plans to build a mixed use development incorporating a supermarket, cafe, restaurant and three apartment buildings; the developer committed to retain the heritage facade of BWCC's old headquarters "to the best of its ability". [4]

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The Shire of Woy Woy was a local government area on the Central Coast region of New South Wales, Australia, centred on the town of Woy Woy. The shire was proclaimed on 1 August 1928 as a result of the proclamation of the separation of the D Riding of Erina Shire and had its council seat at Woy Woy, but covered the majority of the Woy Woy peninsula including Woy Woy Bay, Umina, Blackwall, Kariong, Pearl Beach, and Patonga. Woy Woy Shire was abolished on 1 January 1947 with the reorganisation of local government in the Central Coast region following the end of the Second World War, with the council area amalgamated into Gosford Shire.

References

  1. "AGY-3490 | Brisbane Water County Council". Research Data Australia. Retrieved 24 December 2024.
  2. 1 2 Cushing, Nancy; Kilmister, Michael; Scott, Nathan (2018). "No Vacancy: History and Meaning of Contemporary Ruins in a Regional Australian City". In Lyons, Siobhan (ed.). Ruin Porn and the Obsession with Decay. Cham: Springer International Publishing. pp. 155–177. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-93390-0_9. ISBN   978-3-319-93390-0 . Retrieved 24 December 2024.
  3. "Squatters delay demolition". Central Coast News. 24 August 2017. Retrieved 24 December 2024.
  4. Vale, Merilyn (20 December 2024). "Bold new plan for Frogys site". Central Coast News. Retrieved 24 December 2024.