New
Factory at Tumut 3
April 1967 The Canberra Times |
The first stage of Pyneboard's
new building complex at Tumut, New South Wales is now complete. It comprises a main particle
board factory and warehouse, a boiler house and separate administration
block. Adjacent to one of Australia's largest
soft-wood forests, the 53-acre site is approximately one mile south-west
of Tumut on the Snowy Mountains Highway. It was necessary to divert a
natural watercourse so that a rail siding could be constructed to bring
in equipment and materials. To create a level "bench" for
the building, 70,000 cubic yards of earth had to be moved. Sydney architects, Stafford, Moor and
Farrington, were called upon to plan the building round the plant layout
designed by the German engineering firm of Himmelheber.
It comprises a ground floor and
four upper platform levels with provision for mounting Cyclone
separates on the roof and housing hydraulic press equipment in a pit
26ft deep. Construction is structural steel
frame on concrete pad foundations, with bar and mesh reinforcing, and
galvanised sheet steel cladding to walls and roof. Portal frames in the warehouse area
give a clear span of 176 feet. Fibreglass roof panels admit
daylight to supplement light from windows. Floors are concrete, with steel-trowelled monolithic finish. All processing areas have natural
ventilation, but air conditioning was required in the main
electrical control room for the forming line on the first platform
level. The whole building complex is 122,400
sq. ft in area and the top of the roof-mounted Cyclones is 80
feet above ground level. |