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LocationMOUNT BUANGOR STATE PARK BAYINDEEN AND MOUNT BUANGOR STATE PARK RAGLAN, ARARAT RURAL CITY, PYRENEES SHIRE
File NumberHER/2002/000223LevelRegistered |
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What is significant? How is it significant? Why is it significant?
Kozminsky's mill and log chute is a rare
surviving example of a large sawmill and log delivery system which
operated during the early period of Victorian timber-getting. Marks
Kozminsky established the mill in partnership with David Sanderson in
1876. The site features the intact formations of a wagon track and log
chute descending from the plateau of Mount Buangor, east of Ararat.
Large eucalypts growing in the chute reinforce its nineteenth-century
origin. At the mill, a four-metre-deep pit for the vertical
breaking-down saw is the deepest recorded in Victoria to date. The
sawdust trench and other earthworks are large and very well preserved.
The mill closed in 1879.
Kozminsky's mill and log chute is of
historical and scientific significance to the State of Victoria.
Kozminsky's mill and log chute is
historically and scientifically significant as a comparatively intact
nineteenth-century sawmill and log delivery route. Log chutes are rare
in Victoria and Kozminsky's is one of the best preserved of its type
known. The remains of the logging route illustrate the construction
methods and engineering features required to operate in steeply
forested terrain in this period. The site is significant for its
potential to provide evidence relating to the technological history of
the sawmilling industry.
Forestry and Timber Industry
Sawmill