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Silo art trail takes a turn

MURRAY River Council has been forced to rework its silo art trail as silos in three towns are no longer available.

While the silos were initially earmarked for inclusion in the $1.7 million River Country Art Trail, Bunnaloo, Wakool and Caldwell are not eligible for use under GrainCorp’s new Silo Art Policy.

Murray River Council staff have been seeking alternative solutions for artwork in the three affected towns but the NSW Government’s Regional Tourism Activation Fund clearly stipulates that funded projects must offer a high-impact visitor experience.

With no other viable options immediately available to meet the criteria, and to ensure the funds were not at risk due to lapsed milestones, the council sought a project variation which included use of Moama’s water tower and an additional sculpture in council-owned space at Tooleybuc.

These alternative elements have been approved by the funding body.

Maintaining the “high-impact tourism infrastructure” nature of the funding program, the new project scope will include use of council-owned water towers in Barham, Mathoura, Moulamein and Moama, plus the introduction of the large-scale art piece in Tooleybuc’s Mensforth Park.

Mayor Frank Crawley said councillors and staff shared the community’s disappointment at the situation but Caldwell, Wakool and Bunnaloo would not necessarily miss out on future projects.

“It simply means no projects right now under this particular funding stream,” Cr Crawley said.

“While we won’t be adding large-scale mural works as initially planned in those towns, we will still be seeking alternative funding opportunities that may lean into other types of projects that can enhance the visitor experience, support the townships and excite community members.

“We’ve already got enthusiastic community committees in place and we plan to continue to work with them to come up with ideas to bring exciting new projects to the towns.

“We’ve also invested in upgrades in many of our towns to entice travellers, like the new signage at Wakool Recreation Reserve on the camp-friendly facilities there, so it makes sense to look at offering further incentives to entice visitors to stay longer.

“We assure the community we will keep this in our sights as further funding opportunities come to light.”

With local themes for the trail now identified and an expression-of-interest document set to be published, the next step will be to appoint suitably experienced artists to commission the works for Barham, Moulamein, Moama, Mathoura and Tooleybuc.

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