Got time: Jindabyne Clock Tower and Memorial Hall upgrades

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For the first time in many, many years, the Jindabyne Clock Tower is ticking again thanks to the NSW Government’s Stronger Country Communities funding upgrades to the Jindabyne Memorial Hall and the tireless work of a master horologist.

The Memorial Hall was erected 55 years ago when the town of Jindabyne was moved to its current location in preparation of the creation of Lake Jindabyne Dam, with its clock tower serving as a prominent local landmark for the decades that followed.

At the time in the 1960s, the clock was a state-of-the-art melding of mechanics and electronics. The clock mechanism was driven by a then-state-of-the-art IBM master clock system, which took up much of what is now the Hall’s supper room.

Similar systems were in use in major train stations and government buildings around the world for many years, but a design flaw with this archaic computer caused it to become less and less reliable as time went on – eventually becoming entirely uneconomical to repair and keep up-and-running.

Council was granted $130,000 in 2020 under Round 3 of the NSW Government’s Stronger Country Communities Fund to breathe new life into Jindabyne Memorial Hall. This much-needed funding saw the installation of air conditioning, modern lighting and emergency fixtures in the main building. Asbestos was removed and replaced in the toilet block, and the carpark was also upgraded.

All of these very necessary completed works are now overshadowed by the rebirth of the clock tower after decades of lying dormant. Master Horologist (clockmaker) Andrew Markerink of Master Clockmakers – whose list of projects include the renewal of clock towers at Sydney Town Hall and Central Station – installed a modern, automated and low-maintenance clock mechanism to bring the Jindabyne Clock Tower back to life.

The new clock is GPS enabled to automatically adjust itself throughout the year (and at daylight savings changeover), and can even self-correct in the event of a blackout.

Council would like to thank Master Clockmakers and the NSW State Government for making this project a reality, for bringing our clock back to the life and for the Memorial Hall upgrades.

/Public Release. View in full here.