National Museum of Australia

National Museum of Australia — via Wikimedia Commons
National Museum of Australia · via Wikimedia Commons
National museum · est. 1980 · Canberra, Australia

National Museum of Australia

The National Museum of Australia (NMA) is the country’s foremost history museum, situated on Acton Peninsula in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. Formally established by federal legislation in 1980 and opened in its permanent home on 11 March 2001, the museum holds over 210,000 objects focused on three core themes: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures, Australian history since 1788, and the interplay between people and the Australian environment.

At a glance

Type
National public history museum
Period
Established 1980 by the National Museum of Australia Act; permanent building opened 2001
Style
Postmodern architecture — deconstructivist, designed by Ashton Raggatt McDougall (ARM)
Location
Acton Peninsula, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
Coordinates
35.2924° S, 149.1173° E

Overview

The National Museum of Australia occupies a prominent site on Acton Peninsula beside Lake Burley Griffin, adjacent to the Australian National University. It is operated and funded by the federal government and serves as the primary national repository for objects relating to Australian social history. The museum attracted Australia’s Major Tourist Attraction award in both 2005 and 2006 and received Canberra tourism recognition for five consecutive years (2003–2007).

History

The National Museum of Australia Act 1980 formally created the institution, though the museum spent its early decades without a permanent dedicated building. The striking postmodern structure on Acton Peninsula was opened on 11 March 2001, designed by the firm Ashton Raggatt McDougall under lead architect Howard Raggatt. The building’s design drew immediate controversy for its visual references to Daniel Libeskind’s Jewish Museum Berlin, sparking allegations of plagiarism that were debated publicly in 2000. The exterior features aluminium panels incorporating braille text messages, some of which were later partially obscured with silver discs following political objections.

What you see

The National Historical Collection contains more than 210,000 objects, with standout holdings including the world’s largest collection of Aboriginal bark paintings and stone tools, the heart of champion racehorse Phar Lap preserved in a climate-controlled display, and the original 1948 Holden prototype car. The building itself rewards close attention: a “knotted ropes” structural metaphor runs through the architecture, and an interior walkway — the Uluru Axis — is deliberately aligned toward Australia’s most sacred landmark. Galleries cover 50,000 years of Indigenous heritage, European settlement from 1788, Federation, and key events including the Sydney 2000 Olympics.

Cultural significance

The NMA holds particular significance as one of the most important repositories of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural material in the world, and as of March 2019 had repatriated over 1,400 sets of ancestral remains to Indigenous communities. Its 2017 exhibition “Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters” explored Aboriginal creation mythology and subsequently toured internationally, reaching audiences far beyond Australia.

Practical information

Address
Lawson Crescent, Acton Peninsula, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
Opening hours
Daily 9:00–17:00 (check official website for public holiday variations)
Admission
General admission free; charges may apply for special exhibitions
Website
nma.gov.au

Getting there

The museum is located on Acton Peninsula, approximately 2 km from Canberra city centre. By bus, Route 3 (City–ANU) stops near the museum. By car, the museum is accessible via Parkes Way and Barry Drive, with on-site parking available. Canberra Airport is approximately 15 km away by road. From Sydney, the ACT is a 3-hour drive or a 3.5-hour train journey via NSW TrainLink.

Sources & resources

📷 Diventa un fotografo di Cultural Heritage Online

Condividi le tue foto dei luoghi: restano pubblicate con la tua firma come autore. Più vengono viste, più ti fai conoscere — e presto un concorso premierà le foto più apprezzate.

Accedi o registrati gratis per aggiungere una foto
📋 Copy & share on social
Scroll to Top