The Weekend Post

Dreamtime’s fast becoming a reality

- CHRIS CALCINO

A FEAT of modern engineerin­g is playing out in a Portsmith shipyard as the gigantic steel skeleton of Cairns’ newest tourism attraction comes to life.

Tourism conglomera­te Experience Co wants to have Dreamtime Island on the water by Christmas, but there is plenty of work to happen between now and then.

English Engineerin­g director Pat English is overseeing the reef pontoon constructi­on in Austal’s massive workshop.

The $6.7m vessel will be stationed at Moore Reef, about 45km off the Cairns coast, and should not have to come back to shore for maintenanc­e until it has been at sea for about 15 years.

That means attention to detail is crucial – and there is no shortage of details in the two-storey structure, with underwater viewing station and on-board scientific laboratory.

“We’re fairly well experience­d at it,” Mr English said.

“We just finished doing one for Cruise Whitsunday­s last year.

“And there’s a couple of overseas inquiries but obviously this COVID-19 has slowed everything down a bit.

“So we hope to be building more – they’re a good job and they’re unique to Cairns.”

Work crews have been busy welding together huge steel pipes to form the artificial island’s floating frame, with the underwater observator­y and engine room sections to be mounted in the coming days.

Austal will chip in some of the finishing touches and painting before the big beast is rolled out to Trinity Inlet on rail tracks to see if it floats.

“This is a good job, this will keep us busy for 12 months,” Mr English said.

“Everyone seems to be fairly buoyant at the moment, strangely enough.”

Experience Co’s existing pontoon at Moore Reef will be retired from the post, although its future use has not yet been revealed.

Experience Co Great Barrier Reef general manager Adam Jones said the replacemen­t would be an extension of the popular Dreamtime Dive and Snorkel Indigenous sea ranger tour company and greatly increase patronage capacity.

“Because it has two full decks, it’s almost double the capacity,” he said.

“The current one has a very small top deck at one end, this one has two full decks.

“We’re also doing a lot of things like increasing the water entry so we don’t have the bottleneck­s that a lot of the existing pontoons have.”

He was particular­ly excited about the partnershi­ps Experience Co could form with CSIRO, James Cook University and other bodies hoping to conduct on-site reef research for extended periods.

“And we’re putting a science lab on there that’s able to be manned 24 hours a day,” he said.

 ??  ?? English Engineerin­g director Pat English and Experience Co Great Barrier Reef general manager Adam Jones at Austal. Picture: Stewart McLean
English Engineerin­g director Pat English and Experience Co Great Barrier Reef general manager Adam Jones at Austal. Picture: Stewart McLean

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