
You won’t find this in the guide books. While thousands of Canberrans drive past them daily I doubt if many people would even remember seeing them. I have never seen any one use them.
I refer to two park benches in the median strip of Limestone Avenue, Ainslie. One at the northern end, where Limestone Avenue meets Girrahween Street, the other at the southern end, where Batman & Quick Streets enter Limestone Avenue.
Limestone Avenue was the first ‘presentation avenue’ in Canberra and by way of gift to the city the Australian Natives Association (ANA), in 1928, lined a stretch of the median strip with native trees.
While the ANA’s intentions were much grander (the Great Depression intervened), to mark the ends of the planted area, in 1931-32, the ANA ended up installing the two modest art-deco ornamental benches you see today.
An interesting thing you will note is that the benches were installed facing out from the tree lined area – like bookends, if you like.
Art-deco style was popular in Canberra (as it was elsewhere) at this time. Close by in Donaldson Street you will find another great example of art-deco architecture – Ainslie Primary School.

Note how the ANA is referred to as the Australian Natives Association on one plaque and Australian Native Association on the other – A somewhat different connotation nowadays if not in the 1930s.

Nowadays Limestone Avenue is better known for its heavy traffic (especially at peak times) than its median strip trees (many of which have died anyway) and park benches. That said the benches do create in ones mind a sense of the formality of days gone by.
Worth a look if you are in the area.
Address: Limestone Avenue
Directions: The first bench is located about 300m down Limestone Avenue from the Australian War Memorial.
For my next CANBERRA – INNER NORTH review click HERE.
For other Canberra reviews click HERE.

Stylish design, as is the primary school. Mine was in a 1930s building too but it didn’t look like that!
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Here it is: http://www.modernism-in-metroland.co.uk/lady-bankes.html
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I prefer the Canberra one though there is actaully a school down the road from this one that is much more similar looking to the one you attended.
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Interesting – it seems a very English style of architecture to me
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Spot on Sarah, and guess who built Australia or rather the 6 colonies in the 1800s ? 🙂
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See, these are the things that are overlooked. Because they are there, and “obscure” despite being in plain sight!
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