A boardwalk and sculpture trail unrolls along the Elwick Bay foreshore in Hobart's northern suburbs, commissioned after a 2005 design competition won by local firm Room 11. The first stage, opened in 2011, culminates at Wilkinsons Point in a cantilevered timber structure that extends out over the water, engineered to feel like a threshold between land and bay rather than a lookout. A second stage in 2014 added an angular, coloured-glass pavilion further along the walk, work that later won a national civic landscape award and an urban design prize from the architecture institute. The sculptures rotate and accumulate along the path rather than sitting in a single building, so the park reads as much as infrastructure — a public walkway repurposed as gallery — as it does as art. It is free, always open, and reachable by a short bus ride from central Hobart. Council funding for further stages stalled after 2021, but the existing boardwalk and its sculptures remain intact and in daily use, a rare case of civic architecture doing double duty as a contemporary art venue.
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