There are 19 Technology museums in Australia
19 results
Grote Reber was an American pioneer of radio astronomy, which combined his interests in amateur radio and amateur astronomy.
The Kurrajong Radio Museum is a Technology museum located in Kurrajong Hills, NSW.
The museum contains artefacts associated with the history of telecommunications and radio broadcasting in Australia.
Questacon – The National Science and Technology Centre is an interactive science communication facility in Canberra, Australia. It is a museum with more than 200 interactive exhibits relating to science and technology.
This museum contains a comprehensive collection of telecommunications equipment from the late 1880's to the present day.
The Apollo Bay Museum is housed in the buildings from which the submarine cable connected Tasmania to the mainland.
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The Federal Standard Printing Works is one of the few substantially intact provincial newspaper printeries remaining from the gold mining era.
The Henty Observer Printing Museum is housed in the original 1934 brick building of The Observer newspaper.
The Crossley engine at Bourke is an oil-fired stationary engine manufactured by Crossley Brothers in 1923 today.
Museum exploring firearms history & technology in a former precision engineering factory.
Australia's Teaching and Working Museum of Typography and Printing.
The Museum of Printing at NERAM is a Technology museum located in Armidale, NSW.
Several Oaklands figures were accepted and displayed at Parliament House in 2001 before returning home to be displayed in front of the Oaklands Vintage Machinery Museum.
The Penrith Museum of Printing is a unique ‘working museum’ established in Penrith NSW in 2001.
The Queanbeyan Printing Museum displays Letterpress printing technology spanning over 100 years and traces the history of Queanbeyan's first newspaper, "The Golden Age" .
The Sydney Children's museum is a hands on science and technology centre for children between the ages of two and twelve.
The exhibition is located next to the library in the building of the Old Printing Works, the historic Jerilderie and Urana Gazette printing works run by Mr. Samuel Gil.
The Sound Museum aims to identify, collect and preserve recorded sounds, equipment, literature, memorabilia and oral histories, particularly of Tasmanian origin.