Control Room
Provenance
- Camera
- NIKON D810
- Lens
- 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8
- Settings
- 14mm · f/9.0 · 1/8 · ISO 100
- Paper
- Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm
The control room at White Bay Power Station curves in a wide horseshoe of pale green panels. Hundreds of switches, dials, and gauges remain in place. Two timber desks sit at the centre. Paint peels from the ceiling above.
Open edition
Printed to order, no fixed quantity. Each print is hand-signed by the photographer.
Limited edition
A fixed number of prints exist. Once sold, the edition closes permanently. Each print is individually numbered and signed.
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In situ





Print datasheet
- Title
- Control Room
- Series
- White Bay Power Station
- Catalogue
- WBP-103
- Process
- Giclée
- Captured
- 27 May 2016
- Camera
- NIKON D810
- Lens
- 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8
- Aperture
- f/9.0
- Shutter
- 1/8 s
- ISO
- 100
- Focal length
- 14 mm
- Paper
- Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm
- Paper size
- 290 × 200 mm
- Location
- Rozelle, New South Wales, Australia
- Authenticity
- C2PA verified provenance →
- Recognised by
- Highly Commended in Multimedia at the 2016 National Trust of Australia (NSW) Heritage Awards
Rozelle, New South Wales, Australia
Map · Mapbox · OpenStreetMap
About this print
A curved control console wraps across the room in a wide arc. Hundreds of dials, switches, and analogue gauges fill every panel. Pale green paint meets beige cladding at mid-height. Three timber desks sit facing the console, their drawers still closed. Fluorescent tubes hang dark from a ceiling marked with water stains and peeling plaster. The tiled floor is grey with fine dust. No glass is broken. Nothing is overturned.
Brett Patman
The series
White Bay Power Station
Bricklayers laid 3.7 million bricks at White Bay across three and a quarter years of Phase 1 construction, on Wanngal Country at the western edge of Rozelle. The New South Wales Government Railways ran the build through its own Construction Department. By 3 July 1913, boilers and alternators were running before the buildings that housed them were complete.
Print sizes
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