European heritage
Declared a national park in 1984, Namadgi National Park has helped protect the biodiversity of the ACT, preserving diverse bird and animal species, plant life, and Aboriginal and European cultural heritage sites.
The Namadgi Visitor Centre opened in 1990. In 1991, the park was expanded to its current size of 106,095 hectares, about 46% of the ACT.
Pastoralists settled in the upper valleys of the Cotter, Gudgenby, Orroral, Naas and Tidbinbilla rivers from the 1830s. Timber extraction began in the Brindabellas in the 1930s but has long since ceased.
Recreational skiing began in the Brindabella Range with the formation of the Canberra Alpine Club in 1934, and a shelter and interpretation site stands today at the site of the old Mount Franklin ski chalet.
Space tracking stations commissioned by NASA and operated by local technicians were integral in the Apollo program of the 1960s, with the huge 'dish' antenna operated at Honeysuckle Creek beaming live images to the world on the day of the Apollo 11 moon landing.