Communications Museum Sydney 12 Kitchener Parade, Bankstown NSW 2200

Communications Museum Sydney





30 Reviews
  • Tuesday10 AM–4 PM
  • Wednesday10 AM–4 PM
  • ThursdayClosed
  • FridayClosed
  • SaturdayClosed
  • SundayClosed
  • MondayClosed




Communications Museum Sydney 12 Kitchener Parade, Bankstown NSW 2200




About the Business

Location: Sydney - National Communications Museum |

Contacts

Call Us
+61297907624
12 Kitchener Parade, Bankstown NSW 2200

Hours

  • Tuesday10 AM–4 PM
  • Wednesday10 AM–4 PM
  • ThursdayClosed
  • FridayClosed
  • SaturdayClosed
  • SundayClosed
  • MondayClosed

Features

  • Wheelchair-accessible entrance
  • Toilets
  • Wheelchair-accessible toilet
  • Restaurant




Recommended Reviews

Marilyn Coventry
19.10.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
I took a group there today and the dedication and the knowledge of our guides and passion for what they do is incredible! Thank you so much for your knowledge and the working exhibits speak for themselves (so to speak!!)
Gavin Rogers
14.10.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
Small Australian telecommunications history museum. Very knowledgeable staff, working hands-on exhibits.
Ric Tester
03.09.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
Great place for anyone interested in our telecommunications heritage. The staff are most obliging and pleasant.
Lafayette Waelchi
27.08.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
Great experience and staff were really helpful.
Ken Smith
26.08.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
Excellent guide
Fergus Fricke
01.08.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
Occasionally treasure hunts discover gems that one didn’t even know existed. In the case of the Telstra Museum in Bankstown the unknown gem comes with an invaluable curator and former Telstra employee, Brian Mullins. Amber with a preserved insect inside pales into insignificance with these finds. I went to the museum, on the advice of Robert Flynn from Telstra, to look for information on the Balmain Telephone Exchange and became fascinated by other items on display including photos and exhibits of telephone, telegraph, telex and other communications equipment used in post offices, telephone exchanges and radio and television stations.One fascinating exhibit was a 1910 Sydney GPO handwritten record, known as the “misdemeanours book”, in which were entered the names of employees, the “Nature of Irregularity” they had committed and the fine imposed on them. It is a huge official ledger of about a thousand pages with one or two employees per page. Amongst the entries was one for an employee whose irregularity was absence without leave". His fine was a salary reduction from £140 to £120 per year. Another entry was for a thirteen-year-old messenger boy. He had fines of 1 shilling for each of eight irregularities that included incorrectly addressing telegrams
Niqabi_ blogger
24.07.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
I stumbled across a TikTok of all things, featuring video inside some sort of museum of telephony on the Telstra account and thought “wow, that’s cool” – so I had to visit! To my amazement, my kids had the most awesome time!We went along to film a segment for The Today Show so I assumed the kids would be bored, but that was far from the case.The Telstra Museum has locations in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. In Sydney its tucked away inside what I can only assume is a former Telstra Exchange facility or office, because it’s far from a Powerhouse like location – however, it’s perfect for what it is.In the back streets of Bankstown, behind a closed door this room is full of some wonderful treasures from our telecommunications past.There’s mobile phones from the early days, big enough to pass as a suitcase today, and smaller ones with pull out extendable antennas.Have one of the amazing volunteers (who are likely former Telstra employees with a love for this very technology) show you things like morse code, telex machines or even the original Telephone Exchanges.What’s amazing is, much of it is still working!Old Payphones, even Television and Radio network operations control panels – you name it, these museums have it.Oh, and there’s also George – the Speaking Clock. Kept ready for the day our mobiles stop telling us the time, a great slice of history itself.
John Ng
23.07.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
just putting 5 stars because sydney needs more museums.
1nathcool
21.07.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
Worth to visit, Great experience and staff were really helpful
Vipul Chaudhari
19.07.2023
Communications Museum Sydney
Worth to visit...good to know how telephones were working, look, quality

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12 Kitchener Parade, Bankstown NSW 2200
Communications Museum Sydney