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Posted: 2024-02-26 18:13:52

It was hoped it could become the heart of tourism in a far-flung corner of Tasmania — instead it lies derelict, with promised funds for its resurrection yet to materialise.

Opened in 2004 by Forestry Tasmania, Dismal Swamp, near Togari in the state's far north-west, invited visitors to explore the largest sinkhole in the southern hemisphere.

It was fitted with a 110-metre slide and a boardwalk that weaved through the blackwood forest, and featured installations designed for the landscape by prominent local artists, including Bill Yaxley, Greg Duncan, and the late Ros Langford.

But despite high hopes for its success, Dismal Swamp shut in 2019 after years of troubled operation, and locals are "shocked" by its condition.

A winding metal slide twists through lush Australian bushland.

Before it closed, visitors to Dismal Swamp could take a 110 metre slide down into the natural sinkhole. (Supplied: Jaws Architects)

Site ‘left to rot’

Before it closed, visitors were greeted by two giant metal praying mantes, perched high on wooden poles — but Hazel Tapson, a former employee and local resident, said they had been cut down with a chainsaw.

"The praying mantis, one of them was crushed … and one of the legs broken off … and a lot of the pole missing and chopped up bits near it," Ms Tapson said.

A metal sculpture of a praying mantis attached to a tree

One of the praying mantis sculptures at Dismal Swamp in 2004.(ABC News)

All that remains of the other sculpture was a broken off leg, with the body nowhere to be seen.

"Who would do that to someone's art?" she said.

"I just can't fathom that."

An art installation with a crayfish and stump in woodlands.

Several sculptures, such as Bill Yaxley's Crayfish Craters installation, have been removed or destroyed. (Supplied: Hazel Tapson)

Another installation, Bill Yaxley's Crayfish Craters, featured land crayfish sculptures sitting atop "chimneys" — a representation of the soil columns they create in the wild.

But Ms Tapson said some had been crushed by fallen trees, and others were "scattered through the forest".

Glass signs at the entrance have also been smashed.

"To see all of those things destroyed, just wilfully destroyed and just been left to rot … it's been really, really devastating," Ms Tapson said.

A concrete wall with an empty rectangular window in it. Shattered glass covers the ground.

Glass signs at Dismal Swamp have been vandalised. (Supplied: Hazel Tapson)

The Parks and Wildlife Service (PWS) removed a Huon Pine bowl created by Aboriginal artist Ros Langford, taken from a "place of cleansing and remembrance" for safekeeping.

It was lined with rocks collected from the Circular Head area, which Ms Tapson said were now missing.

Two Aboriginal ceremonies were held there, one a handover ceremony, and the other a ceremony for Hazel's daughter Claire, who died in a car accident in 2006.

The path leading to the bowl was called Claire's Walk.

"The demise of the whole [site] is a real stab in the heart," she said.

"That bowl, to me, should have stayed there in place but the whole site should have been guarded over."

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