100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Caloundra RSL's historic 'Huey' helicopter to be moved for major four-lane road

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Key change: music venue plans to add brewery

A live music venue that began as a custom guitar workshop is seeking to add a brewery and the sale of food and beverages More

Surf club elects its first female president

A Coast surf lifesaving club has made history by electing its first female president. Victoria Berry took the helm at the Maroochydore Surf Life Saving More

Busy transport hub gears up for new bus depot

A tourist hotspot is gearing up for a new bus depot, which would improve bus running times and reduce CO2 emissions in the congested More

Sami Muirhead: a bellyful of Bali love

Ashes in cocktails, island romances and strained stomach muscles from surfing after a 40-year hiatus More it was one of the best weeks of More

Photo of the day: river glow

"Lots of clouds made for a fabulous sunrise over the Maroochy River." Sandy Gillis was on the spot to snare this photo. If you have a More

B2B: First-home buyer support continues in Queensland

From July 1, first-home buyers in Queensland can still access valuable support to help them enter the property market. The First Home Owner Grant of More

An historic ‘Huey’ helicopter from the Vietnam War may be moved from its home in the Caloundra RSL’s Memorial Garden to make way for a major four-lane road.

The UH-1B Iroquois Helicopter A2-1022 from the Battle of Long Tan has hovered over the garden since 2012 and has been a prized addition to the green sanctuary.

But a proposal to build a major intersection and four-lane road from Nicklin Way – extending and double-laning Third Avenue from Nicklin Way to the Caloundra CBD – would have sliced off a chunk from the RSL’s Memorial Garden.

The $37.8 million Caloundra Transport Corridor Upgrade would have reclaimed 7 metres of the garden which the RSL described as a “savage slice” of their space treasured by veterans and their families.

The ‘Huey’ chopper on Third Avenue will be moved. Picture: Warren Lynam

They initially opposed the move and rallied the community, but faced with the prospect of the Sunshine Coast Council forcing the reclamation, the RSL agreed to negotiate for an alternative.

The Caloundra RSL had initially petitioned against the plan to slice off a section of their Memorial Garden.

Caloundra RSL sub branch president Heather Christie said the group had convinced council to reduce the amount of garden lost from 7 metres down to between 2.5 metres and 3 metres.

A new section of garden would then be created in an area north of its current location near an aged care centre next to Ben Bennett Park.

But even that would have left the helicopter in its original home abutting “an ugly barrier” with cars whizzing past along a four-lane Third Avenue which the council has projected would be used by 20,000 cars a day.

So the helicopter will be relocated along with other items like the flag pole, cenotaph and bofors gun, Ms Christie said.

Help keep independent and fair Sunshine Coast news coming by subscribing to our free daily news feed. All it requires is your name and email. See SUBSCRIBE at the top of this article 

She said a new pavilion would also be built to provide shade during commemorations such as Anzac Day because new plants would take time to reach their potential.

“We would like them not to go ahead with Third Avenue at all. To us Arthur Street would have had less impact but it’s apparently not on the cards for council so we have to work towards the best outcome for the community and veterans,” Ms Christie said.

Ms Christie said the RSL was in the process of evaluating the move and getting quotes and was appealing to the community to “come on board” and help with donations of plant and equipment and to help move the helicopter.

“We would like the community involved because the community was behind us when we launched a petition (against the Third Avenue extension).”

The Huey helicopter was one of two involved in the Battle of Long Tan in 1966 in which the troops were vastly outnumbered -108 Anzacs to an estimated 2500 Viet Cong – in torrential downpours in a rubber plantation.

The RAAF helicopter took off in the treacherous conditions to replenish supplies in the middle of a firefight as ammunition was running low.

Major Harry Smith and a number of the survivors from the battle, which has been immortalised on film, reside on the Sunshine Coast.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share