Your home-turf advantage: heritage assessment in Canberra led by someone who has worked inside the ACT regulator.

The Heritage Act 2004 is administered by the ACT Heritage Council, supported by ACT Heritage. Aboriginal places and objects are automatically protected, and the Council must consult Representative Aboriginal Organisations (RAOs) on Aboriginal heritage matters. Archaeological excavation generally requires a permit, with a methodology the Council will scrutinise.
Dr Collins assessed exactly these applications from within the ACT Heritage Unit and constructed statements of significance for the Council. That perspective is hard to buy and impossible to fake — and it is the fastest route to an approval that holds.
No. The ACT operates under the Heritage Act 2004 with the ACT Heritage Council and Representative Aboriginal Organisations, while NSW administers Aboriginal heritage under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 with AHIPs and Registered Aboriginal Parties. Cross-border projects need both handled correctly — COLCO does.
If your project involves archaeological excavation of a heritage place or object, you will generally need a permit from the ACT Heritage Council, supported by an approved methodology. COLCO prepares these applications.
Speak with the COLCO team, led by Dr Sophie Collins — senior heritage expertise for the capital region. Canberra-based, servicing the ACT and NSW.
Request a consultation