The name Builyan is an Aboriginal word, meaning stone curlew.[1]
The Builyan Cemetery (formerly the Many Peaks Cemetery) is on the Gladstone Regional Council's Local Heritage Register.[2] An area of 4 acres at Many Peaks was proclaimed a cemetery reserve in 1910.[3]
Builyan State School opened on 4 December 1922.[4]
Builyan Post Office opened on 1 July 1927 (a receiving office had been open from 1912) and closed on 13 August 1993.[5][6] The building known as "The Old Post Office" now operates as a Community Centre and Tourist information.[citation needed]
Builyan Hall was opened in August 1950, built from local timbers with a dance floor of spotted gum. A ceremony at the hall attended by 500-600 people switched on mains electricity to the town on 30 October 1954.[7][8]
There are no secondary schools in the Boyne Valley. The nearest is Miriam Vale State School which offers secondary schooling to Year 10. For Years 11 and 12, the nearest schools are Gladstone State High School, Rosedale State School and Monto State High School.[11]
Attractions
The Dawes Range Tunnel section of the Boyne Burnett Inland Rail Trail was opened on 11 September 2021. The 26.28-kilometre (16.33 mi) section starts at Barrimoon Siding, Kalpowar and finishes at Builyan, Boyne Valley.[12] This section contains 6 tunnels between Barrimoon Siding and Golembil Siding, and they are Local Heritage listed.[13][14] Tunnel Six is the only place 100 year old rail and hogback sleepers are preserved on any of the disused rail corridors in the state. Hogback sleepers have a round top. They are hand hewn from the hard dense iron bark trees growing adjacent to the track.[15] The trail also passes the historic township of Many Peaks with its Local Heritage listed attractions – the Many Peaks Railway Complex,[16] and Many Peaks Road Bridge.[17] The Rail Trail is currently open as far as the Railway siding at Builyan in the Boyne Valley with Free camp area, fresh water and public ammenities.
While not on the rail trail, the Heritage listed Many Peaks Railway Dam is accessed by getting on to the (very low traffic) bitumen road at Many Peaks and riding back less than a kilometre. There is a new shelter shed, history information signage, toilet block and elevated lookout over the old weir. There is no drinking water available.[18][19]
^"PUBLIC RESERVES". The Brisbane Courier. No. 16, 497. Queensland, Australia. 25 November 1910. p. 7. Retrieved 29 September 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
^"GLADSTONE NEWS". Morning Bulletin. No. 27, 805. Queensland, Australia. 12 August 1950. p. 8. Retrieved 10 October 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Light switched on at Builyan". Rockhampton Morning Bulletin. 1 November 1954. p. 4.