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MMAPSS

Maritime Museums of Australia Project Support Scheme

Applications for the 2026-27 round of MMAPSS funding are closed. Please check this website in early 2027 for details of the next round.

Many cultural institutions around the country care for maritime items of historical and national significance. The museum supports and encourages efforts to conserve and display unique local objects for today’s audiences and future generations.

It also supports staff or volunteers, from remote or regional organisations, to spend time learning specific skills and making valuable connections.

“The MMAPSS funding has been absolutely vital in completing this project. As a small regional collection we have a small budget [and] this funding has allowed us to think creatively about one of our most significant collection items.”

 

Portland Maritime Discovery Centre

Since 1995, the scheme has provided over $2.7 million in support of over 580 projects and more than 100 museological training opportunities to organisations across Australia.

If your museum or organisation has an object(s) of significance you would like to preserve or display, you may be eligible to apply for a grant of up to $15,000 and/or in-kind support where expert staff from the Australian National Maritime Museum can be engaged to assist you.

Your staff or volunteers may also be eligible to attend our Maritime Museum Administrators Course, which provides museological training during a week-long course at the ANMM (more details below).

Wondering whether your project can be funded? See the ‘past recipients’ link below, for information on projects previously funded by MMAPSS. You are also welcome to contact the MMAPSS Coordinator on 02 8241 8369 or mmapss@sea.museum.

Funding is provided by the Australian Federal Government, and the Australian National Maritime Museum.

The scheme gives grants to projects that fall into one of these categories:

  • Collection management (registration, documentation and storage)
  • Conservation (preservation, vessel restoration, conservation work/treatments and professional assessments)
  • Presentation (research, development of exhibitions, establishing interpretative displays and workshops)
  • Development of relevant education or public programs which make collections more accessible to audiences
  • Museological training for paid or unpaid workers of not-for-profit organisations caring for Australia's maritime collections.

Maritime Museum Administrators’ Course

Group of women looking in white boxes in a conservation lab.

“To have the opportunity to take part in this funded course has been invaluable. I cannot imagine anywhere else I could have received such an amazing experience, so educational and so enlightening.”

 

Karyn Bugeja, Amazon 1863 Project

Frequently asked questions

Past recipients

See the full list of recipients to receive MMAPSS funding over the past 10 years, organised by year and state. 

More Information

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