Author: John Nicholson
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 9781865082585
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 40
Book Description
The inside story of a national icon.
Building the Sydney Harbour Bridge
Author: John Nicholson
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 9781865082585
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 40
Book Description
The inside story of a national icon.
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 9781865082585
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 40
Book Description
The inside story of a national icon.
The Bridge
Author: Peter Lalor
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 9781741750270
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
The definitive story of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, one of the world's most amazing engineering feats - a structure that has become a national icon.
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 9781741750270
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
The definitive story of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, one of the world's most amazing engineering feats - a structure that has become a national icon.
The Day We Built the Bridge
Author: Samantha Tidy
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781925227437
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :
Book Description
There are moments in history that connect us and define a country. In our hearts and minds, some moments rely on us to hold onto a dream, face tough challenges, and put in a great deal of effort.Big dreams can take generations. It can also take six million hand driven rivets and 53,000 tonnes of steel.The Day We Built the Bridge celebrates our connection with one another, and declares that despite the greatest of challenges, together we can make history.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781925227437
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :
Book Description
There are moments in history that connect us and define a country. In our hearts and minds, some moments rely on us to hold onto a dream, face tough challenges, and put in a great deal of effort.Big dreams can take generations. It can also take six million hand driven rivets and 53,000 tonnes of steel.The Day We Built the Bridge celebrates our connection with one another, and declares that despite the greatest of challenges, together we can make history.
Sydney Art Deco
Author: Peter Sheridan
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780992389666
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 432
Book Description
First photographic reference book on Sydney's Art Deco architecture and lifestyle in the 1930s and 1940s containing contemporary and vintage images. The book covers commercial, residential, cinemas, pubs, civic and industrial buildings with Art Deco features.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780992389666
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 432
Book Description
First photographic reference book on Sydney's Art Deco architecture and lifestyle in the 1930s and 1940s containing contemporary and vintage images. The book covers commercial, residential, cinemas, pubs, civic and industrial buildings with Art Deco features.
Sirius
Author: John Dunn
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780980834758
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
This book is about Sirius, one of Australia and Sydney's best known brutalist buildings and social housing successes. Through numerous battles and green bans, confrontation, arrests in the 1970s, The Rocks Green Ban was lifted for Sirius to be built for local residents who were displaced by The Rocks redevelopment. It has been a rare example of successful public housing since it opened in 1980. By 2015, the NSW Liberal government wants the building and its residents gone. Protection of the building was rejected by its own NSW Heritage Council recommendation to list Sirius on the State Register. This book celebrates Sirius the place, and its history and people. It is one of the few architectural social history books tracking the fight to save the building throughout 2016-2017 and discusses the many long time residents, advocates and the original design by Tao Gofers.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9780980834758
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
This book is about Sirius, one of Australia and Sydney's best known brutalist buildings and social housing successes. Through numerous battles and green bans, confrontation, arrests in the 1970s, The Rocks Green Ban was lifted for Sirius to be built for local residents who were displaced by The Rocks redevelopment. It has been a rare example of successful public housing since it opened in 1980. By 2015, the NSW Liberal government wants the building and its residents gone. Protection of the building was rejected by its own NSW Heritage Council recommendation to list Sirius on the State Register. This book celebrates Sirius the place, and its history and people. It is one of the few architectural social history books tracking the fight to save the building throughout 2016-2017 and discusses the many long time residents, advocates and the original design by Tao Gofers.
To the Bridge: the Journey of Lennie and Ginger Mick
Author: Corinne Fenton
Publisher: Black Dog Books
ISBN: 9781925126822
Category : Australia
Languages : en
Pages : 40
Book Description
The award-winning team of Corinne Fenton and Andrew McLean tell the story of Lennie Gwyther and Ginger Mick, a boy and his pony who crossed Sydney's Harbour Bridge on 19th of March, 1932 and marched into history. Nine-year-old Lennie Gwyther dreamed of seeing the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. With his father's blessing, he rode his pony Ginger Mick across Australia, inspiring crowds of supporters to greet him in cities along the way, as he made his way to Sydney. It was there that he saw the bridge that had captivated his imagination and inspired his brave journey. And it was then that he and Ginger Mick became a legend.This inspiring historical story is about persistence, resilience, bravery, courage and hope. It's about pursuing a dream and the impact that journey can have on those who follow.
Publisher: Black Dog Books
ISBN: 9781925126822
Category : Australia
Languages : en
Pages : 40
Book Description
The award-winning team of Corinne Fenton and Andrew McLean tell the story of Lennie Gwyther and Ginger Mick, a boy and his pony who crossed Sydney's Harbour Bridge on 19th of March, 1932 and marched into history. Nine-year-old Lennie Gwyther dreamed of seeing the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. With his father's blessing, he rode his pony Ginger Mick across Australia, inspiring crowds of supporters to greet him in cities along the way, as he made his way to Sydney. It was there that he saw the bridge that had captivated his imagination and inspired his brave journey. And it was then that he and Ginger Mick became a legend.This inspiring historical story is about persistence, resilience, bravery, courage and hope. It's about pursuing a dream and the impact that journey can have on those who follow.
Bridging Sydney
Author: Caroline Mackaness
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781876991227
Category : Arch bridges
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
Bridging Sydney commemorates the 75th anniversary of the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, one of the world's iconic bridge structures. From the earliest concepts for a harbor crossing to the complexities of construction during the Depression, the bridge's story is rich and complex. A remarkable feat of engineering, it signified Australia's industrial and social maturity and had a dramatic impact on the city of Sydney. In its spectacular location on Sydney Harbour, in close proximity to the Opera House, the bridge has inspired generations of artists and writers, and has become an internationally recognized symbol of Australia. This publication is the result of extensive research and is illustrated with images from public and private collections, including plans, photographs and many works of art. These images have been brought together with original sketches of alternatives for the bridge and oral histories to provide a unique perspective on this much-loved Australian icon, placing it in the context of international bridge construction and 20th century engineering.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781876991227
Category : Arch bridges
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
Bridging Sydney commemorates the 75th anniversary of the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, one of the world's iconic bridge structures. From the earliest concepts for a harbor crossing to the complexities of construction during the Depression, the bridge's story is rich and complex. A remarkable feat of engineering, it signified Australia's industrial and social maturity and had a dramatic impact on the city of Sydney. In its spectacular location on Sydney Harbour, in close proximity to the Opera House, the bridge has inspired generations of artists and writers, and has become an internationally recognized symbol of Australia. This publication is the result of extensive research and is illustrated with images from public and private collections, including plans, photographs and many works of art. These images have been brought together with original sketches of alternatives for the bridge and oral histories to provide a unique perspective on this much-loved Australian icon, placing it in the context of international bridge construction and 20th century engineering.
Public Sydney
Author: Philip Thalis
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781876991425
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 229
Book Description
For the first time, see the making of Sydney and all its public buildings and places in exquisite drawings in this new book. For anyone who cares about Sydney, or cities in general -- whether a passionate city dweller, architect, landscape designer, planner, engineer or historian -- it offers a deep appreciation of the city's evolution.
Publisher:
ISBN: 9781876991425
Category : Architecture
Languages : en
Pages : 229
Book Description
For the first time, see the making of Sydney and all its public buildings and places in exquisite drawings in this new book. For anyone who cares about Sydney, or cities in general -- whether a passionate city dweller, architect, landscape designer, planner, engineer or historian -- it offers a deep appreciation of the city's evolution.
Sydney Harbour Bridge
Author: Vashti Farrer
Publisher: Scholastic Press
ISBN: 9781741699531
Category : Bridges
Languages : en
Pages : 186
Book Description
'I said to Mum that the sky-workers must have really good heads for heights, but she said, "Either that, or they have a family to feed and will do anything for a job that pays."' It is 1932 and Sydney has hit hard times but the construction of a bridge that will reach across the harbour is setting spirits soaring. Both Alice and Billy tell the story of building the spectacular Harbour Bridge which will link the north shore to the working class suburbs of the south and unify a separated city.
Publisher: Scholastic Press
ISBN: 9781741699531
Category : Bridges
Languages : en
Pages : 186
Book Description
'I said to Mum that the sky-workers must have really good heads for heights, but she said, "Either that, or they have a family to feed and will do anything for a job that pays."' It is 1932 and Sydney has hit hard times but the construction of a bridge that will reach across the harbour is setting spirits soaring. Both Alice and Billy tell the story of building the spectacular Harbour Bridge which will link the north shore to the working class suburbs of the south and unify a separated city.
The Great Arch
Author: Vicki Hastrich
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 1741769558
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 350
Book Description
In 1924 the planned and long-awaited Sydney Harbour Bridge represents an impossible ideal - to span the great waters of the harbour and take a war-scarred nation into a dazzling future. No one is more enthusiastic than Reverend Ralph Anderson Cage of Lavender Bay, whose imagination is seized by the scale of this thoroughly modern vision. Ralph is a grand dreamer with all-too-human failings and in the Bridge, which he can see under construction from his Rectory verandah, he finds an obsession to last a lifetime. Sermons become paeans to the creative will of God - and the beauty of girders and pylons - and his parish papers wax lyrical about rivets and granite. But as he urges his long-suffering wife Stella, his children, his parishioners and the phlegmatic housekeeper Mrs Pessey to dream as big as he does, Ralph fails to notice those left behind by the bridge: the dispossessed families whose houses are destroyed in its path and the workers who lose their lives in accidents on its precarious heights. The Great Depression wears on, and the Bridge becomes a bitter reminder to his hungry parishioners of a promised prosperity that never comes. As Ralph invests everything in his obsession, the great arch he so loves and admires threatens to become his undoing. Inspired by true people and events, and as open and colossal as the bridge itself, Vicki Hastrich's deeply moving novel links two centuries, two world wars and two generations. By turns wickedly funny and breathtakingly poetic, this is the story of an ordinary man, and an ordinary life, made grand. Commended in the FAW Christina Stead Award 2009 'I gulped down The Great Arch in two long sittings, cancelling a coffee date because I didn't want to put it down. Hastrich had me hooked from the opening pages. . . I feel like climbing the bridge and yelling out how good it is.' Christos Tsiolkas, author of The Slap '. . .a story of imagination, loneliness, obsession and love. . . A deeply tender, very funny and sad and beautiful book.' Charlotte Wood, author of The Children '. . .as airy, soaring and magnificent as the bridge itself.' Michelle de Kretser, author of The Lost Dog 'Hastrich has given us an absorbing novel and an entrancing social history of inner Sydney, the fading relevance of the church in people's lives, and the sufferings caused by the Great Depression and World War II. After this, I will never again take the Sydney Harbour Bridge for granted.' Christina Hill, Australian Book Review
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
ISBN: 1741769558
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 350
Book Description
In 1924 the planned and long-awaited Sydney Harbour Bridge represents an impossible ideal - to span the great waters of the harbour and take a war-scarred nation into a dazzling future. No one is more enthusiastic than Reverend Ralph Anderson Cage of Lavender Bay, whose imagination is seized by the scale of this thoroughly modern vision. Ralph is a grand dreamer with all-too-human failings and in the Bridge, which he can see under construction from his Rectory verandah, he finds an obsession to last a lifetime. Sermons become paeans to the creative will of God - and the beauty of girders and pylons - and his parish papers wax lyrical about rivets and granite. But as he urges his long-suffering wife Stella, his children, his parishioners and the phlegmatic housekeeper Mrs Pessey to dream as big as he does, Ralph fails to notice those left behind by the bridge: the dispossessed families whose houses are destroyed in its path and the workers who lose their lives in accidents on its precarious heights. The Great Depression wears on, and the Bridge becomes a bitter reminder to his hungry parishioners of a promised prosperity that never comes. As Ralph invests everything in his obsession, the great arch he so loves and admires threatens to become his undoing. Inspired by true people and events, and as open and colossal as the bridge itself, Vicki Hastrich's deeply moving novel links two centuries, two world wars and two generations. By turns wickedly funny and breathtakingly poetic, this is the story of an ordinary man, and an ordinary life, made grand. Commended in the FAW Christina Stead Award 2009 'I gulped down The Great Arch in two long sittings, cancelling a coffee date because I didn't want to put it down. Hastrich had me hooked from the opening pages. . . I feel like climbing the bridge and yelling out how good it is.' Christos Tsiolkas, author of The Slap '. . .a story of imagination, loneliness, obsession and love. . . A deeply tender, very funny and sad and beautiful book.' Charlotte Wood, author of The Children '. . .as airy, soaring and magnificent as the bridge itself.' Michelle de Kretser, author of The Lost Dog 'Hastrich has given us an absorbing novel and an entrancing social history of inner Sydney, the fading relevance of the church in people's lives, and the sufferings caused by the Great Depression and World War II. After this, I will never again take the Sydney Harbour Bridge for granted.' Christina Hill, Australian Book Review