Constructing Australia (2007) The Bridge
Triumphs and tragedies in building a nation. This is the definitive story of how a giant steel arch, the
Sydney Harbour Bridge, resembling a coat hanger became one of world's most recognised structures and an engineering triumph.
Massive, majestic and breathtaking, the bridge was the greatest engineering challenge of its day anywhere on earth.
Nothing like it had ever been attempted in
Australia. It not only altered the life of a city forever, it became a
symbol of a bold young nation and a changing world.
And it was certainly visionary. At a time when there were only 30,
000 cars and trucks in the entire city, the
Bridge could carry 6000 vehicles and 160 trains every hour and all of
Sydney's people could have easily crossed it in a single afternoon. With its graceful arch rising high above the famous harbour, it remained the tallest structure in the city until the late
1960s.
The tale of its construction combines immense practical problems and intense human drama; personal conflicts and political intrigues.
Completed during the dark days of the
Great Depression and opened in
March 1932, it is the legacy of a fateful partnership between two very different men—a brilliant engineer,
JJC Bradfield and a maverick politician,
Jack Lang—who shared a relentless ambition to create "the people's bridge".
Along the way, they managed to stir up more than one hornets' nest, both at home and in
Britain.
Today, it is impossible to imagine Sydney, and
Australia, without it, but as the film reveals, the bridge the world has come to love may not only have been utterly different, but may never have been built at all.