Cracker: Sydney-side
25 Responses
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Jo S,
The interior of the Sydney Opera House looks gorgeous, I've always appreciated it from the outside, but never had the opportunity to attend a concert. Hmm, may have to make the extra effort next time I visit to indulge in some orchestral music ....
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“you can’t wear your thongs there” advised the concierge
Times have changed. I stopped referring to them as thongs in Oz, because people thought you were talking about underwear.
One thing that’s obvious when you head to Australia – they’re doing very well.
Yes, it was a bit of a shock to me just how well. Even my brother-in-law, the sole breadwinner and a nurse, has stopped crying poor to us, it's just untenable after you get yourself 50 inches of TV and build a huge extension to your property.
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I only went to Sydney once - over 30 years ago. I didn't so much like the City, but I loved the outskirts. We went to the Blue Mountains which I thought were magnificent, even at 16. And I really really loved the hotel at the top where you had a panoramic view of the whole thing. Just lovely.
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Hmm it makes good sense I suppose, if you live in the south, don't waste money travelling to Auckland (reportedly a hell hole, with despite Ms Tizards best efforts ghastly traffic problems) fly to Sydney and see the real thing
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Indeed Raymond, indeed. I'm thinking next time instead of Westfield St Lukes (definitely a hell hole, and you should try and get a park on the weekend) I'll pop across to Sydders for the weekend ;)
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I'm currently in Sydney, and it's my first time in this city. I like the place, and they seem to know in Australia how to make good use of public spaces. They don't seem afraid to spend public money on monuments and works of art, which is something my own city (Auckland) has been lousy at. It helps that they have a much larger population, I guess, but they also appear to have a more positive attitude. Not sure I want to live here, but it's a great place to visit and be inspired.
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Don't suppose you dropped in to see the dugongs in the Sydney aquarium?
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Kumara Republic, in reply to
They don't seem afraid to spend public money on monuments and works of art, which is something my own city (Auckland) has been lousy at.
Wellington offers a model to follow, and it need not cost too much either.
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Deep Red, you should check out what Councillor Cathy Casey is doing. She's going around locating all the public art, sculptures and statues around Auckland and rehabilitating them. There seems to be quite a lot of good stuff.
But Wellington's are wonderful, and I'm particularly fond of the wind sculptures on Cobham Drive.
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Russell Brown, in reply to
I’m currently in Sydney, and it’s my first time in this city. I like the place, and they seem to know in Australia how to make good use of public spaces. They don’t seem afraid to spend public money on monuments and works of art, which is something my own city (Auckland) has been lousy at.
I travelled to Australia quite a few times as an IT journalist, and their commitment to public spaces was always an inspiration.
I'm not sure I'd want to go as far as living in Brisbane, but the arts precinct across the river from the CBD is amazing. In Melbourne, they took out a road -- a road! -- to make way for a broad pedestrian concourse along the Yarra, from the railway station to the sports complex. I fear we'll never be that good.
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BenWilson, in reply to
I fear we'll never be that good.
We don't have enough roads to just go chucking one to pedestrians, although it seems that is the way Queen St is going.
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Kumara Republic, in reply to
In Melbourne, they took out a road -- a road! -- to make way for a broad pedestrian concourse along the Yarra, from the railway station to the sports complex. I fear we'll never be that good.
We managed to pull it off with Cuba St years ago.
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Scott Gamble, in reply to
@Hilary
Re: public art and Councilor Casey researching it.Details of Ak public artwork here on the Ak Public Libraries website: http://bit.ly/egM9wf
(disclosure: I helped research this about 10 years ago)
Good to see public artwork getting some attention though. It can make a city.On a change of subject, I live in Sydney and it is bigger and better than Ak in many ways. But also much worse too. (traffic, house prices and availability, awful, awful rich twits etc)
Basically it's just Ak but 4x the size. No real differences. Except that their city beaches are miles better than our east coast beaches.
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keep it down you lot! Mention public artwork and this is what you'll get…
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BenWilson, in reply to
Except that their city beaches are miles better than our east coast beaches.
Unless you're scared of sharks.
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Scott Gamble, in reply to
Unless you're scared of sharks.
I surf regularly at Tamarama and Bronte and have yet to have any contact with sharks. In fact, in over 20 years of surfing I've never even seen a shark! And most of the time in Ak I would surf at Maori Bay, which has a seal colony (aka shark attractors) on Oaia Island.
Just lucky, I guess. -
BenWilson, in reply to
Just lucky, I guess.
Must be! The one and only time I went to Bondi they had 3 shark warnings in 1 hour, and I could see the shark from the cliffs. The surfers, however, ignored it, even when it came close (which you could see because a boat followed it, trying to shoo it away).
But you're right, you'd be bloody unlucky to be attacked by a shark.
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Downtown Sydney is really nice. The Western ghettos are horrible - Sydney (like LA and a few other places) is big enough that the outer suburbs are beyond reasonable travelling distance of the CBD. Which is fine if you're retired in Windsor, less good if you're unemployed in Bankstown.
Auckland is going this way, I feel.
But the way NZ's going, I might wind up living in Australia, unless we get a government that stops sucking dollars out of the country to give to their rich mates.
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Kumara Republic, in reply to
Auckland is going this way, I feel.
Are gated communities a big thing over in Sydney?
But the way NZ's going, I might wind up living in Australia, unless we get a government that stops sucking dollars out of the country to give to their rich mates.
How many bodyguards and coils of razor wire could it all buy? Forget Black Budgets, here's the Barb Wire Budget.
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BenWilson, in reply to
Auckland is going this way, I feel.
Yup, it's one of the reasons I'm not so bummed about it. If Auckland ended up like Sydney now, or even 20 years ago, it would be a whole lot choicer.
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There was also a (hot) visual artist from the Ukraine, whose chosen medium was sand sprinkled and swept over a light box, projected onto the big screen.
Kseniya Simonova I'd imagine. This is her pretty famous work in Ukraine's got talent which is about the invasion and massacre in her country during WW2:
(18 million views on youtube, and that's not the only version up there)
She's actually a trained psychologist, she learnt sand art as a side line to her job. -
Sacha, in reply to
In Melbourne, they took out a road -- a road! -- to make way for a broad pedestrian concourse
Whereas in Auckland we took out the planned pedestrian concourse between Britomart and Vector Arena (you can still see the beginning until it becomes a narrow service lane with wheelie bins beside the supermarket) - so that property developers could erect more of their cheap ugly apartments and offices. Now spectators have to wend around inadequate footpaths and spill onto the roads. Screw the crowds, I'm alright Jack.
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JLM,
Now you're talking about Auckland, a plug here for the Auckland Transport Blog which is one of my favourites, despite living at the other end of the country. At least one massive, evidence-based information filled posting every single day.
Back to Sydney, walking round the traffic-calmed streets of Surry Hills was a revelation and an inspiration. Blocking off one end of a street so you can't barrel through in your car. What a radical idea!
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Sacha, in reply to
a plug here for the Auckland Transport Blog
I love their work. Extends to thought-provoking big-picture pieces like this guest post by planning historian Chris Harris.
What both these articles point to is that Len’s team seems to have a strong focus on the South and West, while their government-backed critics seem to think that Auckland’s suburban future lies mainly north of the Auckland Harbour Bridge.
This difference of perspective is a manifestation of a very real and growing division between two Aucklands, one white or East Asian and prosperous; the other poorer, browner and, these days, much more likely to be unemployed. The one made up of settler landlords, the other made up of their indigenous tenants. The one conservative, the other nationalist and radicalised.
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This probably does not reflect a conscious plan to bring about growing segregation and estrangement between Two Aucklands. Rather, it reflects the fact that most roading plans have a short term and risk-averse logic. They meet current travel demands that link middle class settler suburbs to office parks, and poorer, indigenous suburbs to warehouses.
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Kumara Republic, in reply to
How best to call the divide? My take: the Nikau Curtain.
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