Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - A Chorus of Contempt at The Sydney Opera House
Episode Date: September 15, 20231957. Jørn Utzon receives a phone call: he's just won an international competition to design a brand new opera house for the Australian city of Sydney. Utzon is unknown in the field, so this is a tri...umph. The young architect couldn’t have imagined what a bitter victory it would turn out to be... The Guggenheim in Bilbao; the Burj Khalifa in Dubai; the Shard in London. These days, everyone seems to want an iconic building. But Sydney Opera House was the first, the greatest – and the most painful. It's now fifty years since the Opera House was opened. This is its origin story. For a full list of sources, please see the show notes at timharford.com. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Important sources for the episode you're about to hear include Helen Pitts book The House
and Peter Murray's The Saga of Sydney Opera House, along with How Big Things Get Done by
Bent Flubier and Dan Gardner.
If you'd like to learn more about the Sydney Opera House or about mega-projects, I strongly
recommend you pick up a copy of one or all of these books which are available from all
good booksellers.
For a full list of our sources, see the show notes at timhalford.com. In a clearing in a forest, a day's walk north of Copenhagen stood a little house, a fair
retail setting worthy of Hans Christian Andersen perhaps, but this is no fairytale and it
wasn't a fairytale house. It was low, flat and minimalist, Denmark's first open plan house. It had been built in 1952
without proper floor plans. The house's young architect was building his own home and
hid insisted instead on personally directing the work as it progressed. But it was brilliant.
Denmark's most celebrated architect visited the construction site and muttered
under his breath, hell, he's better than I am.
Maybe so. It was hard to be sure. The young architect, Yorne Utsen, had won plenty of
competitions, but with his career interrupted by the war, that house was almost the only
thing he'd actually built.
Late in January 1957, the phone in the Putzen home rang.
Yorn and his wife were taking a winter walk in the woods.
Their 10-year-old daughter, Lynn, was at home babysitting her new-born brother.
She answered the phone.
Hello. The village operator was on the other end.
She knew the family.
Lynn, is your father home?
No.
Is your mother home?
No, they're out walking.
Quick, go find your father.
He's one of prize.
It's someone from the newspaper in Sydney, Australia.
Go to him to come quick.
Lynn drops the phone, leaves her sleeping brother,
and grabs her bike.
She races out into the Danish winter, yelling for her parents.
It must have been alarm to see their little blonde babysitting
daughter cycling towards them, screaming
at the top of her voice.
Sydney. Sydney.
She skids to her halt.
You want a prize.
You want something in Sydney. Someone's on the phone, and You want a prize, you want something in Sydney?
Someone's on the phone and they want to talk to you.
It must have felt like a phone call from the moon.
The unknown young Dane, Yorne Utson, had won an international competition to design the Sydney Opera House.
But Utson couldn't have imagined what a bitter victory it would prove to be.
I'm Tim Harford and you're listening to cautionary tales. Eugene Goussens was a distinguished violinist and conductor. In the 1940s he moved from
Britain to the faraway city of Sydney, where he was struck
by three things.
The beauty of the harbour?
The apparent indifference of the locals to that beauty?
And the lack of a really good venue for classical music.
Gusson's dreamed up an idea.
Build a huge opera house on Benelong Point, a finger of rock poking out into Sydney's
glorious harbour, in which blue water is surrounded on all sides by the city, and spanned by
the vast arch of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
Gussons was charismatic, and local politicians were keen to show that they could deliver
cultural amenities for Sydney voters.
They formed a committee, which announced an open competition to design the new opera house.
Anyone, even an unknown young architect from Denmark, could try to win.
As Goosons' grand project gathered momentum,
he flew back to London to be knighted by the Queen.
And on his return,
tipped off by a journalist,
customs officers asked to search his luggage.
They found it to be packed with naughty photographs
and even noughtier rubber masks.
In 1950s Australia, it was a scandal. Sir Eugene fled back to London, a broken man.
Alas, Sir Eugene's fate, great talent, self-inflicted wounds and a tragic end to a great career, is just the overture to the story of the Sydney Opera House, in which
the same dramatic beats would play out on a much bigger stage.
Not that anyone should have expected the Sydney Opera House to be an easy project.
So Eugene had wanted big concert halls, but Ben Along Point was a cramped site.
The premiere of the state wanted a grand legacy, a building for the ages, but no politician
wanted to raise taxes to pay for it.
And opera houses are actually rather ungainly structures, they're bulging towers for stage
machinery, they usually hidden behind grand facades.
But Sydney's Opera House couldn't hide. It would be visible across the water,
from north, east and west, even from above, from the monumental Sydney Harbour Bridge.
In announcing their competition then, the committee laid down the challenge to
architects from around the world.
Design an opera house for us.
It needs to be huge, fit onto a tiny site, look amazing from any angle, and be cheap.
Knock yourselves out.
In January 1957, the time came to choose a winner.
The judging panel spent four days sifting through
more than 200 entries and drawing up a short list. They were waiting for the arrival of
the final judge, an architectural rock star, the great Finnish-American architect, Eero
Saranon, but he was running late. That was understandable.
Sarenan was a busy man, designer of landmarks such as the celebrated TWA terminal at New York's
international airport.
And if buildings like that helped New York to feel like the center of the world, then Sydney,
that the world's edge, wanted some of that stardust.
When the other judges showed Erosarinen the ten leading entries, everyone could tell that
he wasn't impressed.
The ideas were awkward compromises, predictably boxed in by their attempts to satisfy the
contradictory requirements of the competition. Sounan shook his head and went for a stroll to Ben Long Point.
He sat and sketched for a while.
Correst on three sides by the lapping waters of Sydney Harbor, it really was a magnificent
spot.
He returned to the judging room and started flipping through the rejects.
There was one which stood out as completely different, even though it was really little
more than a sketch.
There was a monumental base reminiscent of an Aztec pyramid or a Chinese imperial palace.
Floating above it were light, shell-like roof structures, overlapping like the sails of some grand ship.
It was like no building Saranun had ever seen.
He laid it out, stepped back to ponder it,
stepped forward to peer at the details.
Then he turned to the other judges.
Gentlemen, here is your opera house.
Twelve days later, the state premier, Joseph K. Hill, stands in front of the cameras
with a sealed envelope. He's a former trade union organizer, not your stereotypical
opera gower, but now that the disgraced Sir Eugene Gussens has fled
the country, K-Hill has surprised some people by stepping up as the opera-houses biggest
champion.
Like any good politician, he's going to milk this dramatic moment.
The winning design, he announces, is scheme number 218.
And who designed that?
K-hill doesn't have the name to hand.
An official hurries forward, rummages in the envelope,
pulls out a second document.
I.S. scheme number 218, submitted by...
Um...
Yorn Utsun of Hellerbake, Denmark.
Yorn Utsun?
Who?
A reporter from the Sydney Morning Herald
places a long distance call to directory assistance in Hellerbake.
They try Utsun's office number.
He's not there. Then they try his home number.
The operator comes back on the line.
Apparently, he's gone out for a walk, but his daughter has gone to find him. Is it okay to hold?
For the first interview with the unknown winner of the Sydney Opera House competition,
sure, he'll hold all of Australia wants to know about the mysterious Yorne Utzum.
When the winning sketch was published, public opinion was divided. Letters published in the Sydney
Morning Herald described the designers A wonderful piece of sculpture.
A haystack covered by several top allens.
A ray of hope.
A sink with plates stacked in readiness for washing.
Some large, lovely ship of the imagination.
A hideous parachute which we cannot fold up and put away.
But when your nuts son arrived in Sydney, some of those doubts began to melt away.
Tall, blonde, blue-eyed, that sexy Danish accent, movie star looks.
He's our Gary Cooper, declared one local lady.
Sydney was a bustling place but it usually felt far from the world's spotlight.
Now, it felt as though Hollywood had come to call the city fell in love with the man.
Professional architects were more cautious. The sketches were impressive,
sure, but Hudson hadn't submitted all the plans and drawings the competition rules specified.
One Australian art critic described his entry as
nothing more than a magnificent doodle.
What's more, Utson's doodle building overstepped the site's boundaries.
Then there was the question of whether its glorious sail-like roof structures could actually
stand up.
None of this worried Eero Saranan, the rock star architect, who'd pushed his fellow judges
into choosing Utsun's entry.
"'Nothing to it,' said Saranan about those roof structures.
Three inches thick at the top and say, 12 inches thick at the top and say 12 inches thick at the base.
But concrete shell architecture was still an emerging field, and many experts weren't
so sure.
Yes, egg shell structures could be surprisingly strong, but cut the egg in half, and much
of that strength is gone.
And Buttson's opera house roof, it was a series of quarter shells.
Until this point Buttson had taken no engineering advice. And he wouldn't have long to figure
out a solution because the project's champion, State Premier Joseph K. Hill, was a man
in a hurry. He was a heavy smoker with a history of health problems.
He knew he was also at risk of losing the next election.
He wanted a monument to his place in history.
So he instructed the Opera House team.
Go down to Biffelong Point and make such progress that no one who succeeds me can stop this going
through to completion.
As a result, the building started before Buttson could figure out the structural basics.
Joseph K. Hill laid the foundation stone on the 2nd of March 1959.
Within a year, he was dead, killed by his third heart attack. But just as he'd intended, so much work had already been done that stopping the project
was unthinkable.
By now, an engineer had been found.
His name was Over-Arupp, the Anglo-Danish boss of Over-Arupp and Partners, a respected engineering
firm.
The two Danes, Uzun and Arup,
had been working together to try to figure out a solution
to the structural problem.
And it was at this point that Arup informed Utzun
of the bad news.
His beautiful, free-standing roof shells
simply couldn't be built.
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Sir Paul McCartney. We talked through more than 150 tracks from McCartney's songbook, and while we did, we recorded our conversations.
I mean, the fact that I dreamed of the song yesterday leads me to believe that it's not just
quite as cut and dried as we think it is.
And now you can listen to our conversations in our new podcast McCartney, a life in
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There's no such thing as too many danes, so let's me to third.
Bent Flubia.
He's the world's leading expert on large projects, and on why these mega-projects are so often
delivered late and way over budget.
And he's fascinated by the Sydney Opera House because it's the ultimate case study,
the definitive fiasco of how not to run a mega project.
Flubio says that the original scene of many mega projects is this.
People start building before they figure out what they're
really trying to do. The ideal mega project starts with a question, why are we doing this?
Then there's a long, careful planning process. Every detail is finalised, then the expensive
construction phase can be kept as short as possible, with no costly changes.
expensive construction phase can be kept as short as possible, with no costly changes. The opera house violated these principles in the most flagrant way imaginable.
Nobody ever really answered the question.
Why?
So Eugene Gussens had wanted to accommodate a lot of opera garrers and use the beautiful
location of Ben Long Point.
The state's premier Joseph K. Hill had wanted a lasting monument on the cheap, without spending
tax pay or money.
Yorne Woodson wanted to build something beautiful and new.
But what if you couldn't make it both beautiful and cheap?
What if you couldn't make it big while also squeezing
it onto Ben Long Point? The trade-offs were swept under the carpet. The difficult decisions
postponed or ignored. Then of course, the building was rushed, with workers digging foundations
before Utsun and Arup had figured out how to build the thing.
Utsun was in an impossible position.
And Utsun wasn't blaneless either.
Remember how he'd never drawn proper plans for his beautiful home in the Danish forest,
but instead had been on-site throughout, personally directing the builders?
Careful planning was all very well, but he
loved to experiment, to feel his way through a project. It worked for his beautiful home,
but could it also work for a colossal, structurally innovative mega-project? Butson worked like
an artist, not a project manager. He wanted to make the final decision on
every detail, no matter how small. At one point he declared about a particular design
change. I don't care what it costs, I don't care what scandal it causes, I don't care
how long it takes, that's what I want. That attitude explains why Utsun's opera house is the most beautiful building in the world.
It also made him the mother of all bottlenecks, especially as Utsun had a habit of disappearing
for weeks at a time.
After his second visit to Sydney, Utsun decided to return to Denmark via China, Japan and
Nepal. When he finally resurfaced, Arup Jovially wrote,
�It was nice to hear from you. I really thought you were lost in the wilds of Asia.�
Utsun had hoped to pick up inspiration on his travels that he could use for the opera
house, and he did. But decisions
on the project ground to a halt without him. And the problem of the roof was no joke.
Utson's original magnificent doodle used a variety of different curves. That caused two
headaches. The first was the expense. It made every section of the roof a unique construction.
The second was more serious. Arup had to spend a fortune on groundbreaking computer simulations
to figure out whether they would collapse under their own weight. Eventually, Arup concluded
that they would. It was Utson who solved the problem.
In a flash of inspiration, he realized
that each part of each vaulted roof, large or small,
could be proportioned as though it was sliced out
of the same single, enormous sphere.
It doesn't sound like much, but the structural properties
of these spherical curves
were well understood, and because the curves would all be identical, they could be built
at much lower cost.
Butson was delighted.
It was the cheapest way of making it you could dream of. All the work during these three years has been the background for arriving at this magnificent solution.
If they hadn't yet started construction, this would have been a triumphant moment.
Unfortunately, construction had begun two and a half years earlier.
The new design would require heavier supports than the ones they'd just built,
and the ones they'd just built were almost indestructible.
The local contractor recommended dynamiting them, one by one,
during the rush hour, so that the noise would be camouflaged by the traffic.
That worked, for a while,
until a lump of concrete was blown high over the harbor
and landed on a passing ferry.
Another opera house bungalow yelled the local newspapers.
Utsun had decided to move his office to Sydney,
to oversee proceedings.
That was a good idea, thought Arupp's team. Utsun had decided to move his office to Sydney to oversee proceedings.
That was a good idea, thought Arupp's team, until Utsun told them he'd be travelling again,
and out of contact between Christmas and March.
Arupp begged him not to do this.
There were so many decisions to be made, and Utsun was the only person who could make them.
But Utsun agreed only to a long meeting near London's Heathrow Airport, the day after
Christmas, to pin down a long list of details.
Utsun was persuaded to hurry the very last mile of his journey.
While flying from Tahiti to Sydney, the DC-7 airliner's radio crackled into life with an invitation. Her majesty,
the queen, was on the royal yacht in Sydney Harbour, and Mr. Woodson was invited to lunch.
After touchdown, he dashed to the royal reception. Arrupp's man on the ground wasn't impressed.
Lo and behold, God appears from heaven.
Utson had descended from Tahiti, popped in for lunch with the Queen, and then grumbled
the Arupp engineer.
And the afternoon he comes onto the site and starts complaining about some things he
wasn't informed about. I mean, there was no one we could contact.
Four months later, July 1963,
the Opera House was scheduled to have been finished.
Yet the site, on Benelong Point,
was still just a huge flat sprawl of concrete.
The basic outline of the broad, low podium was visible with the structure of the two sunken theatres scooped out of concrete. The basic outline of the broad, low podium was visible
with the structure of the two sunken theatres scooped out of it.
There was no sign of walls, let alone the roof.
In his history of the project,
the saga of Sydney Opera House,
architectural writer Peter Murray
combs to the letters between uva-Arupp and
yorn-Utsun and finds two men whose relationship is slowly falling apart.
Utsun worried that Arupp was trying to take control and steal the credit.
Arupp was eyeing the exits. Here's Arupp.
I do not know whether you have thought of getting other engineers
to help you. I would welcome the idea of someone else solving the problems and experiencing
your method of working.
Butsen responded,
Dear uver, please dissist from your criticism. Management is in a way the easiest part of
the job, something which most people can learn.
Well, perhaps nobody doubted Utsun's genius as an architect,
but as deadline after deadline was being broken, this was no time to be taking management for granted.
time to be taking management for granted. The mega-project expert, Bent Flubia, argues that the longer the construction phase of a project lasts, the more time there is for
something to derail everything. He's right. In May 1965, two years after the opera house was supposed to have been finished, there was a state election in New South Wales.
The backdrop for this election was an expensive and manifestly unfinished building.
The roofshelves had at last been built, soaring above the podium and the waters of the harbour. But they
were bare concrete, the epic job of tiling them had hardly begun. The site was open to
the elements, since the spectacular glass curtain wall facing out over the harbour was
still just a structural problem on Utson's drawing board. And so, the populist opposition party campaigned on a promise to clean up the mess at the Opera
House.
Although the project was funded mostly by proceeds from the state lottery rather than taxes,
it was hugely over budget.
And conservative rural voters had started to wonder why that lottery
money couldn't be spent on something else, such as more roads, schools, and hospitals.
When the opposition won, the job of Minister for Public Works went to a politician named
Davis Hughes. Hughes was a controversial choice, and not only because he'd
recently become notorious for falsely claiming to have a bachelor's degree in
job applications. When he was put in charge of this vast construction project,
his wife laughingly remarked that he couldn't drive a nail in straight. In the
first six months of his tenure, Hughes struggled to get a grip,
to his frustration, spending on the opera house ballooned more than ever.
By the start of 1966, nine years after Utsun had become famous around the world for
winning the design competition, Hughes was ready for a showdown.
He began withholding payments to Utsun, demanding more oversight and more control.
Without the money, Utsun couldn't pay his staff.
He was already in financial trouble because both Denmark and Australia were arguing that
he should be paying his taxes to them.
Was Davis Hughes deliberately undermining Utson?
Or was he imposing some much-needed discipline?
Whatever the aim, the result was predictable.
Whoever Arup could see what was coming, he wrote to Utson urging him not to resign,
telling him that resigning would
solve nothing. But Arup's letter didn't arrive in time to warn Utsun to be careful what
he said. After a tense meeting with Hughes, Utsun sent a letter explaining that, by cutting
off the money, you have forced me to leave the job. Utsun later said that he was just pausing work for lack of funds
and that quitting was never his intention.
But Davis Hughes didn't see any ambiguity.
He promptly announced to the State Assembly
that Yorne Utsun had resigned.
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Get Command Center for free today at thrive.ca.
That's THR-Y-V dot CA.
Terms and conditions apply.
Free plans have limited functionality.
I'm Paul Mandein, poet who over the past several years had the good fortune to spend time with one of the world's greatest songwriters, Sir Paul McCartney.
We talked through more than 150 tracks from McCartney's songbook, and while we did,
we recorded our conversations.
I mean the fact that I dreamed the song yesterday leads me to believe that it's not just
quite as cut and dried as we think it is.
And now you can listen to our conversations in our new podcast McCartney a life. McCartney has been asked many times to write his autobiography and he's always
declined. But as we ventured on this journey line by line, it became clear how much
of McCartney's life is indeed embedded in his lyrics.
It was like going back to an old snapshot album looking back on work. I hadn't thought much about for quite a few years.
Listen, wherever you get your podcasts and if you want to binge the entire season,
add free, right now. Sign up for Pushkin Plus on the McCartney Aliphonderik Showpage in Apple
Podcasts or at pushkin.fm-plus. Your membership also unlocks access to ad-free binges from Malcolm Gladwell, Dr. Laurie
Santos and many other top hosts.
Utson's departure was announced on the 1st of March 1966, almost exactly seven years
after construction had begun.
Despite all the project's troubles, it was a bombshell.
By now, the curved shells were almost fully tiled.
The shimmering effect looked spectacular.
Protesters gathered at the half-finished structure on Benelong Point,
waving signs, save the opera house, and we need Utsun.
The Royal Australian Institute of Architects told Davis Hughes,
get him back.
No prominent architect would touch the Opera House project
after Utsun's acrimonious departure.
It was a matter of professional solidarity.
The engineer, Uva Arup, did not resign.
Utsun saw this as a bit trail.
He stopped returning Arup's calls.
Arup hand-wrote an emotional letter to Utsun, urging him to come back and offering to
broker a compromise with Davis Hughes. Couldn't over a new
on at least meet for a chat? He signed off, even if you don't trust me, it couldn't
do any harm, could it? The situation can't get any worse, so why not try?"
Utsun replied the same day. If you think I should be in charge of the project, then act accordingly," he wrote,
it tells the minister that Utsun must be in charge.
Utsun returned to Denmark, still thinking about all the remaining challenges on the project,
such as how to fit more seats into the hall. He expected that Davis Hughes would come crawling back, in part because he couldn't imagine
anyone else being capable of finishing the job.
I am still available.
It is not I, but the Sydney Opera House that creates all of the enormous difficulties.
But Davis Hughes wasn't the type to back down.
If no prominent architect would take the job, it just have to get one
nobody had heard of. He called in a young local government architect named Peter Hall,
and handed him the task of finishing the opera house. Hall did so, taking seven more
years, and three times as much money as had already been spent. The Opera House cost
fifteen times the original budget, admittedly the original budget was always a fiction,
and it was completed a decade behind schedule.
Your Nutson wasn't the type to back down either. Years later, over Arab asked a mutual friend to try
to arrange a reconciliation. Maybe he and Utsun could meet and talk things over. They
drove to Utsun's hometown, and Arab sat in a hotel lobby, nursing a coffee, and waiting. The friend returned.
Utsun didn't want to see Arok. There would be no reconciliation.
The Opera House was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II on the 20th of October 1973. Bjorn Utsen declined his invitation to attend, which was perhaps just as well.
The Queen's speech, written by local politicians, didn't mention Utsen's name.
The plaque she unveiled celebrated young Peter Hall and Davis Hughes.
young Peter Hall and Davis Hughes. In his book How Big Things Get Done, Bent Flubier describes what happened when Star architect
Frank Geary was asked to come to Bill Bough to work on a building.
Unlike the young unknown Utson, Geary was 62 years old, battle hardened by some painful
political fights over his buildings, and famous.
Bill Bauer's officials showed him a beautiful old warehouse, and they asked him if he would
consider renovating it to become a new Guggenheim museum. Why? asked Geary.
What are you trying to achieve?
In Sydney nobody had really formulated those questions, let alone answered them.
But in Bilbao, they knew what they wanted.
They wanted to get by design, what Sydney had got by accident, an icon.
Bill Bauer was the Detroit of Southern Europe, a once great city ravaged by deindustrialization.
The local government wanted the new museum to spark an urban renaissance,
to put Bill Bauer on the map just as Sydney Opera House had put Sydney on the map.
Fine, said Geary. In that case, forget the renovation project. You're going to have to do what Sydney did
and build something breathtaking and new. You're going to have to put it on the waterfront and in fact, added Geary. I've seen just the spot.
When Geary's Guggenheim Bilbao was finally opened,
it was a huge success, on time and under budget.
According to Flubier's data on mega projects,
that sort of thing doesn't happen a lot.
But the fact that it happened at all
is because Geary started with a clearly agreed plan
and nobody rushed to start digging.
These days, everybody seems to want one of those
iconic buildings.
Frank Geary made it look easy after all.
But the Sydney Opera House
was the first and the greatest and the most painful.
In spite of everything, the Opera House is a masterpiece. I've been lucky enough to see
it, to stroll around the Sydney Harbour admiring all the angles, to walk up the grand steps of the podium on Benelong Point.
I've even performed on the stage. It's breathtaking. All of it. No camera can do it justice.
In the entire 20th century, only the Empire State Building comes close to serving as an icon of a city.
The Sydney Opera House is like the Eiffel Tower or the Pyramids.
It's repaid its debt to the citizens of the city many times over.
So you might think, who cares that it was late, who cares what it cost, it was all worth
it in the end.
But bent flububier disagrees. The process of building
the opera house was a fiasco. And that fiasco had a cost that you can't measure in delays
or in dollars. The cost starts with Yorne Utsen's reputation. Utsen was told that because he had resigned, he'd never get a government project in Denmark.
He taught for a while in Hawaii and anonymously designed some buildings for a friend's architecture
practice.
He did win a commission to design something big in Q8, but Saddam Hussein's army set fire
to that in 1991.
In a Copenhagen suburb, he built a humble church. It's unprepossessing on the outside,
but on the inside there's a gorgeous ceiling
that looks like folds of cloth,
parting to reveal the light of heaven.
Apparently, it had something similar in mind
for the interior of the opera house.
But nobody wanted to give him another chance to display his genius on the stage it deserved.
The price of the Sydney Opera House?
It was all those other buildings that Yorne Utsun was never allowed to design.
Eventually, the architecture profession woke up
and began showering prizes on him,
often acknowledging regretfully
that Utsun hadn't built much besides the Opera House,
but it was too late to change that.
When he won architecture's Nobel Prize, the Pritzker,
he was 85 years old.
The Opera House itself had started to become embarrassed by the controversy,
and that graceless plaque that didn't even mention Utson's name.
In the 1990s, they attempted a reproachement,
naming a room in his honour, and asking him to help design a new wing.
Still, he didn't come.
He sent his son to give a speech, explaining that his elderly father...
Lives and breathes the opera house, and as its creator, he just has to close his eyes to see it.
As its creator, he just has to close his eyes to see it. One person who sneered at the peacemaking was Davis Hughes, an old man like Utzen himself.
He phoned the chairman of the Opera House management team and ran for 45 minutes about
the very idea of asking Uttsun his opinion on anything.
I did Utsun a favour, he said, I put him out of his misery like you put down a dog.
Late in Utsun's life, a British architect named John Party, went to visit him in New Yorker,
where he'd spent most of his later years. It was a kind of pilgrimage
to meet one of the true greats of architecture. Buttson had designed the home, of course,
and party described its,
Glare-free hush that seemed to transport me to another world. They talked about this
and that. The old man expressed the occasional pain at the opera
house of fair, but this was all a long time ago. He said, Butson had never been back to
Sydney. He designed the most beautiful building of the 20th century, and had never seen it.
Sensing that Utsun had left some part of his heart in Sydney, party offered to help the
old man travel back.
Utsun's wife pulled party aside.
That wasn't possible, she said.
It would kill him.
Did she mean the arduous journey?
Or did she mean the memories?
The End of the World Important sources for this episode were the house
by Helen Pitt and the saga of Sydney Opera House by Peter Murray.
If you're interested in bent flu beer and mega project, I have a three-part series on the V2 rocket program.
It's available to subscribers on Pushkin Plus.
For a full list of our sources, please see the show notes at timhalford.com.
Corsion Retails is written by me, Tim Halford, with Andrew Wright.
It's produced by Alice Finds, with support from Edith Husslo.
The sound design and original music is the work of Pascal Weiss.
Sarah Nicks edited the scripts.
Corsion Retails features the voice talents of Rufus Wright, Melanie Guthridge, Ben Crow,
Stella Halford and Gemma Saunders. The show wouldn't have been possible without the work
of Jacob Weisberg, Ryan Dilly, Greta Cohn, Lytel Malard, John Schnarrs, Carly Migliore
and Eric Sandler. Corsinary Tales has a production of Pushkin Industries.
It was recorded in Wartle Studios in London by Tom Erie.
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