History Daily - The Sydney Opera House Opens
Episode Date: October 20, 2025October 20, 1973. After 15 years of construction, the Sydney Opera House is dedicated by Queen Elizabeth II. This episode originally aired in 2023. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free l...istening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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hold his
his wife's
hand as
they walk through
the wood.
The couple
enjoy the forest calm as they follow the trail away from their home. Even in the heart of winter,
Yon is grateful for any chance to take refuge in the outdoors. So they've left their newborn in the care
of their 10-year-old daughter while they get a little peace and quiet. But the tranquility of the forest
is interrupted by the sound of shouting in the distance. The couple instantly recognizes the sound
of their daughter's voice and they stop dead in their tracks. Yon immediately begins to fear the
worst. He and his wife start running back in the direction of their home. Yon's thoughts race with
nightmare scenarios. He fears he's made a terrible mistake in trusting the baby with his daughter.
But before the couple can get to the house, their daughter comes into view, riding on a bicycle.
She hops off and Yon dashes toward her. When they meet, he's confused to find a wide grin across
his daughter's face. Someone from Sydney is on the phone, she tells him. They want to speak
you. You've won the prize. On January 29, 1957, Y'all Nootson is announced as the winner of the
design competition for the Sydney Opera House. The Opera House will be built on Benalong Point,
a slim piece of land sticking out into Sydney Harbor. The specifications for the competition
were daunting. The Opera House must be spacious enough to host large audiences, yet also
fit on a very narrow area of land. And it must be architecturally appealing.
from every direction. After competing against 233 entries, yawns won out. But though his design
will be unique and beautiful, bringing his vision to life will be an incredible challenge. Over the
next 16 years, the effort will generate intense controversy as the project blows past deadlines
and budgets before finally opening to the world on October 20, 1973. When the show continues
in just a few seconds, I'm going to repeat our catchphrase.
History is made every day, and it's true.
All around us, history is happening, but I want to make a little history of my own.
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From Noiser
in Airship,
I'm Lindsay Graham
and this is
History Daily.
History is made
every day.
On this podcast
Every day,
we tell the true
stories of the
people and events
that shaped our world.
Today is October 20th,
1973.
The Sydney Opera House
opens.
It's a dreary
Monday
morning on March 2nd, 1959, on Benelong Point in Sydney.
Joseph Cahill, the state premiere of New South Wales,
looked at his watch and tries to hide his impatience.
It's been more than two years since Yon Utson's design won the competition to build the
Sydney Opera House, but construction has yet to begin, and people are getting restless.
Among them is Cahill.
In just a few weeks, he's up for re-election, and he's eager to demonstrate progress on this
major public project.
But it's not just his political career that Cahill is thinking about.
The 68-year-old politician has recently been diagnosed with heart disease,
and he's been pondering how he'll be remembered after he's gone.
He wants to be known as the man who brought Sydney a historic building.
But the clock is ticking, and Cahill has no idea how much time he has left.
So today, even though Yon's team hasn't finished working through all of their engineering challenges,
Cahill is breaking ground on the Opera House.
It's important to him that the president.
project is seen as a bipartisan effort.
But Robert Askin, the leader from the opposition party, hasn't arrived, and so the ceremony
is being delayed.
Cahill lets out a heavy sigh and hopes the dark clouds overhead don't turn into an all-out
downpour.
Thankfully, Askin arrives before any rain starts to fall.
Cahill beams with pride as messages of congratulations and support from around the world
are read aloud.
Then he takes his place at the podium to deliver his remarks, as the polished politician
looks out of the crowd, Cahill projects confidence and optimism. The upcoming election may cause
controversies and challenges, but Cahill promises that the Opera House will be free from drama.
Cahill vows that the building will open on Australia Day, January 26th in 1963. Then Cahill bathes in
the applause and flashes a triumphant smile. After his speech, Cahill's rival Askin comes to the
deus. He too commits to a spirit of cooperation and seconds Cahill's promise
to bring Jan's vision to life speedily and without rancor.
Once the speeches have concluded,
Cahill and Yon worked together to lay down a special plaque
that the Danish architect designed for the occasion,
signaling the first step of construction of the opera house.
Cahill is exhilarated.
When the opera house is complete in just a few years,
Sydney will have the beautiful landmark it deserves,
and his legacy will be cemented.
Cahill leans down and kisses the plaque.
Then he rises up and lifts his hand to give a signal.
A siren sounds, and immediately workers spring into action. After months of anticipation,
construction on the Opera House begins. But sadly, Cahill does not live to see his dream come to life.
Just seven months later, Cahill passes away after a long life in politics, with the Opera House
nowhere close to completion. About the same time, while construction on the Buildings Foundation
begins, Yon and his engineering partner, Ovei Arap, finds themselves in the midst of questions about the
building's final design, and they struggle to come up with answers.
The central challenge is how to build Yon's roofs.
Yon's plan calls for a series of shell-like roofs that culminate sails.
The beautiful curves are what set his design apart and won him the competition,
but translating Yon's original sketch into a working structure proves difficult.
After months of trial and error using state-of-the-art computer modeling technology,
Jan and Ova are still stumped.
It seems nearly impossible to find a structure for the roofs that will be strong enough,
but also cheap to build, a key criterion of the New South Wales government.
Then, finally, in 1961, the team finds a solution.
Instead of making the shape of each shell unrelated to the next,
they realize they can treat each roof as a slice out of the same sphere.
By giving the roofs a common geometry and reducing their irregularity,
they're able to more easily do the math required for their construction
and ensure that the roofs are structurally sound.
It also allows the roof's parts to be cast from the same mold,
drastically lowering costs.
But Yon and Ove's solution creates a new problem.
Their new roof design requires heavier supports
than the ones that have already been built.
The construction crew has no choice but to demolish the original supports.
It's noisy, messy work that shakes the public's confidence in the project
and sets the timeline back once again.
By July 1963, it's six months after Joseph Cahill promised the opera house would be complete
and work is far from finished.
The construction site is visible from every angle of Sydney Harbor
and all of the city's residents can see no sign of walls or roofs.
Public support for the opera house and for Yon begins to crumble.
But Yon's confidence in his design is unshakable.
He pushes forward, untroubled by criticism or deadlines.
Two years later, the building's roofs will finally be built.
But there will be still lots of work to do.
And New South Wales voters will grow increasingly impatient.
That year they will elect a new government
that will vow to rein in the Opera House's budget and its troublesome architect.
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seven years after construction began on the Sydney Opera House.
Jaun Utson steals himself with a deep breath
before ascending the stairs into a state government building in Sydney.
When voters ushered in new leadership last year,
Jaun was initially hopeful.
Under the previous administration, he felt that his expertise was often questioned,
making progress on the Opera House unnecessarily slow.
He thought perhaps the new leadership of New South Wales would give him freer reign.
But Yon soon realized he misread the political situation.
The new government is determined to take charge of the out-of-control Opera House.
They've cast the project as wasteful, draining money that could be going to schools and roads.
They've also questioned Yon's leadership.
The new Secretary of Public Works, Davis Hughes, a former Air Force pilot in school,
immediately began micromanaging Yon's work.
Since taking over, he has insisted Yon submit detailed drawings for each stage of construction,
clashed with him over materials and withheld money.
Yon is frustrated with Hughes' constant interference, and he's tired of nagging the man for payment.
So today, Yon is at Hughes' office, hoping he can reclaim control over the opera house.
As he approaches Hughes's door, Yon is ready to give him an ultimatum, pay up or he'll walk.
But the meeting begins on a positive note.
Yon is pleasantly surprised when Hughes agrees to pay him a monthly advance to cover his work.
But the congenial tone doesn't last long.
The men spar over which materials to use and how much they cost.
Then Yon brings up an outstanding amount for his previous work.
Yon has been inquiring about the money for weeks,
and he wants to know exactly when he'll get paid.
But Hughes is evasive.
He tells the architect that he'll look into it by the end of the week
But that's not good enough for Yon.
He's fed up with non-committal answers and tells Hughes he's resigning.
Hughes blanches and reprimands Yon for speaking to a government official in this way,
but the architect is already standing up and walking out of the office.
Yon is furious, and he hopes the labor minister understands his seriousness.
He expects his resignation to be taken as a threat,
one that will force Hughes into a more conciliatory posture.
But again, Yon has miscalculated.
Instead, Hughes uses Yon's resignation to solidify his own control over the opera house.
When news breaks of Yon's resignation, a public debate emerges.
There's a large outpouring of support for the Danish architect.
Members of the architectural and musical world begged the government to reinstate him.
They insist that only Yon can deliver on his original vision and finally provide Sidney with a world-class landmark.
But there are others who view Yon's resignation as a welcome development.
They blame Yon for the Opera House's ballooning costs,
and they see no reason why the landmark has to be built by a foreigner
when Australia has plenty of talent of its own.
In the days after his resignation, Yon holds a series of meetings with Hughes.
He implores to be put back in charge at the Opera House,
but in each meeting the government stands firm.
If Yon returns, it will be as one member of a committee,
and Hughes will continue to exert oversight.
Yon can't accept these terms.
and on March 18th he submits all of his remaining planning documents and models to the New South Wales government.
His engineer, Ovei Erep, writes Yorne a heartfelt letter, pleading for him to come back.
Although Yorne and Ova's relationship has frayed over the course of many heated design debates,
Ova feels the opera house cannot succeed without the Danish architect.
In response, Yon asks Ova to resign in solidarity, but Ove does not.
Yon takes this as a final betrayal from a former country,
and at the end of April, Jan and his family leave Australia never to return.
To take his place, Hughes picks a young Australian architect named Peter Hall.
As a young man, Peter admired Yon's work. He even briefly considered working for him.
But instead, Peter stayed in Australia and designed a number of public buildings.
And when Peter takes over, the exterior of the opera house is practically finished.
Peter's main task will be to resolve a number of challenges within the opera house's interior design.
And ultimately he and his team will complete the opera house,
but it will take them another seven years and millions more dollars
to finish the work that Jan began almost a decade earlier.
And when the opera house does finally open,
its original designer will be conspicuously absent.
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It's October
20th
1973 on
Benelong Point
in Sydney
Harbor
seven years
after
Jan Utson
resigned
as architect
of the
Sydney
Opera House.
Queen
Elizabeth
II
steps up to
a microphone
to address
the
exuberant
crowd in
front of her.
It's a
blustry
day,
but the
mood is
celebratory.
After
14 years of construction and controversy, the Sydney Opera House is finally complete.
The harbor is filled with hundreds of boats who have sailed up to surround the building on the day of its opening.
Earlier in the ceremony, an Aboriginal actor spoke to guests from the top of the highest rooftop.
He channeled the voice of his ancestor Ben-Along, one of the first Aboriginal Australians to connect with British settlers and the eponym of the Opera House's site.
With his address complete, it's now Queen Elizabeth's turn to speak to the
the assembled masses. The British monarch holds tightly onto her printed remarks, so the pages
aren't blown away in the wind. She speaks about the history of the arts in Australia and praises
the Opera House as a remarkable addition to Sydney's architectural and communal life. She celebrates
the many people who labored for more than a decade to bring the landmark into being,
but she does not name the man who first dreamt of the Opera House. Jan Utson's name is notably
absent from the Queen's speech. His name is also missing from the Planned.
the Queen unveils that day. It's a final snub by the Government of New South Wales
who drafted the Queen's words. Today, the Opera House stands as a cautionary tale for those
who want to build their dreams. It opened 10 years late and cost almost 15 times its original budget.
But the Opera House is also Australia's most visited tourist attraction. It is a UNESCO World
Heritage Site and inseparable in the public mine from the city of Sydney. And despite his
absence on the day of its opening, Yon Utson's name will be forever connected to the Sydney Opera House.
In 2003, Yon will win the Pritzker Prize, architecture's highest honor. The prize committee will
write, there is no doubt that the Sydney Opera House is his masterpiece. It is one of the
great iconic buildings of the 20th century, an image of great beauty that has become known throughout
the world, a symbol for not only a city, but a whole country and continent. So despite all the
controversies and challenges. Yon's design will endure as a triumph. A labor well-worth
a year is a struggle that preceded its opening on October 20th, 1973. Next, on History Daily, October 21st,
1983. An experimental bone marrow transplant gives hope to a 12-year-old boy who spent most of his
life in a plastic isolation bubble. From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily. Hosted, edited,
and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham. Audio editing by Muhammad Shazid. Sound designed by
Molly Bond. Music by Lindsay Graham. This episode is written and research by Ruben Abrams
Brosby. Executive producers are Alexandra Curry Buckner for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noisor.
