Section C
Sydney Opera House must be one of the most recognizable images
of the modem world—up there with the Eiffel Tower and the Empire State
Building—and one of the most photographed. Not only is it recognizable, it has
come to represent "Australia". Although only having been open since 1973, it is
as (36) of Australia as the pyramids are of Egypt and the
Colosseum of Rome. The Opera House is (37) on Bennelong
Point, which reaches out into the harbour. The (38) of the
Sydney Harbour Bridge, the blue water of the harbour and the Sydney Opera House,
(39) from a ferry or from the air, is (40)
and unforgettable. Ironic, perhaps, that this Australian icon was
designed by (41) Danish architect—Jorn Utzon. In the
late 1950s the NSW Government established an appeal fund to (42)
the construction of the Sydney Opera House, and (43)
a competition for its design. Utzon’s design was chosen. The irony
was that (44) . Utzon spent a couple of years reworking the
design. It was 1961 before (45) . The venture experienced
cost blow-outs and there were occasions when the NSW Government was tempted to
call a halt. (46) . In 1966 the situation reached crisis
point and Jorn Utzon resigned from the project. The building was eventually
completed by others in 1973.