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"There the proud arch Colossus like bestride Yon glittering streams and bound the strafing tide."
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Sydney Harbour BridgeSydney Harbour Bridge
Sydney Harbour Bridge
The Sydney Harbour Bridge is a steel through arch bridge in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, spanning Sydney Harbour from the central business district (CBD) to the North Shore. The view of the bridge, the harbour, and the nearby Sydney Opera House is widely regarded as an iconic image of Sydney, and of Australia itself. Nicknamed "the Coathanger" because of its arch-based design, the bridge ca
"There the proud arch Colossus like bestride Yon glittering streams and bound the strafing tide."
"The contract for the construction of the Sydney Harbour Bridge was let to , of , England, by the in March, 1924, and the bridge was completed in March, 1932. ... The whole of the work on the site was carried out under the direction of Mr. , C.M.G., O.B.E., M. Inst. C.E., a director of Messrs. Dorman, Long and Company, Limited."
"The Sydney Harbour Bridge had already begun to attract the imagination of filmmakers prior to its completion, and to this day continues to draw filmmakers towards it, in a way no other Australian architectural structure has consistently managed to do ... ranging from ( and , 1985) through to (, 1986) and (, 2000), to name but a few ..."
"Before the Sydney Harbour Bridge there were two Sydneys. With it there was one, united by a monumental arch that rose above the water and the rooftops and wrote itself into the iconography and romance of the city and entire country. The bridge facilitated the greatest geographical change to the since the rising of the waters shifting the ocean to what would be the citys doorstep. The bridge brought together the 300,000 on the north side with the 600,000 to the south side. It gave both access to land and facilities that had been prohibitively distant before, opening up the northern beaches and further afield."
"To get on in Australia, you must make two observations. Say, "You have the most beautiful bridge in the world" and "They tell me you trounced England again in the cricket." The first statement will be a lie. Sydney Bridge [sic] is big, utilitarian and the symbol of Australia, like the Statue of Liberty or the Eiffel Tower. But it is very ugly. No Australian will admit this."
"Between 1930 and 1982, 92 persons fell from the Sydney Harbour Bridge into the water, 59 metres below. The major problem among survivors was pulmonary trauma, often with severe respiratory failure. The position of impact influenced survival, the feet-first vertical position being the most favourable. Mortality rate from the fall was 85%."