Posts

Showing posts from October, 2019

Barangaroo 1865

Image
This is an awesome pic of a ship-builder because it's so early in Sydney's photographed history, and look behind. I've spliced two old stereographs together and enhanced the details. Top left on the hill is Sydney Observatory, and top right is the church tower of St Philip's, both still intact today. The steep cliffs and shoreline have been redeveloped many times over many decades so that today they're unrecognisable from the original. And how do we know we're in the same spot as the photo above? Triangulate the Observatory tower and its west dome, and they match. Google Street View (clickable).

Bond Street, Sydney 1898

Image
This is how Sydney generally used to look in the C19th. So much of it was swept away in the 60s and 70s for mass modernism, before it was collectively realised how much history, beauty and heritage had been lost. It's still going on, just to a lesser extent. I enhanced the photo from a very dark original which is why it looks a little patchy. Some of the detail had been lost in the under-exposure. Anyway, from the same corner as above. Google Street View (clickable).

King Street at York 1865-1959

Image
The same spot on King Street across 150 years. In 1865, a quiet colonial outpost, just like a big country town. But prosperity and commerce are growing, real estate increasingly in demand. 1885. Post gold-rush, and mass immigration from the poorer parts of the UK has jumped over the preceding decades. The wealthy of the colony keep consolidating, and the main streets are full of substantial sandstone buildings. This is when Sydney starts to get its large Victorian edifices that we know today. 1959. The city has had a 10-storey height limit imposed since 1910. This restriction has just been lifted, and the charming-scale streets will soon be largely decimated and replaced by modernist and post-modernist goliaths. Google Street View (clickable)