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Sydney Harbour Bridge turns 80

เผยแพร่:   โดย: MGR Online

Sydney, New South Wales, AUSTRALIA: A group of Sydney Symphony Orchestra musicians play to an audience of six people connected to the Sydney Harbour Bridge after scaling the citys iconic Harbour Bridge for an exclusive concert on March 19, 2012, to celebrate the sweeping structures 80th birthday. Known as the Grand Old Dame of Sydney, or more colloquially The Coathanger, the bridge was officially opened to traffic on March 19, 1932, joining the harbours northern and southern shores for the first time. It was an ambitious project which took eight years to complete, with construction of the 1,149-metre (3,770-foot) span claiming the lives of 16 men. To celebrate its 80th anniversary 11 horn section musicians from the Sydney Symphony Orchestra -- also turning 80 this year -- climbed to the top of the bridges 134-metre high arch to perform for a select group of special guests. AFP PHOTO/Bridgeclimb

March 19, 2012
SYDNEY (AFP) - A group of Sydney Symphony Orchestra musicians scaled the city's Harbour Bridge for an exclusive concert Monday to celebrate the sweeping structure's 80th birthday.

Known as the "Grand Old Dame" of Sydney, or more colloquially "The Coathanger", the bridge was officially opened to traffic on March 19, 1932, joining the harbour's northern and southern shores for the first time.

It was an ambitious project that took eight years to complete, with construction of the 1,149-metre (3,770-foot) span claiming the lives of 16 men.

To celebrate its 80th anniversary, 11 brass section musicians from the Sydney Symphony Orchestra -- also turning 80 this year -- climbed to the top of the bridge's 134-metre high arch to perform for a select group of guests.

"The musicians performed Aaron Copland's 'Fanfare for the Common Man' plus the theme music from the movie Chariots of Fire," a Symphony spokeswoman said.

The small audience featured six "Bridge heroes" with a special connection to the structure, according to event organisers.

They included descendants of the bridge's engineer J.J.C Bradfield, a man whose uncle placed the very first rivet, and one woman who was born in an ambulance on the span.

The bridge is one of Sydney's most-photographed and best-known landmarks and is often the centrepiece of fireworks displays in the city.
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