12 Mar: Yes, We Canberra

What is Australia’s capital city? Not Sydney. Nor Melbourne. It’s Canberra: so named at an official ceremony on 12th March, 1913 – when the site was little more than grazing land for sheep.

But for this newly-federated nation, Canberra’s remote, inland location was a deliberate compromise to offset the rivalry between the country’s two largest cities. Sydney had long been the principal colonial centre, but Melbourne’s rapid expansion during the nineteenth-century gold rush made it an equally powerful contender. To avoid favouring either, Parliament decided their new capital was to be located in New South Wales, but at least one hundred miles from Sydney, and not on the coast. 

Designing was entrusted to the winner of an international planning competition, the American architect Walter Burley Griffin. His plan emphasised grand geometry, sweeping avenues, and harmony with the surrounding landscape, producing a city organised around lakes, vistas, and circular roadways. But development proceeded slowly, especially after the disruptions of two world wars.

In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly consider why the town has never quite won the heart of most Australians; compare its construction to that other purpose-built capital, Washington DC; and reveal how the sex industry revived one of its suburbs…

Further Reading:

• ‘Founding of Canberra’ (National Museum of Australia): https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/founding-of-canberra

• ‘Marion Mahony Griffin: architect, environmentalist, visionary’ (MHNSW, 2022): https://mhnsw.au/stories/general/marion-mahony-griffin-architect-environmentalist-visionary/

• ‘Tony Robinson’s Time Walks | S2E4 | Canberra’ (Time Walks, 2019): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kww18KmF4fc

#Architecture #Design #Australia #1910s