After more than a decade in the making, Sydney is unveiling a cultural attraction that’s every bit as epic as the Opera House and which looks certain to become a must-see for all visitors to Australia.
Indeed, the significance of the Sydney Modern Project on the country’s tourist industry is being compared to when the late Queen Elizabeth opened the iconic Opera House in 1973, one of the most distinctive buildings in the world which now attracts up to 11 million visitors a year.
The Sydney Modern Project is a 183,000 sq ft expansion of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, which cost £192 million and opens on Saturday, virtually doubling its already impressive exhibition space with huge glass pavilions to give visitors stunning views over Sydney Harbour.
And as the city opens up after the chaos wreaked by Covid, brilliant new hotels and restaurants are making their mark. From February, prepare to battle to get a table at Petermen on Lower North Shore, run by acclaimed local seafood chef Josh Niland, while standout places to stay include the Oxford House boutique hotel in Paddington and The Porter House Hotel in the Central Business District. And by the spring, the Capella Sydney is due to open in the iconic, heritage-listed Department of Education building along with the company’s signature Brasserie 1930 restaurant and Auriga Spa.
The Sydney Modern Project is a 183,000 sq ft expansion of the Art Gallery of New South Wales (artist’s impression above). Claudia Joseph was given a private viewing – and had her breath taken away
I checked in to boutique hotel A by Adina, where my suite had spectacular views over the Central Business District. It’s also home to Sydney’s newest cocktail bar, Dean & Nancy, which is inspired by the swinging bars of the 1950s.
This buzz all comes ahead of an anticipated invasion of tourists when Sydney hosts two major international events. On February 24, Australian singer Kylie Minogue will open the 17-day WorldPride event, the first time it has been held in the southern hemisphere, and in July the Women’s World Cup. The tournament is the country’s biggest sporting event since the 2003 Rugby World Cup.
But back at Sydney Modern Project, I’m lucky to be given a private viewing, and walking down its wide spiral stairway I catch my breath at the vast Second World War naval oil tank now transformed into a modern art pavilion. Miranda Carroll, the British director of public engagement, tells me: ‘It’ll be similar to the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern – an industrial space for major commissions.’
Claudia says that the Sydney Modern Project will be ‘every bit as epic as the Opera House’ (pictured)
Claudia stayed at the A By Adina hotel, where her suite had spectacular views over Sydney’s Central Business District
Two other galleries at Sydney Modern Project include a huge white cube space for major touring exhibitions and an area for its collection exhibitions. One of its centrepieces will be a huge 62ft by 16ft screen overlooking the central atrium featuring a moving-image work by artist Lisa Reihana, a Maori New Zealander who has exhibited at Cambridge University and the Royal Academy of Arts.
Gallery director Dr Michael Brand says: ‘Great cultural developments like the Sydney Modern Project enhance the global perceptions of cities, states, and nations. Our transformed home for art will provide visitors with exceptional experiences only possible in Sydney.’
So with a flourishing cultural scene, a wealth of museums and galleries and amazing new places to book in and dine out, a holiday Down Under is certainly worth the long haul.
- Claudia Joseph was a guest of A By Adina. Rooms cost from £130 a night (abyadina.com).