The Sydney Opera House is one of the world’s most famous buildings and its history is deeply interconnected with our own. In the mid-1950’s Bennelong Point, known to the Traditional Owners as Tubowgule, set between Sydney Harbour and the Sydney Botanic Gardens, was chosen as the site for Sydney’s new arts and culture building. Danish architect Jørn Utzon won the international design competition for the Sydney Opera House design.
In 1957, we were appointed as the project’s consulting engineers and our founder, Sir Ove Arup, travelled to Australia to set up a site office, establishing our Australian practice. From start to completion, we provided structural engineering for all elements of the building, including the foundation, the roof’s iconic pre-cast shells, the concourse and glass walls.
The Opera House’s complex design presented a unique opportunity for close collaboration between engineering and architecture. It also pushed engineering boundaries, creating technical innovation and establishing design conventions we still use today.
A unique collaboration between engineering and architecture
The Opera House was, at the time considered unbuildable. This complexity created a unique opportunity for Sir Ove Arup and architect Jørn Utzon to collaborate closely – a break from conventional architectural practice at the time.
The crowning achievement of this collaboration is the Opera House’s most recognisable design component, the concrete roof sails, which hold 1,056,006 ceramic tiles. There was no precedent anywhere is the world for building the sails, which needed to be self-supporting.
Working together, they created 12 trial schemes before landing on a spherical solution consisting of ten roof sails built from segments of the same sphere, 75 metres in diameter. Each sail is made from pre-cast concrete supported by concrete ribs. The simplicity of this solution enabled the ribs to be mass produced on site and then lifted into place, offering design coherence and economies of scale.