Underused for years,giant cave under Barangaroo finally has a future

It’s been underutilised for seven years:a grand cavernous space carved from the harbour headland best known as the backdrop for several car television commercials and a venue for the 2022 Biennale.

The NSW government has announced a new fit-out to revive Barangaroo’s the Cutaway amid mounting pressure for it to deliver an Indigenous art and cultural centre at Barangaroo’s Headland Park.

The Cutaway,Barangaroo is destined for a refit.

The Cutaway,Barangaroo is destined for a refit.Infrastructure NSW

Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council chief executive Nathan Moran says it is a “travesty” that Sydney lacks a culture centre staffed and governed by Aboriginal people or a permanent keeping place for Aboriginal cultural artefacts.

“It’s a space as big as the Opera House’s main performance hall,and it’s really sad that this space remains empty;vacant despite our best endeavours to put together cultural projects of the highest quality. To leave it practically empty is an embarrassment for everyone. I’m not joking when I say we’d be better using it as an indoor cricket space.

“At a national Indigenous cultural centre at Barangaroo,we could not only show arts and dance but carving,weaving storytelling,the whole gamut,and we could have exhibitions and displays and artist in resident sharing their culture from right across the country.”

The Cutaway,with its flexible shell space,6500-square-metre footprint and cathedral-like ceilings,is buried in a hill created from a flat wharf – largely the result of Paul Keating’s vision to reinstate the naturalistic headland.

The Cutaway has been carved out of sandstone rock with parking for 300 cars under its floor.

The Cutaway has been carved out of sandstone rock with parking for 300 cars under its floor.Infrastructure NSW

Infrastructure NSW identified a national Indigenous centre as a priority in 2016,a project subsequently costed at about $600 million. More recently,the agency has been developing concept plans to upgrade utilities,and acoustics at the Cutaway to create a versatile function space and potential art gallery.

Asked about its plans,Infrastructure NSW declined to go into specifics.

Planning minister Robert Stokes said:“New designs for the Cutaway will elevate the venue to become one of Sydney’s premier cultural and event facilities,spanning three levels and creating a space for events,education,art and entertainment.”

FJMT Studio has been appointed to complete a concept design and seek relevant planning approvals during 2022. Subject to planning and design,construction is expected to be complete in mid-2024.

The Cutaway hosted the 2022 Sydney Biennale.

The Cutaway hosted the 2022 Sydney Biennale.

Moran said former premier Mike Baird had committed to working towards an Indigenous cultural centre. The matter went out to national consultation in 2016 but that report was never shared with the land council.

No further discussions had taken place with the NSW government since 2020,Moran said. Then,the government told Aboriginal leaders it could fund the return of Goat Island to Aboriginal custodianship but not also a centre at the Cutaway.

“It left us all bereft,” Mr Moran said. “It’s the goodwill I worry about. How long can we maintain offering to share our culture in respectful and collective way when we are not even seen to be a priority or even relevant in the cultural landscape of Sydney.”

Shadow Minister for Arts and Heritage Walt Secord said NSW Labor has long advocated for the Cutaway to include a “hallowed” Aboriginal cultural space and urged the Perrottet government to honour this longstanding commitment.

“Sadly,central Sydney lacks sufficient recognition of the state’s rich First Nation history and culture;the Cutaway provides an appropriate and auspicious location to address this.”

Last month NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet announced the Museum of Sydney,site of Australia’s first Government House,would be transformed into an Indigenous cultural space dedicated to the culture and history of Aboriginal people.

A government spokesperson said it was committed to this space established at Sydney Living Museums in partnership with the Aboriginal Languages Trust.

“This deeply important cultural institution will be informed by extensive consultation with the Aboriginal community to deliver a place where the community can talk openly and constructively about history and culture.”

Mr Moran dismissed this enterprise as “another government run institution operating on another non-Aboriginal place”.

“This is colonialism 101,” he said.

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Linda Morris is an arts writer at The Sydney Morning Herald

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