Articles in the World Expo 88 category.
Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen governed Queensland for nearly two decades in controversy. That his most enduring civic act was an open, cosmopolitan world's fair says everything about the complexity of his legacy.
In 1988, Brisbane was a provincial city at the edge of national ambition. Six months of a world exposition did not merely redecorate it — they renegotiated its relationship with itself.
Across 40 hectares of South Brisbane, more than 50 nations and dozens of corporate and state participants assembled a temporary city of ideas — each pavilion a sovereign act of self-presentation.
1988 was the year Australia turned two hundred, argued with itself about what that meant, opened a parliament and hosted a world exposition — all at once.
When World Expo 88 closed its gates in October 1988, the question of what would remain became Brisbane's most consequential urban decision. The answer reshaped a city.
Before the pavilions rose and the flags flew, a layered human landscape was erased from the south bank of the Maiwar. This is the story of what stood there first.
From April to October 1988, Brisbane hosted the world and was altered by the encounter. The story of Expo 88 is a story about what a city discovers when it steps, briefly, into the light.
World Expo 88 was not merely a fair. Held from April to October 1988, it was a civic event of a specific type — a Specialised Expo — that reordered how Brisbane understood itself.
When World Expo 88 closed its gates in October 1988, the fate of 42 hectares of Brisbane's most significant riverbank hung in the balance. The decision made in its wake changed the city forever.
For a generation of Queenslanders, Expo 88 is not history — it is felt memory. Six months in 1988 rewired how a city understood itself and what it believed it deserved.
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