Flashback: 30 years since Expo 88 put southeast Queensland on the map
IT was one of the biggest parties the state has ever witnessed. Expo 88 was a coming of age moment and brought thousands of Gold Coasters north to experience the once-in-a-lifetime event.
History
Don't miss out on the headlines from History. Followed categories will be added to My News.
A ROYAL visit, indigenous protests and a festival-like atmosphere. Sounds familiar doesn’t it?
The Gold Coast witnessed plenty of this just weeks ago during the Commonwealth Games as the eyes of the world turned and focused on the Glitter Strip.
But the same scenes in fact played out across southeast Queensland three decades ago as the region welcomed one of its biggest ever events.
Expo 88 began 30 years ago this week, creating a stir and acting as a “coming of age” for the area, with the Gold Coast keen to get in on the action.
Thousands of locals made the trek up the Pacific Highway to attend the opening on April 30, 1988 and get a glimpse of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, who were on hand to open the event.
After four years of planning the curtain finally went up on the $625 million event, the biggest part of the nation’s bicentennial celebrations.
A giant inflatable Expo Oz, complete with slouch hat and striped swimming trunks skied down the Brisbane River and under thousands of spectators on Victoria Bridge.
National flags in the form of huge bunches of balloons lined the bridge and a Hercules plane flew low, spilling its colourful cargo of balloons all over the site.
Expo ambassador Jeanne Little delighted the crowd with her gold and black banana hat but her zany headgear was forgotten when the Queen finally emerged on stage in a pink hat, trimmed with blue, a pink and blue dress and white shoes.
Brisbane Lord Mayor Sallyanne Atkinson welcomed the royal couple to the nation.
“Expo 88 is something like a coming of age for our city,” she said.
“When you first came here more than 30 years ago we were still a city finding its feet.”
Southerners said Alderman Atkinson spoke of Brisbane as a cultural desert and the city hall clock tower dominated the skyline.
She said the crowds of 1988 showed it had become the nation’s finest cultural centre.
And Gold Coasters were excited to attend, with a local seaplane company even offering flights taking off from the Broadwater and landing in Brisbane to ferry passengers to the event.
And accommodation was at such a premium for the event that a West End resident set up a tent on their front lawn, a short distance from Expo 88 offering rent for $450 a day.
Among the locals who attended were 14 students from Marymount Catholic College to man displays for the Duke of Edinburgh Award and to act as officials and guides during a visit by Prince Edward.
Indigenous protesters followed the Queen as she made a visit to St John’s Cathedral but the royals ignored the rally.
After opening Expo, the Queen boarded the royal yacht Britannia and waved goodbye from its deck as she made her way towards Sydney.
Expo 88 ran for six months, wrapping up in October that year.
It was declared a major success, selling $175 million worth of tickets and attracting 15.7 million visitors.