The Seventy Wonders Of The Modern World: 1500 Years Of Extraordinary Feats Of Engineering And Construction

$20.75 New In stock Publisher: Thames & Hudson
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ISBN : 9780500510476
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The Seventy Wonders Of The Modern World: 1500 Years Of Extraordinary Feats Of Engineering And Construction

The Seventy Wonders Of The Modern World: 1500 Years Of Extraordinary Feats Of Engineering And Construction

Chronicling the history of human ingenuity and creative design from A.D. 500 to the present day, this richly illustrated study captures a broad spectrum of remarkable architectural wonders, ranging from St. Peter's Basilica and the Taj Mahal to the Sydney Opera House, the Hoover Dam, and the Guggenheim Museum, accompanied by diagrams, reconstructions, and spectacular photography. 17,500 first printing.From School Library JournalAdult/High School-A beautifully executed, well-organized work. Accompanied by good (mostly color) photos with explanatory captions, the text relates lots of facts: when a structure was built and why; its construction history; politics, if any; and basic statistics such as dimensions, etc. The information is condensed into two to four pages of interesting writing and illustrations per project. Sites are arranged by category: churches, mosques, temples, and shrines; palaces and castles (ranging from the Forbidden City to Hearst's Castle); public and state buildings; towers and skyscrapers; bridges, railways, and tunnels; canals and dams; and colossal statues. The piece on the World Trade Center includes informed speculation on the reason for its collapse. Useful for history, civilization, architecture, engineering, and physics classes as well as for general readers.Judy McAloon, Potomac Library, Prince William County, VACopyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.From Library JournalThis companion volume to The Seventy Wonders of the Ancient World and The Seventy Great Mysteries of the Ancient World examines well-known structures worldwide. Although the book is subtitled "1500 Years of Extraordinary Feats of Engineering and Construction," most of the featured "wonders" date from the second half of the 20th century. The selections are divided into seven categories: churches, palaces, public buildings, towers and skyscrapers, bridges and railways, canals and dams, and statues. Each entry includes basic information on history, structural and engineering details, innovations, aesthetics, and a sidebar "factfile." Written by 28 architects, engineers, and historians, primarily from the United States, Britain, and Australia, the book is intended for general readers. The photos and diagrams that complement the text are uniformly excellent. A more sophisticated, broader, but more expensive choice in the "building wonders" category is Donald Langmead and Christine Garnaut's Encyclopedia of Architectural and Engineering Feats. Suitable for school, public, and basic academic collections.Russell T. Clement, Northwestern Univ. Lib., Evanston, ILCopyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.From BooklistParkyn, an architect and journalist, defineswonders as "artifacts which are larger than the human scale, which are the products of the brain and hands of men and women, and which also somehow exemplify a notable landmark in the evolution of a particular genre." The genres he has in mind determine the sections of this efficiently designed, photo-rich, mind-expanding volume: houses of worship; palaces; public buildings; skyscrapers; bridges, railroads, and tunnels; canals and dams; and colossal statues. With more than two dozen international contributors on the case, this "wow" survey celebrates technical and aesthetic marvels on every continent, each a triumph over obstacles natural and human. As each "wonder" is carefully documented within the context of its place and time, a surprising amount of scientific, engineering, artistic, and political history is illuminated, including the rise of the techno-dependent modern metropolis. So what qualifies as a wonder? Istanbul's sixth-century church Hagia Sophia; the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet; Frank Gehry's Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain; the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; the Channel Tunnel; and Mount Rushmore.Donna SeamanCopyright

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