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Hardcover: 128 pages
ISBN-10: 1770851119
ISBN-13: 978-1770851115
Ã¥ Å©±â: 28.2 cm x 25.7 cm
[ ¿µ¹® ¼Æò ]
Book Description
An in-depth look at the world's mightiest structures.
Stunning foldout pages, panels, diagrams, photographs and "Mega Facts" boxes make this book a stimulating read for all ages. Megastructures describes how and why these structures were designed and built. It explains the physics behind the designs, which allows buildings, dams or bridges to rise to incredible heights, withstand enormous pressures, and resist collapse from environmental forces.
The book is organized into four sections.
Towering Giants: skyscrapers, towers, monuments, offshore platforms
Burj Khalifa Skyscraper (gatefold) -- casts shadows on passing clouds
Troll A Gas Platform -- its legs weigh an astonishing 72,300 tons each
Pearl River Tower -- the first "green" skyscraper
Gigantic Lengths: wide and long, over and under
Types of bridges -- beam, arch, cantilever, suspension, cable-stayed
Öresund Link (gatefold) -- joins Denmark and Sweden
Gatthard Base Tunnel -- at 35 miles, the world's longest
Massive Monsters and Darkest Depths: stadiums, islands, dams
London's Olympic Stadium (gatefold) -- cut-away diagrams
Hoover Dam -- changing a river course
Palm Islands, Dubai -- palm-tree shaped artificial islands longest
Darkest Depths: mines, power stations, ice cores
Channel Tunnel (gatefold) -- a network of interlinking tunnels and passages
Thunder Horse Oil Field -- the deepest oil field ever found
Bingham Canyon Mine -- the world's deepest opencast mine longest
In each chapter, Megastructures also looks at Failures and Accidents, including such frightening events as windows falling out, roofs collapsing, floods and explosions. Future chapters in each section describe the monsters of tomorrow, like the pickle-shaped Gherkin tower, the Lake Vostok tunnel deep under Antarctic ice and the Bering Bridge linking the USA and Russia.
A glossary of words highlighted in the text, a resources section and an index round out this riveting book.
Kirkus Reviews
Graham explores the building of "megastructures," from skyscrapers to stadiums, bridges to dams, opera houses, tunnels and oil-drilling platforms. This is one of those big, busy books that jams a lot of information onto the page via boxed insets, quick, jumpy paragraphs with attention-grabbing snippets, and a tumble of artwork and illustrations, with an occasional gatefold that feels as big as a quilt. Nothing is conveyed with much context or depth. The material all comes in a rush, so it pays to slow down and drink it in; readers must assemble all the components to get the big picture. Graham is informed and in his brusqueness has chosen all the right tidbits. There are fun facts--how long it takes to paint the Eiffel Tower or wash all the windows in Dubai's Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest building; how all the concrete in the Hoover Dam could pave a highway from San Francisco to New York City--and an array of monster problems that can beset massive structures. There are peeks at future megastructures as well as photos of contemporary ones, such as offshore drilling platforms, the "Blinking-Eye Bridge" over the River Tyne in England and the Large Hadron Collider, that are utterly futuristic. Nor has Graham forsaken the past, with visits paid to the Ponte Vecchio, the Leaning Tower of Pisa and the Delaware Aqueduct. A rangy and exuberant, if skimming, introduction to giant, man-made structures.
North Bay Nugget
Stunning foldouts, panels, diagrams, photographs and fact boxes make this book a stimulating read for all ages.
Anne Dame Puget Sound Council for the Review of Children's
Stunning photographs and illustrations, fun facts, history, fold-out pages, failures and accidents, future projects... what more could one ask for in a book about bridges, skyscrapers, tunnels, opera houses, stadiums, mines, etc? Nothing, really... This one is sure to pull in a wide audience. |
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