Synopses & Reviews
Bridges are such ubiquitous features of the built environment that we cross most of them barely acknowledging their presence. Certain bridges, however, command attention: for their utility facilitating travel from here to there; for their size, setting, beauty, or historical associations. Ordinary or spellbinding, every bridge is a response to a problem--the spanning of a river or other obstacle, solved more or less elegantly. This visual sourcebook surveys American bridges from coast to coast in terms of four fundamental structural types (beam, arch, truss, and suspension) and the special category of movable bridges (swing, lift, and bascule) showing how similar structural ideas have been addressed by different designers, refined over time, and rendered in various building materials. A special feature is "A Call for Preservation" of the American bridge engineering heritage by Eric DeLony, formerly chief of the Historic American Engineering Record, National Park Service.
Review
"Every reader's knowledge should be enhanced by this book....[N]o better detailed history of bridges since 1750." Construction History
Review
[F]ascinating.
Review
"[A]nother example that the as-of-now published titles in the Norton/Library of Congress Visual Sourcebook series are a must have for architectural history buffs and barn, theater, canal, lighthouse and bridge enthusiasts alike." Traditional Building
Review
"[T]his book will be an invaluable reference for architects, engineers and preservationists." Engineering News-Record
Review
"[A book] equally worth recommending
Review
"[H]ighly recommended for any college-level collection strong in either engineering or structural art." California Bookwatch
Review
"Another excellent production by the Norton/Library of Congress team." Transactions of the Newcomen Society
Review
"[H]ighly detailed caption information...makes every turned page an opportunity for deeper understanding." Civil Engineering
Review
"[F]ascinating." IA: Journal of the Society for Industrial Archaeology
Review
"[A book] equally worth recommending
Review
"[A book] equally worth recommending
Review
"[A book] equally worth recommending
Review
"[A book] equally worth recommending
Synopsis
An account of American bridge design, from familiar monuments to modest structures that offer eloquent statements of problems solved.
About the Author
Richard L. Cleary is associate professor in the School of Architecture at The University of Texas at Austin, and lives in Austin.