John Fowler, Benjamin Baker, Forth Bridge Opus 18

by ; ;
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1997-12-16
Publisher(s): Edition Axel Menges
List Price: $52.43

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Summary

When the Forth Bridge opened on 4 March 1890, it was the longest railway bridge in the world and the first large structure made of steel. Crossing the wide Firth of Forth west of Edinburgh in Scotland, it represents one of the greatest engineering triumphs of Victorian Britain, man's victory over the intractable topography of land and water. Not surprisingly, such a vigorous rebuff of the natural order was condemned at the time by those late Victorians who resisted the march of technology, and William Morris described the Bridge as the "supremest specimen of all ugliness". In response, Benjamin Baker insisted that its beauty lay in its functional elegance. Contrasting the bridge with the only comparable structure of the period, the Eiffel Tower, he concluded: "The Eiffel Tower is a foolish piece of work, ugly, ill-proportioned and of no real use to anyone." But the beauty and fascination of the Forth Bridge lies not simply in its functional performance, but in its scale and power. Over a mile long and higher than the dome of St. Peter's in Rome, it rivals the natural phenomena that the philosophers of the 18th century identified as sources of sublime beauty. Immanuel Kant pointed to hurricanes, boundless oceans and high waterfalls as objects of sublime contemplation, "because they raise the forces of the soul above the heights of the vulgar commonplace, and discover within us a power of resistance of quite another kind, which gives us courage to be able to measure ourselves against the seeming omnipotence of nature". In the 19th century the awe-inspiring feats of nature were rivalled by the inventions of the engineers, and the thrill of the waterfall or the lightning flash was eclipsed by the sight of the roaring locomotive dashing across the majestic span of the Forth Bridge.

Author Biography

Ian Boyd Whyte is an architectural historian specializing in the architecture of the late 19 and early 20th centuries. Angus J. Macdonald is a structural engineer with particular research interests in the relationship between structure and architecture. Both teach in the Department of Agriculture at the University of Edinburgh. Colin Baxter is one of Scotland's most celebrated photographers.

Table of Contents

Iain Boyd Whyte: A sensation of immense power
6(6)
Angus J. Macdonald: The technology of the Forth Bridge
12(6)
The concept
12(1)
The continuous-girder principle
12(1)
Triangulation of the internal geometry
13(1)
Steel
14(1)
Construction
15(1)
Stability and bracing
15(1)
Expansion and contraction
16(1)
Conclusion
17(1)
Plans
18(4)
Pictorial section
22(38)
Statistics
60

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