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In the Introduction, the author writes: “Like most human bodies, most buildings have full lives, and then they die.” He states that “the accidental death of a building is always due to the failure of its skeleton, the structure. But these are the exceptions, he avers; standing buildings are the norm. So why do they sometimes fall down? The key, he writes, is in understanding structural behavior.

He then discusses specific buildings that either have, or have not, collapsed, and delves into the reasons that explain what happened. In particular, he reviews very interesting cases in which buildings failed because of a lack of understanding of the effects of wind, sand, soil settlement, heat, or snow, to name some common problems. In one example, he offers the fascinating anecdote of how a dome collapsed because of uneven snow loads caused by wind direction and tendency for drifting. He goes into great detail about particular failures that would be well-known to readers, such as the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and the catastrophic collapse of the Kansas City Hyatt Regency walkways in 1981.

This book is much less technical and more interesting that his previous book, “Why Buildings Stand Up.”
 
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nbmars | 10 andere besprekingen | Nov 16, 2020 |
In brief, as the author explains, this book offers the history of some of the great monuments of architecture and an explanation of why they stand up. He describes in detail the challenge of weight distribution, the role different materials play, and equilibrium provided by beams and columns, He then looks at specific types of buildings and how their construction has evolved, from houses to skyscrapers. The next chapters deal with specific structures, including the Eiffel Tower, some famous cathedrals and the domes that characterize them, and some famous bridges. He also deals with “form-resistant” structures. He ends with a discussion of natural disasters and how buildings can (or don’t) withstand them.

The book goes into quite a bit of technical detail, and although it makes for difficult reading, it definitely provides answers to questions you have about, for example, how pyramids and cathedrals could have been constructed without modern equipment, and how bridges could have been erected in water.½
 
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nbmars | 7 andere besprekingen | Nov 16, 2020 |
Why Buildings Stand Up: The Strength of Architecture Interesting.
 
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ElentarriLT | 7 andere besprekingen | Mar 24, 2020 |
This is my second read, the first more than a decade ago. The theoretical chapters near the beginning (loads, materials, beams) are better than the chapters that get caught up in 'explaining architecture.' It's a good explainer book for structure, I'm not sure it's a good critique/history book, but both subjects get equal time.
 
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sarcher | 7 andere besprekingen | Jul 7, 2019 |
Salvadori's dedication notes that his mother-in-law thought that his book "Why Buildings Stand Up," was nice, but she would be much more interested in why they fall down. She had a good point; I found this book more engaging than the other one. As well as covering structural theory in a way that I mostly was able to follow (there's an appendix in the back that covers things at a more basic and abstract level too), that theory is tied into specific instances of building collapse, both famous and relatively unknown. One of the authors has professional experience as a forensic engineer and has testified in court proceedings in that capacit. His discussion of those proceedings in the book adds some interest too.

More strongly and clearly than the other books on architecture and design I've read, Why Buildings Fall Down gives me a sense of awe at the number of different pieces, both literal and metaphorical, that must fit nicely together for a building to do what it's supposed to do safely.½
 
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MeghanIsMe | 10 andere besprekingen | Feb 27, 2019 |
This had a lot of great information for someone like me; an interested layperson with no professional design training. The style is a classic sort of stuffy academic prose, and in places goes on at length about how much of a genius someone was (the paragraph-plus extolling the mind of Gustave Eiffel being a good example), but its certainly informative and engaging if I put that aside.

I did feel like a lot of what was here was similar to Edward Allen's (no relation!) book, How Buildings Work: The Strength of Architecture, which I read recently. Allen was rather broader in range of topics, and Salvadori more in depth in examining structural design theory and specific historical and modern buildings. It was worth a read, for sure.
 
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MeghanIsMe | 7 andere besprekingen | Feb 27, 2019 |
The writing (or translation) is a little awkward, but the book is essential for understanding the engineering of buildings. Covers the Pyramids, residential dwellings, skyscrapers, beams and columns, bridges and cathedrals.
 
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deckla | 7 andere besprekingen | Jun 2, 2018 |
The second volume is perhaps a bit more interesting for the lay reader, but I found it a little too repetitive. The few major disasters I already knew about and why they happened so that left a lot of smaller scale or less know collapses with similar reasons for failure. Still had some useful background for my studying though.
 
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janemarieprice | 10 andere besprekingen | Jan 2, 2016 |
This is a good basic overview of structural principles and how they work. The writing style grated on me a bit, but I got used to it after a while. I’d recommend for anyone who has a basic interest in learning about structures and how they work. His cheerleading of specific technologies as the be all end all ages the book unfortunately as his predictions have not borne out.
 
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janemarieprice | 7 andere besprekingen | Jan 2, 2016 |
Chiaro e interessante

Bellissima descrizione dei principi e tecniche di costruzione, con interessanti esempi e spiegazioni molto chiare, senza mai usare un linguaggio complesso o formule matematiche.
Un ottimo libro divulgativo che interessa e crea curiosità nel lettore.

Oltre alle spiegazioni tecniche, ogni capitolo si apre e si chiude con un pensieri di più ampio respiro, che toccano a volte la filosofia e le scienze umane.

Un piccolo gioiello da leggere assolutamente.
 
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mbellati | 7 andere besprekingen | Dec 25, 2014 |
Why did the pyramid at Meidum shed 250,000 tons of limestone outer casings when few of the others have? Why is the pyramid shape a logical structure for a country where the only available building material is stone? Those and many other questions are answered in a fascinating book by Matthys Levy. The bottom blocks of a pyramid must support the weight of all the blocks above it; those on top support only their own weight, much like a mountain. The classical 52o angle was adopted only after it was understood that the foundation had to be laid on limestone. At Meidum, the bottom layers and foundation were supported by sand, and the casing blocks lay in horizontal layers and were not inclined inward, unlike in all the pyramids that followed.

The light, airy dome has replaced the pyramid as man's alternative to monolithic monuments. The dome originated thirty-three hundred years ago in Assyria. By 200 A.D., the Roman Pantheon represented the peak of the builders' skill. In 1420, Filippo Brunelleschi completed the dome over the Santa Maria de Fiore without using a scaffold. What gives domes their stability and permanence is their curved continuous shape. Unlike arches that require enormous buttresses, the dome shares the load among all its members. They are exceptionally strong and support gravity loads well. Their rigidity makes them susceptible to earthquakes and soil settlement, however. The advent of Christian liturgical requirements, i.e., the cross shape of many buildings, posed great difficulties for medieval builders who wished to incorporate the dome into religious structures. Eggshells, which are difficult to squash when pressed from the ends toward the middle, are really just two domes glued together. The ratio of an eggshell's span to thickness is about 30. That of a conservatively designed dome is usually at least 300, or about ten times stronger.

The book analyzes assorted structural failures. The collapse of the dome at the C.W. Post College of Long Island University provides an interesting example of how a dome that met and exceeded code standards could still collapse because of a failure to anticipate natural conditions. The assumption behind the design was that snow loads on the roof would be uniform. During the storm that collapsed the roof, an east wind blew snow in huge drifts on one side of the dome, stressing it beyond design limits. That, coupled with the natural lifting effect caused by wind passing over the top of a dome (much like a sail) caused the structural members to fail. So even though the total snow load was one-quarter the maximum, it was concentrated on less than one-third of the dome's structure, bringing it down.

A particularly interesting section describes how tuned, dynamic dampers work in large buildings and why they are necessary. All tall buildings oscillate because of the pressure of the wind. This movement, while not necessarily structurally dangerous — although it can be — can cause airsickness in the occupants. A huge tuned (set to the same frequency as the oscillations of the building) concrete block is set on a thin layer of oil at the top of the building. It is connected to the outer walls by enormous steel springs and shock absorbers. When the building begins to oscillate, the damper tends to stay put because of its large inertia and allows the building to slide under it on the layer of oil. The springs on one side of the damper become longer and literally pull the building back into shape. Those on the other side push it to its original position.

Thermal stresses must also be considered in building and bridge design. As steel beams in a bridge expand from the heat in summer, the bridge must be permitted to expand by using rollers, or the compression caused by the prevention of expansion would reduce the carrying capacity. Air-conditioned buildings pose unique problems because the outside beams may be expanding while the inside beams are contracting because of the temperature differential. This can cause unwanted bending unless structural reinforcement is present.

The chapter on dams is instructive. Many earthen dams, built centuries ago, have survived thousands of years. The Romans built numerous masonry dams on a base three to four times the width of the dam's height. It remained for a Scottish engineer in the 19th century to show that the base width need be no more than the height. Of 1,764 dams built in the United States before 1959, one in fifty failed for a variety of reasons, a rather high failure rate. The most famous collapse is that of the Johnstown dam in 1889, which killed more than three thousand people. It had been completed in 1853 and was intended to provide a steady source of water for a Pennsylvania canal. By 1860, the canal was already obsolete; railroads were taking over the hauling of freight. Soon the dam was in a state of disrepair. When it was sold to new owners they made dangerous modifications that reduced the spillway to less than one-third of its original capacity. The five-inch rainfall that was blamed for the dam's failure would never have destroyed the dam in its original configuration.
 
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ecw0647 | 10 andere besprekingen | Sep 30, 2013 |
I read this as part of my undergrad work to get credits for ethical technology use (they wouldn't take my transfer credits without me reading this first). The voice is good (not too dry, not judgmental, etc) and the anecdotes are interesting.½
 
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benuathanasia | 10 andere besprekingen | Jan 5, 2013 |
A companion volume to the author's Why Buildings Stand Up. There's a lot of overlap, but this one has the analysis of a disaster in every chapter. My Updated and Expanded edition, published in 2012, includes a chapter on 9/11. I found this an excellent introduction to the basic ideas behind structural engineering.
 
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aulsmith | 10 andere besprekingen | Jun 9, 2012 |
In alcuni punti, per un profano, non sono molto chiare le descrizioni delle strutture, ed i disegni non aiutano molto.Interessante la parte relativa alle perizie fatte da Salvadori per i tribunali negli USA.
 
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Iskandar_LT | 10 andere besprekingen | Jan 2, 2011 |
Salvadori's book, together with its companion volume, Why Buildings Fall Down (an even more gripping read, of course), tells a series of fascinating stories to give us a readable, even entertaining, introduction to the principles of structural engineering.
 
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DavidGerstel | 7 andere besprekingen | Jul 6, 2010 |
Actually, why large structures fall down, including bridges and convention centers. Fairly accessible, though for such a targeted topic there’s not much holding the book together, no pun intended—just physics (an extensive appendix goes over basic principles of construction engineering in accessible language) and a bunch of stories of things that fell down, usually due to mistakes about what the building design/materials could take. Published in 1992, the book has a now-eerie chapter about the plane that hit the Empire State Building and how that’s very unlikely to happen again.
 
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rivkat | 10 andere besprekingen | Jul 22, 2009 |
To this engineer, fascinating. Accessible and dramatic.
 
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andrewlovesoldbooks | 10 andere besprekingen | Dec 27, 2008 |
I wonder if this is useful for my classroom (6th grade math)!
 
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livesimple | Jul 31, 2008 |
"My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair! Nothing beside remains: round the decay Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare, The lone and level sands stretch far away." This mystery tour of structural engineering presents numerous cases of failed buildings. The outstanding inked illustrations show the physical forces at work and help the lay reader understand the expert sleuthing of collapsing houses, towers, bridges and dams. Besides the well-known cases (Galloping Gertie, Johnstown, Pisa), the little cases are particularly fascinating. The appendices give a good non-mathematical introduction to the issues of structural engineering.

This book is the perfect present for your phobic friends. Having read this book, you will never feel completely at ease in a building or on a bridge. Any moment the structure might break down ... The main drivers of structural disasters are: a fast deployment of untested innovations, the lack of redundancies and the neglect of control and maintenance. The authors show that more planning, testing and control can prevent disasters and limit their financial and human cost. Structural disasters usually show a long history of neglected warning signs.

The awful chapter 17 where author Mario Salvadori has the psychological need to mention twice his two Italian doctorates and an American honoris causa (and belittle the general public) is not worthy of the rest of the book and should have been excised in the updated version (His ego must have been deeply wounded.). Although the claim "updated" is debatable: Many cases are still stuck in 1989. A truly updated version would have added some input resolving the cases. The changes made mostly concern the two attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. A further reading list would also have made a good addition as the field has a sharp divide between professional and amateur titles. Overall, highly recommended.½
1 stem
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jcbrunner | 10 andere besprekingen | Oct 6, 2007 |
 
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ScienceOlympiad | Apr 20, 2007 |
A scientific study of the subject. Includes b&w drawings.½
 
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debherter | 10 andere besprekingen | Feb 5, 2007 |
Toon 21 van 21