Engineers of Dreams: Great Bridge Builders and the Spanning of America

Home > Other > Engineers of Dreams: Great Bridge Builders and the Spanning of America > Page 53
Engineers of Dreams: Great Bridge Builders and the Spanning of America Page 53

by Henry Petroski


  427. “the desire to secure”: ENR, Feb. 13, 1930, p. 272.

  428. The towers were designed: S. R. Watson and Watson, p. 148.

  429. “on a gusty, rainy day”: “Memoir” of Robinson, p. 1536.

  430. “professionally connected”: ibid., p. 1535.

  431. “helped to design”: see, e.g., Current Biography, 1957, p. 528.

  432. bridge to Oakland: see, e.g., Purcell et al.; United States Steel (1936).

  433. “the greatest bridge”: ENR, July 20, 1933, p. 89.

  434. Charles H. Purcell: Smith et al., p. 242.

  435. “among the lightest”: Jackson, p. 264.

  436. “studies and investigations”: United States Steel (1936), p. 8.

  437. The board of consulting engineers: Purcell, pp. 183, 187.

  438. In an article: Purcell et al.

  439. “consider the large number”: ibid., p. 376.

  440. two distinct bridges: United States Steel (1936), pp. 11–12.

  441. Joshua A. Norton: ibid., p. 86.

  442. “We, Norton I”: reproduced in ibid., p. 87.

  443. “Who is bold enough”: ibid., p. 86.

  444. “Your length”: Andrade (unpaged).

  445. Conde Balcom McCullough: Smith et al., pp. 242–43; see also Jackson, p. 304.

  446. “Outstanding Practice Problems”: Steinman (1925), p 851.

  447. American Society of Civil Engineers and Architects: see C. W. Hunt, p. 17.

  448. founder societies: see, e.g., Wisely, p. 308. The American Institute of Chemical Engineers became the fifth “founder society” in 1958.

  449. “to address the social”: Robbins, p. 3.

  450. professional ethics: see, e.g., Wisely, pp. 128 ff.

  451. codes of ethics: ibid. p. 127.

  452. “neither satisfactorily formulated”: ENR, May 21, 1925, p. 839.

  453. “In plain words”: ibid.

  454. “to further the public welfare”: Robbins, p. 5.

  455. “engineering on a par”: Steinman (1935b), p. 877.

  456. “The public needs”: ibid. pp. 877–78.

  457. “nontechnical concerns”: Robbins, pp. 5–6.

  458. “Why, I thought”: Hoover, pp. 131–32.

  459. “The four-year course”: ENR, Jan. 14, 1932, p. 65.

  460. issue of what form: see Florman.

  461. “Engr. D. B. Steinman”: ENR, Feb. 13, 1936, p. 257.

  462. “Engineers above all”: ENR, Jan. 2, 1936, p. 25.

  463. “Mexican engineer”: ENR, April 23, 1936, p. 607; cf. Jan. 2, 1936, p. 25; Feb. 13, pp. 256–57; May 21, p. 749.

  464. “Liberty Bridge”: Daley, p. 33; cf. Steinman (c. 1929).

  465. Robinson & Steinman brochure: Robinson & Steinman.

  466. “I expect Liberty Bridge”: NYT, Sept. 20, 1948, p. 27, as quoted in Current Biography, 1957.

  467. late 1940s bridges brochure: Steinman (c. 1947).

  468. “the hands of Dr. Steinman”: see also The Bent of Tau Beta Pi, Dec. 1957, p. 23.

  469. As late as 1957: Current Biography, 1957.

  470. After the George Washington Bridge: see Billington (1977).

  471. separate articles: Steinman (1941a); Ammann (1941).

  472. “elaborate tests”: Steinman (1941a).

  473. response from Ammann: Ammann (1941).

  474. “competitors”: ENR, June 25, 1959, p. 58.

  475. “Eminence Grade”: Wisely, p. 105; see also pp. 106–109.

  476. Sara Ruth Watson: Ratigan, p. 262.

  477. American Toll Bridge Association: ibid., p. 219.

  478. “I can’t write”: ibid.

  479. This new book project: Steinman (1950).

  480. “To spark the things”: Steinman (1959), p. 55.

  481. “A boy grew up”: Steinman (1950), p. vii.

  482. “She grasped her husband’s ideas”: Steinman (1954b), p. 26.

  483. “to the heroic contribution”: Steinman (1950), p. 420.

  484. Writing after the war: Steinman (1948).

  485. “guesswork expressed”: ENR, Feb. 27, 1941, p. 317.

  486. He modeled with mathematical formulas: Steinman (1943).

  487. “What this area needs”: Ratigan, p. 278.

  488. “In the land of Hiawatha”: Steinman (1959), p. 16.

  489. Inter-Peninsula Communications Commission: Steinman (1957), pp. 23–24.

  490. recommending both: ibid., p. 25.

  491. “perfectly safe suspension bridge”: ibid., p. 27.

  492. “not been sufficient”: quoted in Advisory Board on the Investigation of Suspension Bridges, p. 777.

  493. Bankers evidently let it be known: Ratigan, p. 283.

  494. critical wind velocity: see, e.g., Steinman, in Rubin, p. 17.

  495. open-grid roadway: see Steinman (1943), p. 472; von Kármán, p. 215.

  496. when drawn to scale: Steinman (1957), p. 166, fig. 17; cf. Rubin, p. 20.

  497. “The Mackinac Bridge”: Steinman, in Rubin, p. 18.

  498. Among those who were central: Steinman (1957), p. 188.

  499. “Since 1921”: Steinman, Boynton, Gronquist & London, p. 3.

  500. “Here is Dr. Steinman’s”: ibid., p. 4.

  501. Italian Steel Institute: NYT Magazine, Oct. 11, 1953, p. 62.

  502. According to the consulting firm’s: Steinman, Boynton, Gronquist & London, p. 26.

  503. “Suspension Bridges”: Steinman (1954c).

  504. Another article: Steinman (1954e).

  505. His obituary: NYT, Aug. 23, 1960, p. 29.

  506. An editorial: NYT, Aug. 25, 1960, p. 28.

  507. “regarded as”: Civil Engineering, Sept. 1960, p. 75.

  508. “Men and Jobs”: ENR, June 25, 1959, pp. 57–59.

  509. “An Artist in Steel Design”: ENR, May 15, 1958, pp. 136, 139–40.

  510. “We may lack”: quoted in ibid., p. 139.

  511. “rugged individualist”: ibid., p. 140.

  512. “What Measure for This Man?”: ENR, June 25, 1959, pp. 57–59.

  513. “The Doctor”: ibid, p. 59.

  514. “Editorial offices”: ibid.

  515. “Dave Steinman”: ENR, Sept. 1, 1960, p. 84.

  Chapter 7 Realize

  516. one out of every five: Secretary of Transportation, p. 5.

  517. “born of a dare”: NYT, Aug. 19, 1987, p. 12.

  518. radically different: see Bruschi and Koglin, p. 122.

  519. “restringing a pearl necklace”: NYT, Aug. 19, 1987, p. 12.

  520. “a case study”: ibid.

  521. “a great engineering miracle”: Buckley, p. 59.

  522. “disinvesting in the American plant”: ibid.

  523. “the least famous”: NYT, Nov. 30, 1991, pp. 1, 31.

  524. “an entirely new color”: The New Yorker, April 27, 1992, pp. 30–32.

  525. “a sort of vermilion”: ibid., p. 32.

  526. as much as 2 percent: Munich Reinsurance Company, p. 85.

  527. “bridge-maintenance artist”: ENR, Nov. 16, 1992, p. 23.

  528. “Forth Bridge red”: Grant, in Paxton, ed., p. 95.

  529. twenty-four painters: ibid., p. 105.

  530. “a pale buff color”: ENR, April 22, 1920, p. 807.

  531. “a light-greenish tint”: Ratigan, p. 191.

  532. “a pleasing shade of verde green”: Steinman (c. 1947), p. 11.

  533. “patina green”: ibid., p. 12.

  534. “a two-color combination”: Ratigan, p. 300.

  535. something Waddell: see ASCE calendar, 1991, caption for February.

  536. “joshed about”: Ratigan, p. 300.

  537. “using an orange-red”: van der Zee, p. 206.

  538. “emphasized”: ibid., p. 219.

  539. red-orange rock: ibid., p. 265.

  540. “red lead”: Brown, p. 105.

  541. “iron-oxide red”: DeLony (1993), p. 143.

  542. “International Orange”: Golden Gate Bridge (c
. 1987).

  543. “the world’s largest Art Deco”: Brown, p. 105.

  544. forty-eight months to complete: Golden Gate Bridge (c. 1987).

  545. “free bridges”: Strauss, p. 71.

  546. toll rate: see van der Zee, p. 306; cf. O’Shaughnessy and Strauss, p. 12; Golden Gate Bridge (1994), p. 36.

  547. one billion cars: Golden Gate Bridge (1994), p. 65.

  548. one-way tolls: ibid., p. 64.

  549. “maintenance, repairs”: Golden Gate Bridge (c. 1987).

  550. Nimitz Freeway: see, e.g., Levy and Salvadori, pp. 95, 105.

  551. “Since the structure”: Purcell, p. 187.

  552. encase the steel piers: Civil Engineering, May 4, 1992, p. C-84.

  553. “had not yet pinpointed”: ENR, Jan. 31, 1994, p. 16.

  554. “the costliest”: New Civil Engineer, Feb. 3, 1994, p. 7.

  555. large vertical motions: New Civil Engineer, Jan. 20, 1994, p. 1; ENR, Jan. 31, 1994, p. 16.

  556. “You can’t design”: New Civil Engineer, Jan. 20, 1994, p. 3.

  557. piece of scholarship: Sibly; Sibly and Walker; see also Petroski (1994), Ch. 10.

  558. “a communication gap”: Sibly and Walker, p. 208.

  559. Cable-stayed bridges: see, e.g., Ito et al., eds.

  560. “perfectly” possible: New Civil Engineer, Aug. 1, 1991, p. 8.

  561. “Proficiency in any art”: Tyrrell (1911), p. 3.

  562. “one of the world’s”: New Civil Engineer, Aug. 1, 1991, p. 8; cf. O’Neill.

  563. structural artists: see Billington (1983).

  564. Maillart’s great concrete bridges: see Billington (1979); Billington (1990).

  565. Interstate 5: see Science News, May 15, 1993, p. 319.

  566. Santiago Calatrava: see, e.g., Harbison.

  567. Alamillo Bridge: Webster, p. 74.

  568. “to win back”: Metz, p. 60.

  569. “to conceive the form”: ENR, Jan. 11, 1993, p. 15.

  570. computer-generated image: see Austin, pp. 41–42.

  571. “federal funds”: Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Nov. 17, 1993.

  572. unrealized Calatrava proposal: Webster, pp. 72–73.

  573. “pedestrian amenities”: Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Dec. 23, 1993.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Addis, William. 1994. “Design Revolutions in the History of Tension Structures.” Structural Engineering Review 6: 1–10.

  Advisory Board on the Investigation of Suspension Bridges. 1952. “Aerodynamic Stability of Suspension Bridges.” Proceedings—Separate No. 144A-144B, American Society of Civil Engineers, pp. 721–81.

  American Association of Engineers. 1933. Vocational Guidance in Engineering Lines. Easton, Pa.: Mack Printing Company.

  American Institute of Steel Construction. [1948.] Prize Bridges: 1928–1947. New York: American Institute of Steel Construction.

  American Society of Civil Engineers. 1972. A Biographical Dictionary of American Civil Engineers. Vol. I. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers.

  ——. 1991. A Biographical Dictionary of American Civil Engineers. Vol. II. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers.

  ——. 1993. Official Register. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers.

  ——. [n.d.] ASCE Guide to History and Heritage Programs. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers.

  American Society of Mechanical Engineers. 1980. Mechanical Engineers in America Born Prior to 1861: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

  ——. [1991.] ASME History and Heritage Guide. New York: American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

  Ammann, O. H. 1918. “The Hell Gate Arch Bridge and Approaches of the New York Connecting Railroad over the East River in New York City,” with discussion. Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers 82: 852–1004, 1005–39.

  —. 1922. “For Students and Practicing Engineers” [review of A Practical Treatise on Suspension Bridges, by D. B. Steinman]. Engineering News-Record, December 21, pp. 1080–81.

  ——. 1923. “Possibilities of the Modern Suspension Bridge for Moderate Spans.” Engineering News-Record, June 21, pp. 1072–78.

  ——. 1924. “The Problem of Bridging the Hudson River at New York with Particular Reference to the Proposed Bridge Between Fort Washington Point and Fort Lee.” Papers and Transactions for … and Proceedings of the … Annual Meeting (Connecticut Society of Civil Engineers).

  [—]. 1926. “Tentative Report of Bridge Engineer on Hudson River Bridge at New York Between Fort Washington and Fort Lee.” New York: Port of New York Authority. [Reprinted in Miller and Saidla, Engineers as Writers, pp. 237–51.]

  ——. 1929a. “Suspension Bridges Revisited” [review of A Practical Treatise on Suspension Bridges, 2nd ed., by D. B. Steinman]. Engineering News-Record, May 26, p. 800.

  ——. 1929b. “Specifications for Design of Bridges Carrying Highway and Electric Rail Passenger Traffic.” The Port of New York Authority Bridge Department, July 1.

  ——. 1931a. “Brobdingnagian Bridges.” Technology Review, July, pp. 441–44, 464.

  ——. 1931b. “Speech” [plus introduction and discussion at a general meeting held November 4, 1931, in New York City]. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting (American Institute of Consulting Engineers), pp. 3–27.

  ——. 1933a. “Advances in Bridge Construction.” Civil Engineering, August, pp. 428–32.

  ——. 1933b. “George Washington Bridge: General Conception and Development of Design.” Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers 97: 1–65.

  ——. 1939. “Planning and Design of Bronx-Whitestone Bridge.” Civil Engineering. April, pp. 217–20.

  ——. 1940. “Present Trends in Structural Design.” Civil Engineering, January, pp. 21–24.

  ——. 1941. “Stay Systems for Suspension Bridges” [response to letter from D. B. Steinman]. Engineering News-Record, February 27, pp. 36–37.

  ——. 1946. “Additional Stiffening of Bronx-Whitestone Bridge.” Civil Engineering, March, pp. 101–3.

  ——. 1953. “Present Status of Design of Suspension Bridges with Respect to Dynamic Wind Action.” Journal of the Boston Society of Civil Engineers 40: 231–53.

  ——. 1963. “Planning and Design of the Verazano-Narrows [sic] Bridge.” Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences ser. II, vol. 25, pp. 598–620.

  ——. 1966. “Verrazano-Narrows Bridge: Conception of Design and Construction Procedure.” Journal of the Construction Division: Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers, CO2: 5–21.

  Ammann, O. H., Theodore von Kármán, and Glenn B. Woodruff. 1941. The Failure of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. Washington, D.C.: Federal Works Agency.

  Anderson, Graham, and Ben Roskrow. 1994. The Channel Tunnel Story. London: E. & F. N. Spon.

  Anderson, Norman D. 1992. Ferris Wheels: An Illustrated History. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green State University Popular Press.

  Andrade, Jorge Carrera. 1941. To the Bay Bridge: Canto al Puente de Oakland. Translated by Eleanor L. Turnbill. Stanford, Calif.: Hoover Library on War, Revolution and Peace.

  Austin, Teresa. 1994. “The Art of the Infrastructure.” Civil Engineering, September, pp. 40–43.

  Ausubel, Jesse H., and Robert Herman, eds. 1988. Cities and Their Vital Systems: Infrastructure, Past, Present, and Future. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

  Bacow, Adele Fleet, and Kenneth E. Kruckemeyer. 1986. Bridge Design: Aesthetics and Developing Technologies. Boston: Massachusetts Department of Public Works and Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities.

  Baird, Howard C. 1924. “Bear Mountain Suspension Bridge over Hudson River.” Engineering News-Record, December 4, pp. 914–18.

  Baker, B. 1873. Long-Span Railway Bridges. Rev. ed. London: E & F. N. Spon.

  ——. 1882. “The Forth Bridge.” Report of Meeting, British Association for the Advancement of Science, pp. 419–33.

  ——. 188
7. “Bridging the Firth of Forth.” In several installments, Engineering, July 29, p. 116; August 5, p. 148; August 12, pp. 170–71; August 19, p. 210; August 26, p. 238. See also Proceedings of the Royal Institution, London (1887), pp. 142–49.

  Baker, Charles Whiting. 1917. “The Story of ‘Engineering News.’ ” Engineering News-Record, April 5, pp. 6–10.

  Ball, Norman R. 1988. “Mind, Heart, and Vision”: Professional Engineering in Canada 1887 to 1987. Ottawa: National Museum of Science and Technology, National Museums of Canada.

  Barker, Harry. 1917. “Quebec Suspended Span Successfully Hung from Cantilevers.” Engineering News-Record, September 27, pp. 580–84.

  Baxter, James Phinney, 3rd. 1933. The Introduction of the Ironclad Warship. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

  Beckett, Derrick. 1984. Stephensons’ Britain. Newton Abbot, Devonshire: David & Charles.

  Biggart, A. S. 1898. “Sir William Arrol.” Cassier’s Magazine 15: 2–19.

  Billings, Henry. 1966. Bridges. New York: Viking.

  Billington, David P. 1977. “History and Esthetics in Suspension Bridges.” Journal of the Structural Division: Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers 103:1655–72. Discussion, 104(1978): 246–49, 378–80, 619, 732–33, 1027–35, 1174–76. Closure, 105 (1979): 671–87.

  ——. 1979. Robert Maillart’s Bridges: The Art of Engineering. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.

  ——. 1980. “Wilhelm Ritter: Teacher of Maillart and Ammann.” Journal of the Structural Division: Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers ST5: 1103–16.

  ——. 1983. The Tower and the Bridge: The New Art of Structural Engineering. New York: Basic Books.

  ——. 1990. Robert Maillart and the Art of Reinforced Concrete. New York/Cambridge, Mass.: Architectural History Foundation/MIT Press.

  Billington, David P., and Aly Nazmy. 1990. “History and Aesthetics of Cable-Stayed Bridges.” Journal of Structural Engineering 117: 3103–34.

  Black, Archibald. 1936. The Story of Bridges. New York: Whittlesey House.

  Blum, Howard. 1980. “Trump: The Development of a Manhattan Developer.” The New York Times, August 26, pp. B1-B4.

  Boller, Alfred P. 1876. Practical Treatise on the Construction of Iron Highway Bridges for the Use of Town Committees, Together with a Short Essay upon the Application of the Principles of the Lever to a Ready Analysis of the Strains upon the More Customary Forms of Beams and Trusses. New York: John Wiley & Sons.

 

‹ Prev