
Members of the Boulder City Consulting Board and other officials standing in a section of pipe over the Hoover Dam, 1935
If you ever find yourself traveling
 by boat along New York City’s East River, stand out on deck as you pass
 under the Manhattan Bridge. For a fleeting moment, as you look up, you 
can glimpse the underbelly of the great landmark. From here, it takes on
 a new dimension: vast beams of steel cross and overlap, appearing like a
 metal runway stretching across the sky. But as soon as you emerge from 
its shadow, it reverts to its usual form, an elegant suspension bridge 
amid the city’s towering skyline.
It isn’t always possible to find an 
unusual perspective on famous landmarks, but photos taken during their 
construction can often provide one. In black-and-white or grainy color, 
they’re filled with promise but not yet substance—scaffolding around a 
skyscraper skeleton, pieces of a sculpture in a workshop, the foot of a 
tower reaching into nothing.
 
 
A photograph by Louis-Émile Durandelle of the construction
 of the Eiffel
 Tower, taken in January 1888. 
In this photo, the tower is reaching its 
first level; it was completed on March 31, 1889
The construction of great landmarks is often thought of in terms of 
statistics—how high, how big, how wide—or hyperbole: the tallest, the 
longest, the most amount of concrete. But there’s always more to the 
story than just figures. Many landmarks are built under clouds of controversy. In February 1887, just after construction began on the Eiffel Tower, a group of artists and writers published a letter in Le Temps newspaper, “Protest Against the Tower of Monsieur Eiffel,”
 proclaiming their distaste for what they called a “stupefying folly.” A
 more humorously cutting criticism came from the French writer Léon 
Bloy, who called the tower a “truly tragic street lamp.”
There’s also often a human cost. At the time that some of these 
landmarks were built, safety standards could be lackluster. Workers on 
the Sydney Harbor Bridge would frequently hitch a ride up onto the structure with the crane hook, which was known as “riding the hook.” In fact, there were often no harnesses or handrails. During the nearly 9 years it took to build, 16 men lost their lives.
Hong Kong’s Bank of China building under construction, 1988. 
Not all landmarks need to be visible, 
monumental structures. The London Underground is an icon, yet it hides 
underneath the city’s more prominent, and often more ancient, landmarks,
 its presence only betrayed by the instantly recognizable red and blue 
logo that pops out from entrances and exits. A photo of its construction
 shows a team of workers, standing on piles of rubble, forging a tunnel 
through the earth. And some landmarks are considerably more recent: it’s
 hard to picture Hong Kong’s vista of skyscrapers without the Bank of China tower, which opened in 1990.
Once completed, landmarks dominate a 
landscape, but as these photos show, it can be even more interesting to 
see present-day icons when they were still taking shape.
Edward Seale’s 1930 photograph of the Sydney Harbor Bridge under construction.

Excavating for the London Underground, Great Northern and City Railway, London, c. 1903.
 
 
Christ the Redeemer statue under scaffolding prior to its unveiling, Rio de Janeiro, 1931. 

 Manhattan Bridge, March 23, 1909. 
 
 
Jakarta’s National Monument under construction, 1963
 
 
An 1844 photograph by William Henry Fox Talbot of Nelson’s Column under construction in Trafalgar Square, London.
 
 
Work on the Sydney Opera House, 1966.
 
 
The beginnings of the Golden Gate Bridge, 1934.
Now, go make something beautiful!
´¨)
¸.•´¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)
(¸.•´ (¸.•´? Tristan
 
¸.•´¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*´¨)
(¸.•´ (¸.•´? Tristan

 


 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
4 comments:
This is really impressive. I always wonder -- especially about the ones built before technology evolved a little more -- how they did it, how many lives were lost. Thanks!
Love the pic of the ET under construction, may steal.
Wow! Another fantastic amazing bit of history! Thank you!
Wow Amazing structures and all a bit too high and scary!!
Happy new week Tristan!
Jackie xx
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