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Book cover of John Fowler, Benjamin Baker, Forth Bridge

John Fowler, Benjamin Baker, Forth Bridge

Opus 18

by Iain Boyd Whyte, Colin Baxter · 1997

ISBN: 3930698188 9783930698189

Category: Architecture / Design, Drafting, Drawing & Presentation

Page count: 60

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 east of Edinburgh, 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 his masterpiece with the only comparable structure of the period, the Eiffel Tower, he concluded: »The Eiffel Tower is a foolish piece of work, ugly, illproportioned and of no real use to anyone.