Books

Books : reviews

Matthys Levy, Mario Salvadori.
Why Buildings Fall Down: how structures fail.
WW Norton. 1992

Although modern technologies and new materials have greatly decreased the number of structural failures in today’s world, buildings still fall down – and whenever a building, a bridge, a tunnel, or a dam collapses, it is front-page news and often the beginning of a hunt for clues and culprits as fascinating as any detective story. Now two world renowned structural engineers take us on an enlightening guided tour through the history of architectural and structural disasters, from ancient times to the present.

Matthys Levy and Mario Salvadori examine buildings of all kinds, from ancient domes like Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia to the state-of-the-art Hartford Civic Arena. Their subjects range from the man-caused destruction of the Parthenon to the earthquake damage of 1989 in Armenia and San Francisco, the Connecticut Thruway bridge collapse at Mianus, and one of the most fatal structural disasters in American history: the fall of the Hyatt Regency ballroom walkways in Kansas City.

The stories that make up Why Buildings Fall Down are in the end very human ones, tales of the interaction of people and nature, of architects, engineers, builders, materials, and natural forces all coming together in sometimes dramatic (and always instructive) ways.