Railway Architecture | Forth Bridge: An Engineering Wonder | FD Engineering
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
- Forth Bridge: An Engineering Wonder | The Architecture the Railways Built | FD Engineering
Watch more 'The Architecture the Railways Built' episodes here:
Manchester - A City Transformed by Railways: • Railway Architecture |...
The Longest Underwater Tunnel in the World: • Railway Architecture |...
Railway expert Tim Dunn visits stations, viaducts, signal boxes, tunnels, pedestrian passages and workshops among other stunning structures that owe their existence to the railway.
In this episode, Tim heads north of the border to scale a Scottish railway icon - the Forth Bridge, without doubt one of the engineering wonders of the world.
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When I saw my first photograph of the Forth Bridge, I was in love. And through the years I've looked at countless images, but this video is special. Views I've never seen before, both of and from this bridge, and my awe and wonder at it continues to grow. Thanks for sharing this film. It was wonderful!
With all the metal on view this structure reminds you immediately of the Eiffel tower - the design is however different. It's an engineering marvel and one can only wonder how it was built in a different era . Paid for with the lives of all the men who toiled in the most hazardous conditions- shockingly some of them we learn were children . Quite simply breathtaking .
I've read that Firth of Forth bridge was built much stronger, due in part, as a response to the Tay bridge collapse.
The largest railway network in the world is India. It is worlds largest employer. The tallest bridge is the chenab in kashmir.😅
I grew up in Edinburgh in the 1950’s and fondly remember the ferries which provided car transport from South Queensferry. The Forth Bridge truely is a marvel! I came to Australia in 1961.
Kashmir isn't in india 😇🙃
Indian railways were built by the same British engineers.
@@nos9784Kashmir is the crown of India
What an amazing story! I am glad I found it. I had no knowledge of the amazing Forth bridge. I was wondering how much effort it would take to periodically repaint the bridge. 25 year paint is a good thing! Take care 🙂
If you want to see the black and white Alfred Hitchcock movie with the Forth bridge from the 1930s, it's called the 39 steps. Enjoy
As an 18 year old student I was fortunate to WALK over the sidewalk of this bridge. It was on a field trip in organized school exchange. Don’t think it would be possible nowadays… that was in 1980…. Still remember it as yesterday. Specially the train passing while walking the bridge….
Out standing Documentary, of history! 🏁
Only about 18 minutes on the Forth Bridge.... then Euston station stuff...
And an intro that's WAY too long. More fluff than substance.
Near 33.33
narrator: "I'm traveling solo".
Cameraperson: "Oy, forget 'bout me then, did you."
I was going to say the same thing. You can see the workers thinking, "Where did this ninny come from?"
> 33:33 < extreme train-spotting
You see the Boat-ship- building Technology of the time..Rivets..and It is a nautical approach, the enclosed structure is shielded from Corrosion by the rivetted Skin..quite ingenious..makes Maintenance easier these round shapes and aerodynamically, it is good too.
I built a spaghetti model of the Forth bridge for a school project.
21:21 - Similar to London, in New York City, the demolition of Pennsylvania Station in the mid-1960s promoted the city's architecture landmarks preservation.
21:28 look how absolutely PISSED the curator looks
I first fell in love with the beauty of the Forth bridge when I was a kid watching a black and white Alfred Hitchcock movie. Im 56. I've forgotten the title. It's a great reason to pull the old movie collection out and watch them again.
What happened to the first three since they made a forth?
It’s a shame to cut three different locos together ostensibly trying to make out it’s the same train. What errors are there about things I don’t know about? Doesn’t inspire confidence.