Catastrophic Collapses: A Global Timeline of Human, Technical, and Moral Failures | Engineering Disasters, Structural Collapses, and Lessons That Shaped Modern Infrastructure
When the ground gives way, it’s never just the concrete that fails.
Catastrophic Collapses is a compelling chronicle of fifty real-world engineering disasters that shook nations, challenged assumptions, and exposed the limits of human foresight. From crumbling bridges and burst dams to structural failures in stadiums, towers, tunnels, and mines, this book maps the global landscape of collapse — not just in terms of steel and concrete, but in leadership, judgment, and responsibility.
Organized chronologically, these case studies span over a century of failures, from Ålesund’s fire-watch tower in 1904 to high-rise tragedies and dam breaches in the 21st century. Each account digs into the technical missteps, overlooked warning signs, and moral compromises that led to catastrophe — and the often-sobering aftermath that followed.
Whether due to design flaws, ignored regulations, maintenance lapses, or flawed decision-making, the collapses explored in this book reveal just how intertwined engineering, politics, economics, and human behavior truly are.
Perfect for engineers, project managers, architects, infrastructure planners, students, and curious minds, this book provides more than a cautionary tale — it’s a call to rethink how we build, how we maintain, and how we prevent history from repeating itself.
📘 Includes:50 detailed incidents across 6 continentsTechnical explanations made accessible to general readersReflections on accountability, resilience, and reformA global timeline and glossary for quick referenceBecause every collapse leaves a blueprint behind — this book ensures we don’t miss the message.