ENDORSEMENTS
“A landmark contribution to the history of technology—Dreicer exposes the ideological scaffolding behind one of America’s most iconic engineering structures. A masterful achievement.”
—Joanna Merwood-Salisbury, author of Chicago 1890: The Skyscraper and the Modern City
“Complex yet eminently readable, American Bridge challenges the reader to see infrastructure as essential to the narratives and imaginaries of the modern world.”
—Mark Jarzombek, author of A Global History of Architecture
“Challenging the concept of evolutionism in the history of construction, Dreicer’s in-depth study of the lattice bridge proposes a new approach based on innovation, entangling politics, and storytelling.”
—Bertrand Lemoine, author of The Eiffel Tower
“Dreicer’s engrossing study of the lattice truss bridge makes a nuanced and original contribution to the history of technology.”
—John Ochsendorf, Professor of Engineering and Architecture, MIT
“The publication of American Bridge can be described as a Sternstunde: a great moment in the history of construction.”
—Karl-Eugen Kurrer, author of The History of the Theory of Structures
“In this meticulously documented history, Gregory Dreicer reflects on the evolution and reception of one design: the lattice bridge.”
—Journal of Urban Affairs
“American Bridge resonates far beyond its historical scope. It offers a way of thinking about infrastructure not as a fixed system, but as an ongoing negotiation between material and meaning. The bridges we build, Dreicer suggests, are inseparable from the stories we tell about them. Both function most effectively when they remain unseen. Both become visible only when they fail.”
—Spacing: Canadian Urbanism Uncovered
“American Bridge presents a complex story that emphasizes a greater contextual approach by acknowledging the many uncredited actors in the history of technology. The abundance of illustrations, mostly historical, considerably enriches the narrative.”
—The International Journal for the History of Engineering & Technology