Every day, we are granted the power to travel at high speeds, fly, see in the dark, summon water from distant mountains and electricity from the sun. The systems that run our world are invisible to us until they fail.
Infrastructure enables lives of astounding ease and freedom that would have been unimaginable just a century ago. These technological systems - the most complex and vast ever created by humans - have allowed us to work collectively for the public good. But these systems are now beginning to fail us. Engineering professor Deb Chachra takes readers on a fascinating tour of these essential utilities, revealing how they work, what it takes to keep them running, and just how much they shape our lives - but also the price they extract, who pays it and in what ways, as well as the threats to our infrastructure in a changing world.
From Snowdonia's Electric Mountain to a solar plant in southern India, Chachra shows how we can rebuild our shared infrastructure to be not just functional but also equitable, resilient, and sustainable. We need to learn how to see these systems and to transform them, together, because the cost of not being able to rely on them is unthinkably high.
Every day, we are granted the power to travel at high speeds, fly, see in the dark, summon water from distant mountains and electricity from the sun. The systems that run our world are invisible to us until they fail.
Infrastructure enables lives of astounding ease and freedom that would have been unimaginable just a century ago. These technological systems - the most complex and vast ever created by humans - have allowed us to work collectively for the public good. But these systems are now beginning to fail us. Engineering professor Deb Chachra takes readers on a fascinating tour of these essential utilities, revealing how they work, what it takes to keep them running, and just how much they shape our lives - but also the price they extract, who pays it and in what ways, as well as the threats to our infrastructure in a changing world.
From Snowdonia's Electric Mountain to a solar plant in southern India, Chachra shows how we can rebuild our shared infrastructure to be not just functional but also equitable, resilient, and sustainable. We need to learn how to see these systems and to transform them, together, because the cost of not being able to rely on them is unthinkably high.
Deb Chachra is a professor at Olin College of Engineering, outside Boston, Massachusetts, and has a technical background in engineering physics, materials science, and bioengineering. She also creates and communicates widely at the intersection of technology and society, including pieces for The Atlantic, the Guardian, and the journal Nature, as well as her own newsletter, Metafoundry. Her research and ideas have been supported by grants from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Autodesk, and the National Science Foundation (US), among others. Prior to joining the faculty of Olin College, she held a postdoctoral fellowship at MIT, and earned her PhD from the University of Toronto.
The urgent problems of the modern era have instilled in so many of
us a deep craving to more clearly see the systems that define our
lives, to better understand when and why they fail, and to regain
agency over a world that can seem too complex to understand much
less affect. Fortunately, Deb Chachra has written exactly the book
we needed. Revelatory, superbly written, and pulsing with wisdom
and humanity, How Infrastructure Works is a masterpiece.
*Ed Yong, author of An Immense World and I Contain Multitudes*
Deb Chachra provides a helpful and hopeful guide to understanding
the hidden systems that keep our everyday lives going. You won't
see the world the same after reading this book!
*Austin Kleon, author of Steal Like an Artist*
A wonderful, wide-ranging narrative addressing the technical,
social, personal, historical, and political aspects of the
often-disregarded, invisible systems that support us. Forged of a
huge heart and vast expertise, it shines with fierce humanity.
*Helen Macdonald, author of Vesper Flights and H Is for Hawk*
Deb Chachra is the perfect guide not just to how infrastructure
works but also how it feels. This book is just like the power
plants it describes: a precise machine, a fountain of energy.
*Robin Sloan, author of Sourdough and Mr Penumbra’s 24-Hour
Bookstore*
How Infrastructure Works gives you x-ray vision into our built
environment. It's also a ton of fun to read; Chachra is a gifted
stylist and a first-rate intellectual guide.
*Clive Thompson, author of Coders*
A hopeful, lyrical - even beautiful - hymn to the systems of mutual
aid we embed in our material world, from sewers to roads to the
power grid.
*Cory Doctorow, author of Red Team Blues*
An extraordinary book that shows just how much the vast engineering
structures that we rely on every day are shaped by political and
social forces. It’s a passionate plea for people to understand that
engineering is deeply human.
*Professor Mark Miodownik, author of Stuff Matters*
Essential. . . . a passionate argument for the political necessity
of functioning infrastructure.
*Washington Post*
As Chachra walks readers through familiar landscapes of networks,
systems and technologies, she makes the systems mysterious and
fascinating once more...you'll be grateful for her perspective.
*Nature*
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