The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Forth Bridge hailed for shaping our world today
The Forth Bridge is among the top 200 influential projects which have helped shape the world.
The Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) has announced the Unesco world heritage site, along with hydroelectric power in Scotland and the Falkirk Wheel, is on the prestigious global list which illustrates how civil engineering has shaped the world and transformed people’s lives for the better.
The list has been collated to mark the ICE’s 200th anniversary and to support the UK Government’s Year of Engineering.
Completed in 1890, the Victorian cantilever railway bridge carries 200 trains a day.
ICE Scotland director Sara Thiam said: “Civil engineers deliver a wonderfully diverse range of work, from the cutting of technology to the everyday infrastructure around us such as buildings, water, energy and roads.
“While many benefit from what civil engineers do, many don’t understand what they do.
“With 200 People and Projects, we hope, as part of our ICE 200 bicentennial celebrations, to be able to shine a light on how civil engineers transform people’s lives.
“These three projects showcase how civil engineering paved the way to modern life and how it continues to tackle the problems of today, safeguarding the future for generations to come.”