The Howard Roark of Engineering
Column by Jeffrey Perren -
Jun 30, 2008
26 ratings from readers
Isambard
Kingdom Brunel was a 19th Century engineer, and his extravagance was of a whole different
order — and of just the right kind. To understand his greatness, one need only look at his work.
Who
was Isambard Kingdom Brunel?
Brunel
is not well known outside the UK today, which is an injustice. For
though he stood barely over five feet high, he is one of history’s
giants.
His
achievements in the mid-19th Century are the stuff of romantic
fiction. Yet his dazzling feats of engineering were very real and
many are still in use today.
Born
in 1806 in Portsea, England, Isambard was the son of a noted British
engineer, Marc Brunel. His father sent him to study in France in
1820, then the world’s center of the most advanced mathematics and
engineering schools.
Brunel
returned to London in 1822 and immediately went to work for his
father for the next six years, chiefly on the Thames Tunnel.
Indications of his love for innovation were already present, even on
this project — begun when he was still less than 20 years old.
He
was one of the first to embrace the use of Portland cement, invented
in 1824. (It has remained through the generations, only modestly
changed, one of the most basic building materials on the planet.)
Just
how prescient he was to select it was recently proven once again. A
structure associated with the tunnel near the docks in Bristol was
unearthed recently. It had virtually no weathering at all and was
still supporting a massive slab after 180 years near the salt air of
the British Atlantic.
In
1828 Brunel stopped work on the tunnel after being injured rescuing
several workers during a flood.
Ever restless, while convalescing he
entered a competition to design the Clifton Bridge — proposed
decades earlier to span the 700-foot (213m) Avon Gorge. At the time,
the largest suspension bridge was the Menai in North Wales, covering
just under 600 feet (176m) between supports.
Unfortunately
for Brunel, the Menai’s designer, Thomas Telford, was judge for the
contest and the older man rejected all of Brunel’s designs in favor
of his own. Three years later, amid corruption charges, new judges
were appointed and Brunel’s design won hands down.
Clifton Suspension Bridge
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Apart
from its sheer beauty (as evidenced by the photo), there are several
innovative elements in the bridge’s design. Just one example is the
design for the supports for the wrought iron chains that hold up the
deck. (Wire cabling, first used in 1823, came into common use later.)
In
order to absorb the extra force of load as traffic crossed the
bridge, Brunel invented roller-mounted saddles to hold the suspension
chain. They move less than 1mm, about the width of a pencil lead, and
without them the extra stress would damage the supporting tower. The
chains themselves are anchored in tunnels in the rock, 60 feet (18m)
deep and support 1,500 tons.
Though
completed in 1864 and designed for horse-drawn carriages, it still
stands up to 21st century auto traffic. Up to 12,000 cars per day
cross it safely.
One
of Brunel’s most well-known achievements is the Great Western
Railway (GWR), built to link London to Bristol. He was appointed
chief engineer in 1833 and completed the road in 1841, building over
120 miles of track and a dozen tunnels and viaducts along the way.
As
part of the effort, he devised a method for nearly doubling the speed
of existing rail traffic from the then-standard 35 mph (58 km/hr) to
over 60 mph (100 km/hr).
His innovation consisted of devising a
practical broader gauge of track to lower the center of gravity of
the car to allow for larger wheels. At the same time, it made
possible a more comfortable ride in larger carriages and more cargo
space for freight cars.
The
proposal met with fierce opposition, however, since the track width
around England at the time was narrower. Ultimately, economics and
other factors caused his innovation to be phased out, but not until
long after Brunel had proven his point by completing the rail as
designed in 1841.
During
the same period and as part of the project, he designed the
still-in-use famed Box Tunnel. At nearly two miles long — then the
longest railway tunnel in the world — it took six years to
complete, claiming 100 lives in the process.
It began construction in
1836 and when the two crews working from either end finally met, they
were only one-and-one-quarter inches out of alignment. This was over
30 years before the first subway tunnel in New York was dug.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel
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Among
other notable GWR structures still in use is Brunel’s Maidenhead
Railway Bridge. A beautiful red-brick structure, its arches were the
widest and flattest in the world. The spans are 128 feet (39m) long
with a rise of only 24 feet (7m).
The low gradient gives the bridge
an elegant look and made train passage easier. (Locomotives require
more power and consume more fuel on gradients, a serious
consideration at the time of early coal-powered engines.)
Not
surprisingly, there were doubters about its structural strength.
Brunel was ordered to leave the wooden construction frame in place to
provide extra support for passing trains.
Confident of his work, he
had workmen lower the beams just enough to eliminate any support
value but still look as if they were in place. When a flood washed
the planks away — but the bridge remained — Brunel’s claims
were finally accepted.
But,
as the saying goes, the innovator was just getting started.
In
1837, with the GWR still in progress, he designed the SS Great
Western, a ship driven by wooden paddle wheels and the first
steamship to offer regular transatlantic service. It was also to be
the largest ship in the world.
Because
of its unprecedented size the GWR backers refused to fund its design.
Many argued that it couldn’t carry enough coal to make the journey.
But Brunel saw, as his contemporaries did not, that while the
capacity of a ship increases in three dimensions, its water
resistance increases in only two. That implied that a larger ship
could be more fuel efficient.
When
the Great Western made its maiden voyage in April, 1838 it missed by
only a few hours being the first steamship ever to cross the ocean.
Taking only 15 days, however, it made the trip faster than any ship
ever had.
In
1843 another Brunel first took to the sea: the SS Great Britain. It
was so mammoth it had to be fastened together with over three million
rivets, used to connect 30,000 wrought iron plates. The ship was so
large the engineer had to invent new methods of launching a ship from
drydock. It took 21 hydraulics over three weeks to get it into the
water.
But
the real innovation lay in its method of propulsion. It was the first
ocean-going iron ship with a screw propeller. Brunel’s propeller
design was a feat of genius. It was so efficient that even
contemporary designs, aided by supercomputers working on advanced
hydrodynamic equations, have only improved upon it by five
percent.
Still,
the great engineer was just getting warmed up.
Plaguing
long steamship travel during the time was the problem of fuel. It
took enormous quantities of coal to power the steam engines and there
were few refueling stations between Bristol and New York at the time.
(That’s still true, actually.)
Brunel was determined to design a
steamship that could carry all the coal it needed for a round trip as
far as to and from Australia.
Great Eastern launch attempt
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His
fertile mind tackled the problem and in 1852 he designed the SS
Leviathan, later renamed the SS Great Eastern.
At 689 feet long and
84 feet wide, the Leviathan was five times larger than anything of
its day.
Fifty years would pass before a larger ship was built. Yet
it could still do over 13 knots. Even contemporary cruise ships
rarely do much more than 20–24 knots.
In
order to achieve the sheer size of the ship and its parts, Brunel
developed dozens of innovations. Shipbuilders of the day were used to
working with wood, which imposed natural limits.
With his experience
on railways and iron bridges, he was able to go beyond the
conventions of his time, to establish new ones.
Engines
of the time, for example, could only produce enough power to propel
standard-sized ships. To solve the problem, Brunel built an engine
room with 10 boilers fed by 100 furnaces that powered the engines.
One produced 3,400 hp for the nearly 60-foot paddles, while another
supplied 4,900 hp for the single gigantic screw propeller.
The ship
carried not only 5 funnels, but six sailing masts with over 18,000
square feet of sail as backup.
The
ship had capacity for over 3,000 passengers — a large number even
for contemporary cruise ships. They could have a ride unmatched in
safety at the time, thanks to a double iron hull and twelve
watertight compartments, more Brunel innovations.
They also enjoyed
gas lamps in the cabins, another first for a cruise ship of the day.
Regrettably,
due to the huge costs of building it, the ship’s sponsoring company
went belly up. Bought by another and renamed, the Great Eastern
finally achieved its maiden transatlantic voyage in June 1860, with
only 38 passengers onboard.
It
later gave a ride to a then little-known writer named Jules Verne.
The voyage inspired him to write his 1871 novel The
Floating City,
accurately summing up the great ship. In 1866 it would achieve even
greater fame by laying the second transatlantic cable, averaging 120
miles per day while spooling out the wire.
Sadly,
Brunel didn’t live to see it. He had died young, of a heart attack,
in September of 1859.
Daniel
Gooch, himself a great Nineteenth Century engineer — among other
things he laid the first transatlantic cable — wrote of Brunel:
The
commercial world thought him extravagant; but although he was so,
great things are not done by those who sit down and count the cost of
every thought and act.
That
gives some insight into his character. More can be gleaned from the
fact that Brunel had no interest in being knighted, but
enthusiastically became President of the Institute of Civil
Engineers.
But
to see him clearest one has only to look at his work. There one sees
extravagance of a whole different order, and of just the right kind.
Jeffrey Perren is a professional writer. His current novel (in progress), The
Power of Civilization
, is the story of an entrepreneur struggling to build a
revolutionary new type of nuclear power plant. He maintains a blog at
ShavingLeviathan.blogspot.com where he discusses contemporary culture and
politics from a pro-reason perspective.