
Underground by David Macaulay
Underground by David Macaulay is a 112-page hardcover published in 1976 by Houghton Mifflin Company. The dust jacket is in rather poor condition, with open and closed tears, surface rubbing, and is price-clipped. Inside, the cloth-bound book is in better condition, with just an old inscription, in ink, on the title page. Book Summary Surface clues--an escaping column of steam, the tip of a ladder escaping a manhole, the rumbling of trains beneath our feet--are often the only reminders of the complex and immense root system that exists beneath the buildings and streets of a modern city. Rarely seen, the complexity of the network of walls, columns, cables, pipes, and tunnels required to satisfy the basic needs of the city's inhabitants is difficult to imagine. Not until a subway breaks down or a water main bursts do we begin to feel the extent of our dependence on this vast hidden complex. David Macaulay takes us on a visual journey through a city's various support systems by exposing a typical section of this network and explaining how it works. Inventing the site at the intersection of two streets, he first shows the various kinds of foundation construction that provides support for massive city buildings and then "opens up" the street and sidewalk to picture the basic support systems: water, sewage, and drainage, electricity, steam, gas, telephone communication, and subway that are so essential to those who live and work in the city. ISBN: 0-395-24739-X