Next Episode of How Did They Build That? is
unknown.
Across the globe, radical architects, ingenious engineers, and skilled builders are creating structures so outrageous, they defy logic...and often even gravity. From a Manhattan skyscraper that looks like a Jenga tower to a Singapore glass dome big enough to house a mountain to a high rise in Italy with a built-in forest, we examine the world's most extraordinary buildings, bridges, and lifts, reveal their design secrets, and discover the incredible stories of their construction as we try to answer the question: How Did They Build That?
Visiting the Hearst Tower in New York City, a 56,000-square-foot private museum named the Audain Museum in Vancouver, and Library Learning Centre in Vienna to learn about how they were built.
Engineers explain the constructions of architect Santiago Calatrava's university building in Florida, architect Frank Gehry's museum in Spain, and cultural center The Shed in New York City.
Visiting the Hearst Tower in Manhattan and Jewel Changi Airport in Singapore to understand how they were built; covering how designers and engineers attempt to create a museum worthy of Salvador Dali in Florida.
Travelling from Canada to Belgium to the Southern U.S. to examine an eye-popping school, museum, and railway station as well as revealing how they were all built.
Uncovering the design and engineering secrets behind the Grand Canyon Skywalk, the award-winning Audain Museum located in Whistler, British Columbia, and more.
Visiting the Vancouver House, Norway's Under restaurant, and the 11-story glass and steel Seattle Central Library in order to discover how these particular visionary buildings were created.
Travelling the globe to learn the engineering secrets behind various designs, such as the world's steepest mountain railway, a remodelled 145-year-old museum, and a futuristic condo.
Visiting London's Gherkin, Seattle's Evergreen Point Floating Bridge, and Lyon's Musée des Confluences to uncover how and why they were built.
Visiting Australia's One Central Park, the Oslo Opera House, and the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco to reveal their architectural secrets.
A look at the design and engineering stories behind D.C.'s Museum of African American History, the Montreal Tower which is the tallest inclined structure in the world, and the Equinor building in Oslo.
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