• Ended
  • #<Network:0x00007f9f953c8fc0>
  • 2002-09-30T04:00:00Z
  • 50m
  • 1h 40m (2 episodes)
  • United States
  • Documentary
This two part series looks at the most impressive manmade structures in the USA. Behind each of them is a big story of an engineer's vision, a daring plan, of problems overcome or disasters that befell. Eye-popping aerial photography is allied to state-of-the art computer graphics to show these icons of architecture rise up girder by girder, block by block. The Empire State Building is actually rebuilt floor by floor, and the Kennedy Space Center rises from an alligator-infested swamp, while giant faces are carved out of the bare mountain at Mt Rushmore.

2 episodes

Series Premiere

2002-09-30T04:00:00Z

1x01 Thinking Big

Series Premiere

1x01 Thinking Big

  • 2002-09-30T04:00:00Z50m

The first programme, Thinking Big , takes the viewer on a journey of through the buildings that the new nation needed to become an industrial giant, and to announce its own increasing power to the world - including the Brooklyn Bridge, the Hoover Dam and the Empire State Building.

2002-10-07T04:00:00Z

1x02 Reach for the sky

1x02 Reach for the sky

  • 2002-10-07T04:00:00Z50m

Superstructures of America continues to deconstruct and reconstruct the most impressive man-made structures in the USA. Behind each of them lies the story of an engineer's vision, a daring plan, problems overcome and disasters encountered. Eye-popping aerial photography is combined with state-of-the art computer graphics to show these icons of architecture rise up girder by girder, block by block. Programme two investigates the fledgling United States' need for buildings that announced their dominance and power to the world. While rare archive footage tells the stories of human endeavour that lie behind some of these famous structures, computer graphics illustrate how the Kennedy Space Center rose up from an alligator-infested swamp, and how the giant presidential faces were carved into the bare mountain at Mt Rushmore.

Loading...