Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Magnificent megastructures
The Guardian Weekly
|November 10, 2023
Utilitarian as they may be, some civic projects are so monumental they approach the sublime. And one of the most elegant is a power station hidden away inside a mountain in the glorious landscape of north Wales

I'VE BEEN FASCINATED BY SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING MY ENTIRE LIFE. The first thing I remember wanting to be when I was a kid was an astronaut - it was the 1970s, the cultural peak of space exploration. By the time I was 10, I wanted to be a nuclear physicist, and this took me all the way through to a degree in engineering physics.
I was born in Canada, but when I was nine, my family lived in Bhopal, India, in my father's family home, for six months. If culture is everything that you do without thinking about why you're doing it, then our infrastructural systems, and the ways of life they make possible, are unquestionably an important part of culture. Even as a child, the differences between Canada and India - language, social norms, the deep poverty and the unignorable inequality-required serious adjustment.
In Bhopal, we only had running water for an hour or so each morning and evening. We collected it in buckets to use for bathing and flushing toilets the rest of the time.
My mother boiled and filtered the water to make it potable to digestive and immune systems accustomed to clean, cold, carefully treated water from Lake Ontario. We quickly learned to expect dimming lights and power cuts as the city's electrical grid struggled to cope with the fans and evaporative coolers brought to bear against summer's heat.
I doubt I would have given much thought to infrastructure had I not lived in these two different places. By moving to Canada, my parents had given me a new citizenship in a country with a different set of educational and economic opportunities, alongside the infrastructure that made it possible for me to access them.
Collective infrastructures - water and sewage, transportation, electricity, telecommunications - are good candidates for the most complex systems created by humans.
Bu hikaye The Guardian Weekly dergisinin November 10, 2023 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Guardian Weekly'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

The Guardian Weekly
Feeling in a pickle? How leftover brine can give your cooking a kick
I’m an avid consumer of pickles. When I’ve finished a jar, how can I use the brine in my cooking?
2 mins
July 04, 2025

The Guardian Weekly
Cool retreats Hill stations swamped by tourists fleeing heat
Until recently, the drive up the mountainous road to Landour was a highlight of a visit to the hilltop town, as drivers enjoyed glorious Himalayan views and breathed in the cool forest air. Today, the journey is something to be endured with up to 1,000 cars a day clogging the narrow, winding road - slowing to navigate hairpin bends. A journey that once took five to six hours from Delhi can now take up to 10 hours, especially at weekends in May and June.
3 mins
July 04, 2025

The Guardian Weekly
How the rise of Zohran Mamdani has divided Democrats
The Friday night before election day, Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old democratic socialist running for mayor of New York City, walked the length of Manhattan, from Inwood Hill Park at its northern tip to the Battery - about 20km. Along the way, he was greeted by a stream of New Yorkers enjoying the sticky summer night - men rose from their folding chairs to shake his hand, drivers honked in support and diners leapt up to snap a selfie with the would-be leader of their city.
5 mins
July 04, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
‘It’s a fight for life’ Tipping points, doomerism and catastrophic risks
Climate expert Genevieve Guenther on the importance of correcting the false narrative that climate threat is under control... and why it is appropriate to be scared
5 mins
July 04, 2025

The Guardian Weekly
Call to revive the spirit of Greenham Common
In August 1981, 36 people, mainly women, walked from Wales to RAF Greenham Common in Berkshire to protest against the storing of US cruise missiles in the UK.
2 mins
July 04, 2025

The Guardian Weekly
Who are the jihadists waging a ghost war in the Sahel?
The scene is wearily familiar. It is dusk at a ramshackle military outpost, surrounded by miles of scrubby desert or on the outskirts of a major town.
3 mins
July 04, 2025

The Guardian Weekly
Will Ghibli's magic fade as the studio turns 40?
The beloved Japanese animation house faces an uncertain future, with its figurehead, 84-year-old Hayao Miyazaki, claiming he has made his final film
3 mins
July 04, 2025

The Guardian Weekly
The ripple effect
After America's blunt intervention, Donald Trump says the war between Iran and Israel is over. But the perceived readiness of the US to employ force instead of negotiations could have knock-on consequences around the world
4 mins
July 04, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Broken justice...
Critics argue that far from shielding the world from the worst crimes, international law has protected states by helping them justify their wrongs. Is the system dying or merely in hibernation?
16 mins
July 04, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
While the death toll mounts, Israel's allies must help build a future for Palestinians
“We cannot be asking civilians to go into a combat zone so that then they can be killed with the justification that they are in a combat zone.” It defies belief that the Unicef spokesperson, James Elder, should have needed to spell that out last week.
2 mins
July 04, 2025
Translate
Change font size