America at 250: A Virtual Tour of the Landmarks That Defined a Nation
Try The Visualization The American story is, at heart, a building story. Itās 250 years of believing that what looked impossible was merely difficult. Crews strung bridges across straits deemed uncrossable, raised towers that shattered records year after year, and pushed water hundreds of miles across the desert. Now you can explore that story through a virtual 3D tour. Built with Cesium, the open-source geospatial technology, the tour maps the engineering feats that physically united and powered a growing America, from harbor to desert to skyline. Hereās your roadmap: 1. The Statue of Liberty Designed by French sculptor FrĆ©dĆ©ric-Auguste Bartholdi and dedicated in New York Harbor in 1886, the Statue of Liberty hides its engineering in plain sight. Beneath the 151-foot figure’s 62,000-pound hammered-copper robe is an internal iron framework engineered by Gustave Eiffel. This flexible skeleton lets the statue sway and expand in high winds and shifting temperatures. The entire monument was built in Paris, disassembled into 350 pieces, packed into 214 crates, and shipped across the Atlantic before being reassembled on its concrete pedestalāa triumph of 19th-century structural engineering and international logistics. Fun fact: The statue wasn’t always green. Her copper attire and skin, roughly two pennies thick,