• B2CW Trailer
    Jul 12 2026
    What if the future of construction depends on us rediscovering the ambition, courage and responsibility of the engineers who came before us? Built to Change the World exists because I believe civil engineering and construction need to reconnect with something bigger than delivery, process and programme. This podcast is about legacy. It is about the engineers, projects and decisions that helped shape modern Britain. It is about lighthouses, canals, railways, sewers, bridges, tunnels, docks and infrastructure systems that changed how people lived, worked, travelled and survived. But this is not history for the sake of history. It is a challenge to the modern construction industry. After nearly 20 years working in construction and civil engineering, I keep coming back to one question: are we still building things that future generations will thank us for? The engineers of the Industrial Revolution did not have the tools we have today. They did not have digital models, instant communication, modern standards or endless data. But many of them had conviction. They looked at the problems in front of them and created systems, structures and ideas that changed the country. This 12-part series explores those stories and asks what they can teach us now about judgement, risk, leadership, public trust, failure, innovation and the responsibility that comes with building things people depend on. What to expect from the series Episode 1: Why Built to Change the World? The series begins with a question about legacy. Why does civil engineering matter, and why do so many people outside the industry fail to see the impact it has on everyday life? This opening episode sets out the mission of the series and asks whether modern construction has become too focused on process and not focused enough on purpose. Episode 2: The Great Stink and the Systems Beneath Our Feet In this episode, we step into mid-19th century London and the public health crisis that forced a city to confront the reality of its own infrastructure failure. The story of the Great Stink and London's sewer system is not only about sanitation. It is about leadership, political pressure, public health and the courage to solve a problem at city scale. Episode 3: Smeaton, Eddystone and the Birth of Civil Engineering This episode goes back to the Eddystone Lighthouse and the work of John Smeaton. It explores what engineering looked like before modern codes, standards and design software, and asks what we can learn from an era where judgement, observation and deep technical understanding were everything. Episode 4: The Canal Kings The canal age changed how Britain moved goods, materials and ambition. This episode looks at the Bridgewater Canal, James Brindley and the systems thinking behind early canal engineering. It is a story about logistics, sequencing, commercial pressure and the creation of infrastructure that unlocked national change. Episode 5: Stephenson, Rocket and the Railway Moment The Rainhill Trials were more than a competition. They were a turning point. This episode explores George Stephenson, the Rocket and the moment railways began to change the scale and speed of Britain. It asks what happens when engineering proves a new future is possible. Episode 6: The Railway Nation Once the railway idea worked, Britain changed rapidly. This episode looks at railway expansion, national connection and the consequences of building infrastructure at speed. It explores ambition, standardisation, disruption and the challenge of turning innovation into a working national system. Episode 7: Brunel, Risk and the Price of Ambition Brunel is often remembered as a genius, but his story is also full of risk, failure, pressure and recovery. This episode looks beyond the legend and asks whether the modern industry gives people enough space to learn from failure, or whether we have created a culture that rewards caution over progress. Episode 8: Bridges, Disaster and Public Trust The Tay Bridge disaster shook public confidence in engineering. The Forth Bridge helped rebuild it. This episode explores what happens when infrastructure fails, why public trust is so hard to earn and so easy to lose, and why safety, accountability and technical integrity must sit at the heart of our profession. Episode 9: Tunnels, Cities and the Hidden Infrastructure of Progress Some of the most important infrastructure is the infrastructure people rarely see. This episode looks at tunnels, underground systems and the engineering that allowed growing cities to function. It explores the hidden work that keeps society moving and asks whether we value invisible infrastructure enough today. Episode 10: Docks, Ports and the Engineering of Trade Britain's industrial growth depended on movement: goods, ships, materials, labour and money. This episode looks at docks and ports as engines of economic change. It explores how infrastructure connects local engineering decisions to national prosperity and ...
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    7 mins