“Wood shifts the lens of the typical architectural and urban history away from the architect and toward the construction industry and, significantly, the workers themselves. He imaginatively and aptly describes the city as an ongoing, continually unfolding scenario in which wrecking, making, and remaking have resulted in the remarkable urban phenomenon that New Yorkers and visitors appreciate today. The reader is left with a new depth of understanding in seeing the city as a built artifact, along with an appreciation for its sheer immensity and grandeur.”
— Gail Fenske, author of The Skyscraper and the City: The Woolworth Building and the Making of Modern New York
“The creation of modern New York required the construction of not just hundreds of thousands of buildings to provide housing and workspace for millions of people, but streets, roads, bridges, mass transit, and more. This kind of transformation cannot be adequately described in architectural and engineering terms, however important those aspects may be. It touched on every aspect of society within the city, specifically including governmental organization, and labor relations. Building the Metropolis is a closely researched history of how the New York we know came to be, in which Wood puts the physical environment in the foreground.”
— Donald Friedman, author of The Structure of Skyscrapers in America, 1871–1900: Their History and Preservation
“Building the Metropolis is quite simply one of the best and most important books ever written about New York. The big story is that Gotham shot past London to become the greatest city on earth in the half century between 1880 and 1935. But Wood tells us so much more. Who actually built the subways, schools, bridges, and streets, and a million new structures for six million new people? The result is a must-read for anyone interested in the mystery and wonder of the most historic spot in the United States.”
— Kenneth T. Jackson, editor of The Encyclopedia of New York City
“An impressive and absorbing account of the origins of New York’s modern cityscape.”
— Kirkus Review
“Across more than three hundred lucid, densely researched pages (excluding endnotes and other back matter), Wood vividly recounts three ‘building booms’ that made, unmade, and remade the metropolis . . . While we still reflexively understand architects to be the authors of their buildings, eliding the labor of myriad other actors, Wood exhaustively reconstructs how New York City’s built environment was shaped not just by designers but also by bosses and workers engaged in struggle, by rent-seeking property owners and power-seeking Tammany Hall officials, and by all manner of contractors and subcontractors trying to build as lucratively as possible.”
— New York Review of Architecture
“Easily readable and loaded with facts and people, this volume explains how New York City was built. . . . This will stand as an invaluable resource for topics seldom covered in urban and architectural histories. . . . Highly recommended.”
— CHOICE
“A rigorous account of the web of investors, politicians, architects, construction companies, laborers, and trade unions that transformed New York City and the culture of its construction industry at the turn of the twentieth century. . . . Readers can appreciate the book’s strict attention to historical narrative, which, with vivid imagery and detail, creates the sense of witnessing firsthand the dynamism and toil of a Gilded Age construction site.”
— Technology and Culture