Construction zone / photographs by Richard Sobol ; text by Cheryl Willis Hudson.
Material type:
TextPublication details: Cambridge, Mass. : Candlewick Press, 2006.Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ; 28 cmISBN: - 0763626848 (reinforced) :
- 9780763626846 (reinforced)
- JUV TH 375 .H83 2006
- A Junior Library Guild selection.
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Juvenile Book
|
Storms Research Center Juvenile Collection | JUV TH 375 .H83 2006 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 98636181 |
Browsing Storms Research Center shelves,Shelving location: Juvenile Collection Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
| JUV TD 792 .N373 2001 Garbage and recycling / | JUV TF 148 .H33 1989 All aboard trains / | JUV TH 4811.5 .L37 2011 If you lived here : houses of the world / | JUV TH 375 .H83 2006 Construction zone / | JUV TJ 603.2 .F56 2013 Locomotive / | JUV TK 140 .E3 G73 1985 Thomas Alva Edison, bringer of light / | JUV TK 140 .E3 W45 1988X Thomas Edison / |
A Junior Library Guild selection.
Put on your hard hat and step inside the construction zone: you're invited on a virtual tour of a building in progress. Put on your hard hat and step inside CONSTRUCTION ZONE! Caution! Construction zone ahead! Anyone who has ever stopped to watch a big building going up - and who hasn't? - will be thrilled by this behind-the-scenes look at an amazing construction project. Young readers are invited to come on a virtual tour of a building in progress, led by award-winning photographer Richard Sobol. It takes hundreds of workers, thousands of trucks and machines, and millions of nails and bolts to transform an idea on paper into an actual building in which people will live, play, shop, or work. Every single piece of the construction puzzle - big and small - must fit together flawlessly. With a clear, direct narrative and handy definitions of construction-related jobs, machines, and terms, Cheryl Willis Hudson distills this most complex of projects into language a young child can grasp. The building itself - the Stata Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Frank O. Gehry - is playful and colorful, sculpted to excite, delight, and surprise. Richard Sobol's vivid color photographs capture all the excitement of the busy construction site, while offering a close-up view of its breathtaking genius.
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