How Did they Build the Suez Canal? 1859 to Today: Extreme Constructions | Documentary – Everything Law and Order Blog

We look back to the original construction of the Suez Canal, back in 1859, to show how it first came to be built, and how now, they are planning to widen it.

It’s a major construction project, aimed at doubling the width of the Suez Canal and deepening its main waterway. 500 million cubic meters of sand and soil have already been transported from all over the world. Using unprecedented 3D images, we reveal how the canal will be widened.

This documentary was produced by Eclectic and directed by Johanna Gauterie, Richard Poisson. It was first released in 2017.

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44 thoughts on “How Did they Build the Suez Canal? 1859 to Today: Extreme Constructions | Documentary”
  1. Why is it when you google original construction photos of the Suez Canal all images are drawings or paintings and not photos? I'll tell you why. Because the original Suez canal was old world construction which happened well before 1859. Yes there were cameras in 1859. The first camera was invented in 1816 by Joseph Nicephore Niepce. Question the time line narrative folks. We've been lied to on a grand scale.

  2. Incredible. An hour long explanation that conveniently skips the questions I wanted answered. How was the water held back while building it? And how was the water released safely once finished?

  3. Staggering feat of ingenious engineering from mid 1900s to today 2024. Excellent history of Suez Canal. A shame the documentary didn't talk about the people of mid 1900s who excavated the Suez, like where they come from, how they died and photos, and what if any their descendants if if they work on the canal today. Thoroughly enjoyable history doc.

  4. I first went through the canal on the BP Tanker British Loyalty in the November of 1977..
    Those steam dredgers were still in operation then.. I can never forget the noise of them.. squealing and screeching like something from the pits of hell..

  5. This documentary says that thousands of manual workers died during the construction of the Suez Canal, but its focus is not the humanitarian tragedy. All the attention of those who watch the documentary is drawn to the success of the technologies created to accelerate the construction of the original channel and used to expand it recently. In the "business as usual" world, machines have life and are revered as if they were living beings. But the poor workers who died have no right to be humanized. No one needs to know their names, how old they were and what the details of the deadly accidents were? Did their families suffer? Are there any descendants of theirs who could give testimony? These questions were considered irrelevant, because as if it were a Pyramid, the Suez Canal devoured the lives of thousands of manual workers and their stories as well.

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