Business | Bartleby

From high-speed rail to the Olympics, why do big projects go wrong?

An entertaining new book spots the common threads between mega-snafus

Lots of countries have big construction projects that become a byword for ineptitude. In America the “Big Dig”, a highway project that snarled up the centre of Boston for years, came in five times over its initial budget. The stadium built for the Montreal Olympics in 1976 was unaffectionately known as the “Big Owe” after costs overran massively; the debts from the games were paid off only 30 years later. Even the Germans get megaprojects wrong. Ground was broken at Brandenburg Airport in Berlin in 2006, and the first flights took off in 2020, ten years later than scheduled.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Mega lowdown”

From the March 18th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Peter Thiel doubles down on patriotism in the Trump era  

Venture capital and the government are now brothers in arms

An illustration of a woman at a desk set like a dining table, holding a knife and fork while looking at a laptop.

Reclaiming the office lunch

Why stopping to eat is a good idea


An illustration of a businessman with legs that are part of the Hong Kong skyline rising from his knees. One arm lifts a container off a ship, the other becomes part of a globe's stand. The globe's axis point forms part of the winch that lifts a shipping c

The trade war may reverse Hong Kong’s commercial decline

Asia’s once-dominant business centre is regaining ground lost to Shanghai, Singapore and New York


LinkedIn’s unlikely role in the AI race

People are using the social network differently. It is using them differently, too

Spanish business thrives while bigger European economies stall

Cheap energy and high immigration are the motors of success

How to swerve Donald Trump’s tariffs

Using cunning or flattery is a good start