This is a real plasma inside a fusion reactor. Its temperature is 150,000,000°C (270,000,032 °F)6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/gifs
Japan has an airport located literally in the ocean. It cost $20 billion to build6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/BeAmazed
This is a real plasma inside a fusion reactor. Its temperature is 150,000,000°C (270,000,032 °F)6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/BeAmazed
This is a real plasma inside a fusion reactor. Its temperature is 150,000,000°C (270,000,032 °F)6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/ThatsInsane
This is a real plasma inside a fusion reactor. Its temperature is 150,000,000°C (270,000,032 °F)6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/TerrifyingAsFuck
Japan has an airport located literally in the ocean. It cost 20 billion dollars to build... but it's sinking6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/TerrifyingAsFuck
The interior of a Boeing aircraft factory in Seattle during World War II. This plant was unique because it was hidden underneath a prop town (pics in the comments show the outside view). This worked, as the factory was never bombed throughout the war6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/InfrastructurePorn
The difference between an unprotected structure (from earthquakes) and a structure with diagonal dampers10mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/Damnthatsinteresting
Lightning striking a rocket with a grounding wire attached to it9mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/oddlysatisfying
Inside a power plant in Ohio. You can see a GE gas turbine on the lower left6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/InfrastructurePorn
This is Laerdal Tunnel, located in Norway. At 24.51 km/15.2 mi it’s the longest road tunnel in the world. For safety, to reduce monotony, it has caverns every 6 km that are lit with blue and yellow lights. They can be used for rest stops. The entire tunnel was built for only $113M9mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/InfrastructurePorn
Lightning striking a rocket with a grounding wire attached to it11mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/ElectricalEngineering
Russians use old jet engines from Mig-15 planes to clear snow from roads6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/Military
Orlando International Airport from an aerial view. It was first a military airport (in 1942) and became a civilian airport in 1975. It is one of the largest airports in the United States by area. It receives 50 million passengers annually (almost as many as Miami International Airport)6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/InfrastructurePorn
This is a real plasma inside a fusion reactor. Its temperature is 150,000,000°C (270,000,032 °F)6mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/ElectricalEngineering
That's how important earthquake-resistant building design is. You can see the difference between an unprotected structure and a structure with diagonal dampers10mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/architecture
The second largest tunnel boring machine in the world, known as Big Bertha. It’s 17.5 meters or 57.5 feet in diameter (you can see a person in the picture for scale)9mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/oddlyterrifying
The only air-born image of a concord at mach two taken from a British fighter plane - the fighter plane could only fly at the same speed very briefly because it would run out of gas at that speed - the concord could fly for hours - truly incredible engineering!11mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/BeAmazed
This 660-ton pendulum protects Taipei 101 from earthquakes and typhoons. Similar technology is used in many other skyscrapers around the world9mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/InfrastructurePorn
This airport in Japan is located literally in the middle of the bay. It cost 20 billion dollars to build and is considered the civil engineering monument of the millennium. However, it has already sunk more than 8 meters and is still sinking.10mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/interestingasfuck
Japan uses sprinklers that spray warm underground water to melt the snow on the roads7mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/InfrastructurePorn
They were definitely under the influence of something when they were creating THIS.11mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/StonerEngineering
The Japanese built the airport literally in the middle of the bay because there was not enough land. It cost 20 billion dollars and is considered an engineering monument of the millennium8mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/interestingasfuck
The largest tunnel boring machine in the world (17.6m / 57ft / or 5 stories)9mo ⋅ ilikepineapples987 ⋅ r/interestingasfuck