Every day, you cross bridges, drink clean water, switch on lights, and walk into buildings that stay standing. You don't think about any of it. That's the point.
The Boring Day is about what it really takes to keep the world running: the invisible systems, the unglamorous maintenance, and the quiet decisions made by people you'll never meet. It explores why projects run over budget, why the same failures keep repeating, how a single tree branch can black out millions, and why the most important day in engineering is the one where nothing happens at all.
Drawing on investigation reports, real-world case studies, and experience on some of the largest industrial facilities ever built, this book takes both engineers and non-engineers inside the systems that hold modern life together. From the design of a drinks can to the collapse of the Morandi Bridge, from missed alarms at Three Mile Island to the technician who refused to accept "it should be fine," it reveals how engineers actually think, what they worry about, and what happens when the margins disappear.
This is not a book about disasters. It's about everything that happens in between. The narrow margins, the hidden risks, and the fragile systems we rely on every day without ever noticing.