ISBN-13: 9783565222285 / Angielski / Miękka / 120 str.
On August 10, 1628, the Swedish warship Vasa-the most powerful / expensive ship ever built-set sail on her maiden voyage. She traveled less than a mile before a light breeze caused her to capsize and sink in Stockholm harbor, watched by thousands. Historian Erik Nelson deconstructs this maritime tragedy in "The Ship That Sank Itself."Nelson frames the Vasa not as a mystery, but as a classic case of "Scope Creep" and management failure. King Gustavus Adolphus constantly changed the requirements, adding a second gun deck and heavy bronze cannons that made the ship top-heavy. The shipwrights knew it was unstable but were too terrified of the King to stop the launch.The book details the fascinating salvage operation in 1961 and the ship's second life as a museum. It serves as a timeless parable for modern project managers about the dangers of ignoring physics to please a boss.
It was built to rule the Baltic, but it couldn't handle a breeze. The story of engineering hubris and the king who doomed his own flagship.