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ships that were never built 10 awesome By Christopher McFadden


IIMS is grateful to Christopher who researched and authored this fascinating article, which was originally published on the Interesting Engineering website https://interestingengineering.com. It seemed a great way to celebrate the 100th edition of The Report Magazine by publishing it.


Christopher graduated from Cardiff University in 2004 with a master’s degree in geology. Since then, he has worked exclusively within the Built Environment, Occupational Health and Safety and Environmental Consultancy industries. He is a qualified and accredited Energy Consultant, Green Deal Assessor and Practitioner member of IEMA.


Any fan of the history of the high seas will be more than familiar with some of the most famous ships in history. Whether it be the RMS Titanic, HMS Victory, USS Enterprise, so on, so forth.


But, for every massively successful and famous ship launched, there are equal numbers of less famous, or even completely forgotten ships throughout history. This is especially the case for proposed ships that either never left the drawing board or were aborted in dry dock.


Progress in any technological field is as much a matter of trial and error as it is scientific and technological innovation. Sometimes proposals for new things, like ships, are a roaring success, other times a complete and absolute failure.


1. Here are some prime examples of the latter: Some of these proposed, but aborted designs. Germany’s WW2 carrier that never was: The Graf Zeppelin Photo source: pilot_micha/Flickr


One of the most infamous massive ships that were never actually completed was the Graf Zeppelin. Partially completed by the outbreak of WW2, the ship would suffer from a combination of poor planning and resource management.


64 | The Report • June 2022 • Issue 100


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