How Infrastructure Works

How Infrastructure Works

Inside the Systems That Shape Our World

Deb Chachra

In late nineteenth-century Boston, this public health argument—that their own families would be safer and healthier because fewer people around them would be sick—was what convinced the wealthier residents to use their taxes to pay for a municipal water system and, new for the time, a sewage system to take the polluted wastewater away. It’s also when the growing city began requiring all new housing developments to have water and sewage lines.
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