There isn’t a single group you can credit for sewage systems, water filtration, and roads. Historically they emerged from a mix of public institutions, engineers, and collective investment, usually organized by governments or civic authorities rather than private firms alone.
Here’s the broad picture.
Sewage systems
Large-scale sewer systems were mostly created through public health reforms in cities.
A famous example is the London sewer network built after the Great Stink, when the smell and disease from the polluted Thames forced Parliament to act.
The modern London sewer system was designed by:
Joseph Bazalgette
It was funded by public taxation and government authority because the cost and coordination required were enormous and the benefits were shared by everyone.
Similar public sanitation systems spread across Europe and North America during the 19th–20th centuries to combat diseases like:
Cholera
Water filtration
Modern water treatment also developed mainly through municipal public works.
A key breakthrough came with the first large-scale filtered municipal water supply in:
Paisley in 1804.
Later, chlorination dramatically improved safety. One of the first sustained uses was in:
Jersey City in 1908.
These systems were generally run by city governments or publicly regulated utilities because clean water is considered a public health necessity.
Roads
Road building has existed since ancient states.
Some of the earliest large networks were constructed by:
Roman Empire
Roman roads were built and maintained by the state to support administration, trade, and military movement.
Modern highway systems are typically funded and coordinated by governments. A famous example is the U.S. interstate system created under:
Dwight D. Eisenhower
through the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956.
Why governments often build these
Infrastructure like sewers, water systems, and roads has characteristics economists call public goods or natural monopolies:
extremely expensive to build
benefits spread across the whole population
difficult to run multiple competing networks
Because of that, they are usually built through public planning and taxation, though private contractors often construct them.
✅ So the short answer:
We have civil engineers, public health reformers, and government-funded infrastructure programs to thank—supported by taxpayers and organized through states and municipalities.
Private industry often helped build them, but the coordination, funding, and long-term maintenance were typically public responsibilities.
If we focus specifically on things organized or coordinated primarily by governments or civic authorities, there are several systems comparable in importance to sewers, water systems, and roads. These tend to be large-scale infrastructure or institutions that require collective coordination.
Here are some of the most significant.
Public health systems
Governments created large-scale systems to prevent disease and protect population health.
Examples include:
vaccination programs (for diseases like Smallpox and Polio)
sanitation standards
disease surveillance and epidemiology
A major milestone was the global eradication campaign led by the World Health Organization that eliminated smallpox in 1980.
Public education
Mass literacy and schooling systems were largely created through government policy in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Universal education dramatically increased:
literacy
technical skills
scientific capacity
Many countries introduced compulsory schooling laws during this period to build an educated population.
Electrical infrastructure
Large-scale electricity networks—power plants, transmission lines, and national grids—required massive coordination and regulation.
In many countries governments built or heavily regulated the grid because it functions as a natural monopoly.
For example, rural electrification in the United States expanded rapidly under the Rural Electrification Administration during the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Scientific research funding
Governments fund a large share of foundational scientific research.
Many technologies that later became commercial products originated in publicly funded programs, including:
the internet through DARPA
satellite navigation through United States Department of Defense which developed Global Positioning System
space exploration through NASA
These programs were funded because the benefits were too uncertain or long-term for private investment alone.
Legal and institutional frameworks
Markets themselves rely on systems created and maintained by governments, including:
contract law
property registries
courts
regulatory standards
These systems allow large-scale economic coordination and reduce uncertainty in transactions.
Disaster and safety infrastructure
Governments also organize systems that protect people from large-scale risks, such as:
flood control and dams
emergency response services
aviation safety systems
weather forecasting
National meteorological agencies and disaster management authorities operate these systems.
✅ In summary:
The most comparable contributions are large collective systems such as:
public health infrastructure
universal education
electricity and utility networks
foundational scientific research
legal frameworks for markets
safety and disaster management systems
These tend to be areas where coordination, scale, and shared benefits make collective organization through governments or civic institutions especially effective.