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{{PolicyCard (Civ6)
{{PolicyCards (Civ6)|title1 = Public Works|enabled_with = Civil Engineering|obsolete_with = |type = Economic|effect = +30% {{Production6}} Production toward [[Builder (Civ6)|Builders]], and newly trained [[Builder (Civ6)|Builders]] gain 2 extra build actions.}}
 
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|era = Industrial
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|type = Economic
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|enabled_with = Civil Engineering
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|obsolete_with =
 
|effect = +30% {{Production6}} toward [[Builder (Civ6)|Builders]], and newly trained [[Builder (Civ6)|Builders]] gain 2 extra build actions.
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}}
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{{seewp|Public works}}
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'''Public Works''' is an Economic [[Policy Cards (Civ6)|Policy Card]] in ''[[Civilization VI]]''.
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== Strategy ==
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Public Works combines the effects of [[Ilkum (Civ6)|Ilkum]] and [[Serfdom (Civ6)|Serfdom]] into a single policy. [[Builder (Civ6)|Builders]] can start planting [[Woods (Civ6)|Woods]] and creating [[Seaside Resort (Civ6)|Seaside Resorts]] shortly after it becomes available, so it will prove most useful to players focused on a [[Victory (Civ6)#Culture|Cultural Victory]]. As with Ilkum and Serfdom, it is useful only as long as you produce builders.
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== Civilopedia entry ==
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{{/Civilopedia}}

Revision as of 13:56, 4 January 2021

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Public Works is an Economic Policy Card in Civilization VI.

Strategy

Public Works combines the effects of Ilkum and Serfdom into a single policy. Builders can start planting Woods and creating Seaside Resorts shortly after it becomes available, so it will prove most useful to players focused on a Cultural Victory. As with Ilkum and Serfdom, it is useful only as long as you produce builders.

Civilopedia entry

Public works encompass public buildings (schools, hospitals, museums, and so forth), public transport facilities (everything from roads to airports), public spaces (all those parks and squares), public services (sewers, dams, the electrical grids), and anything else (often pork barrel projects) the government might be willing to finance and construct for the “greater” good. In ancient Rome, the Opera publica oversaw construction of projects to benefit the community … all those lovely aqueducts for instance. American politicians took the lead in reviving that idea; in 1791 AD Pennsylvania launched the first comprehensive publicly financed road system, and in 1801 Philadelphia built the first public water system.