Civil engineering is a professional engineering discipline
that deals with the design, construction, and maintenance of the physical and
naturally built environment, including works like roads, bridges, canals, dams, and buildings.[1][2][3] Civil
engineering is the oldest engineering discipline
after military engineering,[4] and
it was defined to distinguish non-military engineering from military
engineering.[5] It
is traditionally broken into several sub-disciplines including environmental engineering,geotechnical engineering, structural engineering, transportation engineering, municipal or
urban engineering, water resources engineering, materials
engineering,coastal engineering,[4] surveying,
and construction engineering.[6] Civil
engineering takes place on all levels: in the public sector from municipal
through to national governments, and in the private sector from individual
homeowners through to international companies.
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History of the civil engineering
profession
See
also: History of structural engineering
Engineering has been an aspect of
life since the beginnings of human existence. The earliest practice of civil
engineering may have commenced between 4000 and 2000 BC in Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia (Ancient
Iraq) when humans started to abandon a nomadic existence,
creating a need for the construction of shelter. During this time, transportation became
increasingly important leading to the development of the wheel and sailing.
Until modern times there was no
clear distinction between civil engineering and architecture,
and the term engineer and architect were mainly geographical variations referring
to the same person, often used interchangeably.[7] The
construction of Pyramids in Egypt (circa 2700–2500 BC)
might be considered the first instances of large structure constructions. Other
ancient historic civil engineering constructions include the Qanat water
management system (the oldest older than 3000 years and longer than 71 km,[8])
the Parthenon by Iktinos in Ancient
Greece (447–438 BC), the Appian Way by Roman
engineers (c. 312 BC), the Great Wall of China by General Meng T'ien under
orders from Ch'in Emperor Shih Huang Ti (c.
220 BC)[6] and
the stupas constructed in ancient Sri Lanka like
the Jetavanaramaya and the extensive
irrigation works in Anuradhapura. The Romans developed civil
structures throughout their empire, including especially aqueducts, insulae, harbors,
bridges, dams and roads.
The Archimedes
screw was operated by hand and could raise water efficiently.
In the 18th century, the term civil
engineering was coined to incorporate all things civilian as opposed to
military engineering.[5] The
first self-proclaimed civil engineer was John Smeaton who
constructed the Eddystone Lighthouse.[4][6] In
1771 Smeaton and some of his colleagues formed the Smeatonian Society of Civil
Engineers, a group of leaders of the profession who met informally over dinner.
Though there was evidence of some technical meetings, it was little more than a
social society.
In 1818 the Institution of Civil
Engineers was founded in London, and in 1820 the eminent engineer Thomas
Telford became its first president. The institution received a
Royal Charter in 1828, formally recognising civil engineering as a profession.
Its charter defined civil engineering as:
the art of
directing the great sources of power in nature for the use and convenience of
man, as the means of production and of traffic in states, both for external and
internal trade, as applied in the construction of roads, bridges, aqueducts,
canals, river navigation and docks for internal intercourse and exchange, and
in the construction of ports, harbours, moles, breakwaters and lighthouses, and
in the art of navigation by artificial power for the purposes of commerce, and
in the construction and application of machinery, and in the drainage of cities
and towns.[9]
The first private college to teach
Civil Engineering in the United States was Norwich University founded in 1819 by
Captain Alden Partridge.[10] The
first degree in Civil Engineering in the United States was awarded by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in
1835.[11] The
first such degree to be awarded to a woman was granted by Cornell University to Nora Stanton Blatch in 1905.[12]
[edit]History of civil engineering
Pont du Gard, France, a Roman aqueduct
built circa 19 BC.
Civil engineering is the application
of physical and scientific principles, and its history is intricately linked to
advances in understanding of physics andmathematics throughout
history. Because civil engineering is a wide ranging profession, including
several separate specialized sub-disciplines, its history is linked to
knowledge of structures, materials science, geography, geology, soils, hydrology, environment, mechanics and
other fields.
Throughout ancient and medieval
history most architectural design and construction was carried out by artisans,
such as stonemasons and carpenters,
rising to the role of master builder. Knowledge was retained in guilds and
seldom supplanted by advances. Structures, roads and infrastructure that
existed were repetitive, and increases in scale were incremental.[13]
One of the earliest examples of a
scientific approach to physical and mathematical problems applicable to civil
engineering is the work of Archimedes in
the 3rd century BC, including Archimedes Principle, which underpins our
understanding of buoyancy, and practical solutions such as Archimedes' screw. Brahmagupta,
an Indian mathematician, used arithmetic in the 7th century AD, based on
Hindu-Arabic numerals, for excavation (volume) computations.[14]
The civil engineer
Education and licensure
Main
article: Civil engineer
The
Institution of Civil Engineers headquarters in London
Civil engineers typically possess
an academic degree with a major in civil
engineering. The length of study for such a degree is usually three to five
years and the completed degree is usually designated as a Bachelor of Engineering, though some
universities designate the degree as a Bachelor of Science. The degree generally
includes units covering physics, mathematics, project management, design and
specific topics in civil engineering. Initially such topics cover most, if not
all, of the sub-disciplines of civil engineering. Students then choose to
specialize in one or more sub-disciplines towards the end of the degree.[15] While
an Undergraduate (BEng/BSc) Degree will normally provide successful students
with industry accredited qualification, some universities offer postgraduate
engineering awards (MEng/MSc) which allow students to further specialize in
their particular area of interest within engineering.[16]
In most countries, a Bachelor's
degree in engineering represents the first step towards professional certification and the
degree program itself is certified by aprofessional
body. After completing a certified degree program the engineer must
satisfy a range of requirements (including work experience and exam
requirements) before being certified. Once certified, the engineer is
designated the title of Professional Engineer (in the United States, Canada
and South Africa), Chartered Engineer (in most Commonwealth countries), Chartered Professional Engineer (in Australia and New Zealand),
or European Engineer (in much of the European
Union). There are international engineering agreements between
relevant professional bodies which are designed to allow engineers to practice
across international borders.
The advantages of certification vary
depending upon location. For example, in the United States and Canada
"only a licensed professional engineer may prepare,
sign and seal, and submit engineering plans and drawings to a public authority
for approval, or seal engineering work for public and private clients.".[17] This
requirement is enforced by state and provincial legislation such as Quebec'sEngineers
Act.[18] In
other countries such as the UK no such legislation exists. In Australia, state
licensing of engineers is limited to the state of Queensland.
Practically all certifying bodies maintain acode of
ethics that they expect all members to abide by or risk
expulsion.[19] In
this way, these organizations play an important role in maintaining ethical
standards for the profession. Even in jurisdictions where certification has
little or no legal bearing on work, engineers are subject to contract law.
In cases where an engineer's work fails he or she may be subject to the tort of
negligenceand, in extreme cases, the charge of criminal negligence.[citation needed] An
engineer's work must also comply with numerous other rules and regulations such
as building codes and legislation pertaining
to environmental law.
Careers
There is no one typical career path
for civil engineers. Most people who graduate with civil engineering degrees
start with jobs that require a low level of responsibility, and as the new
engineers prove their competence, they are trusted with tasks that have larger
consequences and require a higher level of responsibility. However, within each
branch of civil engineering career path options vary. In some fields and firms,
entry-level engineers are put to work primarily monitoring construction in the
field, serving as the "eyes and ears" of senior design engineers;
while in other areas, entry-level engineers perform the more routine tasks of
analysis or design and interpretation. Experienced engineers generally do more
complex analysis or design work, or management of more complex design projects,
or management of other engineers, or into specialized consulting,
including forensic engineering.
Sub-disciplines
The Falkirk Wheel in Scotland.
In general, civil engineering is
concerned with the overall interface of human created fixed projects with the
greater world. General civil engineers work closely with surveyors and
specialized civil engineers to fit and serve fixed projects within their given
site, community and terrain by designing grading, drainage,pavement, water supply, sewer service, electric
and communications supply, and land divisions. General engineers spend much of
their time visiting project sites, developing community consensus, and
preparing construction plans. General civil engineering is also referred to
as site engineering, a branch
of civil engineering that primarily focuses on converting a tract of land from
one usage to another. Civil engineers typically apply the principles of
geotechnical engineering, structural engineering, environmental engineering,
transportation engineering and construction engineering to residential,
commercial, industrial and public works projects of all sizes and levels of
construction.
Coastal engineering
Main
article: Coastal management
Coastal engineering is concerned
with managing coastal areas. In some jurisdictions the terms sea defense and
coastal protection are used to mean, respectively, defense against flooding and
erosion. The term coastal defense is the more traditional term, but coastal
management has become more popular as the field has expanded to include
techniques that allow erosion to claim land.
Building
construction for several apartment blocks
Construction engineering
Main
article: Construction engineering
Construction engineering involves
planning and execution of the designs from transportation, site development,
hydraulic, environmental, structural and geotechnical engineers. As
construction firms tend to have higher business risk than other types of civil
engineering firms, many construction engineers tend to take on a role that is
more business-like in nature: drafting and reviewing contracts,
evaluating logistical operations, and closely monitoring prices of
necessary supplies.
Earthquake engineering
Main article: Earthquake engineering
Earthquake engineering covers
ability of various structures to withstand hazardous earthquake exposures
at the sites of their particular location.
Earthquake-proof
and massive pyramid El Castillo, Chichen Itza
Earthquake engineering is a sub
discipline of the broader category of Structural engineering. The main
objectives of earthquake engineering are:[20]
Snapshot
from shake-table video [2] of
testing base-isolated (right) and regular (left) building model
§ Understand interaction of structures with
the shaky ground.
§ Foresee the consequences of possible
earthquakes.
§ Design, construct and maintain
structures to perform at earthquake exposure up to the
expectations and in compliance withbuilding
codes.
Environmental engineering
Main
article: Environmental engineering
A filter
bed, a part of sewage treatment
Environmental engineering deals with
the treatment of chemical, biological, and/or thermal waste, the purification
of water and air, and the remediation of contaminated sites,
due to prior waste disposal or accidental contamination. Among the topics
covered by environmental engineering are pollutant transport, water purification, waste water treatment, air pollution, solid waste
treatment and hazardous
waste management. Environmental engineers can be involved with
pollution reduction, green engineering, and industrial ecology. Environmental engineering
also deals with the gathering of information on the environmental consequences
of proposed actions and the assessment of effects of proposed actions for the
purpose of assisting society and policy makers in the decision making process.
Environmental engineering is the
contemporary term for sanitary engineering, though sanitary
engineering traditionally had not included much of the hazardous waste
management and environmental remediation work covered by the term environmental
engineering. Some other terms in use are public health engineering and
environmental health engineering.
Geotechnical engineering
Construction
of an Embankment Dam in Navarra, Spain
Main article: Geotechnical engineering
Geotechnical engineering is an area
of civil engineering concerned with the rock and
soil that civil engineering systems are supported by. Knowledge from the fields
of geology, material science and testing, mechanics,
and hydraulics are
applied by geotechnical engineers to safely and economically design foundations, retaining
walls, and similar structures. Environmental concerns in relation
to groundwater and waste
disposal have spawned a new area of study called
geoenvironmental engineering where biology and chemistry are
important.[21][22]
Some of the unique difficulties of
geotechnical engineering are the result of the variability and properties of
soil. Boundary conditions are often well defined
in other branches of civil engineering, but with soil, clearly defining these
conditions can be impossible. The material properties and behavior of soil are
also difficult to predict due to the variability of soil and limited investigation. This contrasts with the
relatively well defined material properties of steel and concrete used
in other areas of civil engineering. Soil
mechanics, which describes the behavior of soil, is also complicated
because soils exhibit nonlinear (stress-dependent) strength, stiffness, and dilatancy (volume
change associated with application of shear stress).[21]
Water resources engineering
See
also: Hydraulic engineering and Hydrology
Water resources engineering is
concerned with the collection and management of water (as a natural
resource). As a discipline it therefore combines hydrology,
environmental science, meteorology, geology, conservation, and resource management. This area of civil
engineering relates to the prediction and management of both the quality and
the quantity of water in both underground (aquifers)
and above ground (lakes, rivers, and streams) resources. Water resource
engineers analyze and model very small to very large areas of the earth to
predict the amount and content of water as it flows into, through, or out of a
facility. Although the actual design of the facility may be left to other
engineers. Hydraulic engineering is concerned with the flow and conveyance of
fluids, principally water. This area of civil engineering is intimately related
to the design of pipelines, water supply network, drainage facilities
(including bridges, dams, channels, culverts, levees, storm sewers),
and canals. Hydraulic engineers design these facilities using the concepts
of fluid pressure, fluid statics, fluid
dynamics, and hydraulics, among others.
Materials engineering
Main
article: Materials science
Another aspect of Civil engineering
is materials science. Material engineering deals with ceramics such as
concrete, mix asphalt concrete, metals Focus around increased strength, metals
such as aluminum and steel, and polymers such as polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) and
carbon fibers.
Materials engineering also consists
of protection and prevention like paints and finishes. Alloying is another
aspect of material engineering, combining two different types of metals to
produce a stronger metal.
Structural engineering
Main
article: Structural engineering
Burj Khalifa,
the world's tallest building, in Dubai
Clifton Suspension Bridge, designed
by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, in Bristol,UK
Structural engineering is concerned
with the structural design and structural analysis of buildings,
bridges, towers, flyovers,tunnels, off shore
structures like oil and gas fields in the sea, and other structures. This
involves identifying the loads which act upon a structure and the forces and
stresses which arise within that structure due to those loads, and then
designing the structure to successfully support and resist those loads. The
loads can be self weight of the structures, other dead load, live loads, moving
(wheel) load, wind load, earthquake load, load from temperature change etc. The
structural engineer must design structures to be safe for their users and to
successfully fulfill the function they are designed for (to be serviceable).
Due to the nature of some loading conditions, sub-disciplines within structural
engineering have emerged, including wind
engineering and earthquake engineering.[23]
Design considerations will include
strength, stiffness, and stability of the structure when subjected to loads
which may be static, such as furniture or self-weight, or dynamic, such as
wind, seismic, crowd or vehicle loads, or transitory, such as temporary
construction loads or impact. Other considerations include cost, constructability, safety,
aesthetics and sustainability.
Surveying
Main
articles: Surveying and Construction surveying
US Navy
Surveyor at work with aleveling instrument.
Surveying is the process by which a
surveyor measures certain dimensions that generally occur on the surface of the
Earth. Surveying equipment, such as levels and theodolites, are used for
accurate measurement of angular deviation, horizontal, vertical and slope
distances. With computerisation, electronic distance measurement (EDM), total
stations, GPS surveying and laser scanning have supplemented (and to a large
extent supplanted) the traditional optical instruments. This information is
crucial to convert the data into a graphical representation of the Earth's
surface, in the form of a map. This information is then used by civil
engineers, contractors and even realtors to design from, build on, and trade,
respectively. Elements of a building or structure must be correctly sized and
positioned in relation to each other and to site boundaries and adjacent
structures. Although surveying is a distinct profession with separate
qualifications and licensing arrangements, civil engineers are trained in the
basics of surveying and mapping, as well as geographic information systems. Surveyors
may also lay out the routes of railways, tramway
tracks, highways, roads, pipelines and streets as
well as position other infrastructures,
such as harbors,
before construction.
Land surveying
In the United States, Canada, the
United Kingdom and most Commonwealth countries land surveying is considered to
be a distinct profession. Land
surveyors are not considered to be engineers, and have their
own professional associations and licencing requirements. The services of a
licenced land surveyor are generally required for boundary surveys (to
establish the boundaries of a parcel using its legal description) and
subdivision plans (a plot or map based on a survey of a parcel of land, with
boundary lines drawn inside the larger parcel to indicate the creation of new
boundary lines and roads), both of which are generally referred to as cadastral
surveying.
Construction surveying
Construction surveying is generally
performed by specialised technicians. Unlike land surveyors, the resulting plan
does not have legal status. Construction surveyors perform the following tasks:
§ Survey existing conditions of the
future work site, including topography, existing buildings and infrastructure,
and even including underground infrastructure whenever possible;
§ Construction surveying (otherwise
"lay-out" or "setting-out"): to stake out reference points
and markers that will guide the construction of new structures such as roads or
buildings for subsequent construction;
§ Verify the location of structures
during construction;
§ As-Built surveying: a survey
conducted at the end of the construction project to verify that the work
authorized was completed to the specifications set on plans.
Transportation engineering
Main
article: Transport engineering
Transportation engineering is
concerned with moving people and goods efficiently, safely, and in a manner
conducive to a vibrant community. This involves specifying, designing,
constructing, and maintaining transportation infrastructure which
includes streets, canals, highways, rail systems, airports, ports, and mass transit.
It includes areas such as transportation design, transportation planning, traffic engineering, some aspects of urban engineering, queueing
theory, pavement engineering, Intelligent Transportation System (ITS),
and infrastructure management.
Municipal or urban engineering
Main
article: Urban engineering
Municipal engineering is concerned
with municipal infrastructure. This involves
specifying, designing, constructing, and maintaining streets, sidewalks, water supply networks, sewers, street
lighting,municipal solid waste management and
disposal, storage depots for various bulk materials used for maintenance and
public works (salt, sand, etc.), public parks and bicycle paths. In the case of
underground utility networks, it may also include the
civil portion (conduits and access chambers) of the local distribution networks
of electrical and telecommunications services. It can also include the
optimizing of waste collection and bus service networks. Some of these
disciplines overlap with other civil engineering specialties, however municipal
engineering focuses on the coordination of these infrastructure networks and
services, as they are often built simultaneously, and managed by the same
municipal authority.
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