Driveways, roads, sidewalks, airport runways, piers and jetties for heavy shipping, and buildings area all made of it. Civil engineering students even have competitions where they race canoes made...
Structural Engineering Loads Explained
Engineers design for a wide variety of loads
Engineers design for a wide variety of loads
Recent Posts
Back in the early 19th century, engineers started to get serious about using wrought and cast iron for construction, but they had a huge problem to surmount: making wrought and cast iron in...
Have you ever had to chip a thick layer of ice off a car to get in, only to then have to run it for an hour with the heat on full blast to get the windshield cleared? If you're from a colder...
Image by David Mark from Pixabay No one wants their building to collapse, but constructing buildings to withstand overly-harsh loading conditions can make them so expensive that they never get...
It seems every time a big wind storm comes through, or the snow gets deep, or rains make soils heavy, a few buildings collapse. When big events like strong hurricanes, earthquakes, or tornados...
If you're not accustomed to designing buildings in more mountainous regions of the United States, the addition of a "Site Elevation Factor" to the design wind load equations in ASCE 7-16 may have...