| CIVIL
ENGINEERING HISTORY AND CHALLENGE |
The
term civil engineering was first used in the 18th century to
distinguish the newly recognized profession from military engineering,until
then preeminent. From earliest times, however, engineers have
engaged in peaceful activities, and many of the civil engineering
works of ancient and medieval times--such as the Roman public
baths, roads, bridges, and aqueducts; the Flemish canals; the
Dutch sea defenses; the French Gothic cathedrals; and many other
monuments--reveal a history of inventive genius and persistent
experimentation.
History
The
beginnings of civil engineering as a separate discipline may
be seen in the foundation in France in 1716 of the Bridge and
Highway Corps, out of which in 1747 grew the École Nationale
des Ponts et Chaussées ("National School of Bridges
and Highways"). Its teachers wrote books that became standard
works on the mechanics of materials, machines, and hydraulics,
and leading British engineers learned French to read them. As
design and calculation replaced rule of thumb and empirical
formulas, and as expert knowledge was codified and formulated,
the nonmilitary engineer moved to the front of the stage. Talented,
if often self-taught, craftsmen, stonemasons, millwrights, toolmakers,
and instrument makers became civil engineers. In Britain, James
Brindley began as a millwright and became the foremost canal
builder of the century; John Rennie was a millwright's apprentice
who eventually built the new London Bridge; Thomas Telford,
a stonemason, became Britain's leading road builder.
John
Smeaton, the first man to call himself a civil engineer, began
as an instrument maker. His design of Eddystone Lighthouse (1756-1759),
with its interlocking masonry, was based on a craftsman's experience.
Smeaton's work was backed by thorough research, and his services
were much in demand. In 1771 he founded the Society of Civil
Engineers (now known as the Smeatonian Society). Its object
was to bring together experienced engineers, entrepreneurs,
and lawyers to promote the building of large public works, such
as canals (and later railways), and to secure the parliamentary
powers necessary to execute their schemes. Their meetings were
held during parliamentary sessions the society follows this
custom to this day.
The
École Polytechnique was founded in Paris in 1794, and
the Bauakademie was started in Berlin in 1799, but no such schools
existed in Great Britain for another two decades. It was this
lack of opportunity for scientific study and for the exchange
of experiences that led a group of young men in 1818 to found
the Institution of Civil Engineers. The founders were keen to
learn from one another and from their elders, and in 1820 they
invited Thomas Telford, by then the dean of British civil engineers,
to be their first president. There were similar developments
elsewhere. By the mid-19th century there were civil engineering
societies in many European countries and the United States,
and the following century produced similar institutions in almost
every country in the world.
Formal
education in engineering science became widely available as
other countries followed the lead of France and Germany. In
Great Britain the universities, traditionally seats of classical
learning, were reluctant to embrace the new disciplines. University
College, London, founded in 1826, provided a broad range of
academic studies and offered a course in mechanical philosophy.
King's College, London, first taught civil engineering in 1838,
and in 1840 Queen Victoria founded the first chair of civil
engineering and mechanics at the University of Glasgow, Scot.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, founded in 1824, offered the
first courses in civil engineering in the United States. The
number of universities throughout the world with engineering
faculties, including civil engineering, increased rapidly in
the 19th and early 20th centuries. Civil engineering today is
taught in universities on every continent.
Civil
Engineering Functions
The
functions of the civil engineer can be divided into three categories:
those performed before construction (feasibility studies, site
investigations, and design), those performed during construction
(dealing with clients, consulting engineers, and contractors),
and those performe after construction (maintenance and research).
Feasibility
Studies
No
major project today is started without an extensive study of
the objective and without preliminary studies of possible plans
leading to a recommended scheme, perhaps with alternatives.
Feasibility studies may cover alternative methods--e.g., bridge
versus tunnel, in the case of a water crossing--or, once the
method is decided, the choice of route. Both economic and engineering
problems must be considered.
Site
Investigations
A
preliminary site investigation is part of the feasibility study,
but once a plan has been adopted a more extensive investigation
is usually imperative. Money spent in a rigorous study of ground
and substructure may save large sums later in remedial works
or in changes made necessary in constructional methods.
Since the load-bearing qualities and stability of the ground
are such important factors in any large-scale construction,
it is surprising that a serious study of soil mechanics did
not develop until the mid-1930s. Kar von Terzaghi, the chief
founder of the science, gives the date of its birth as 1936,
when the First International Conference on Soil Mechanics and
Foundation Engineering was held at Harvard University and an
international society was formed. Today there are specialist
societies and journals in many countries, and most universities
that have a civil engineering faculty have courses in soil mechanics.
Design
The
design of engineering works may require the application of design
theory from many fields--e.g., mechanics,hydraulics, thermodynamics,
or nuclear physics. Research in structural analysis and the
technology of materials has opened the way for more rational
designs, new design concepts, and greater economy of materials.
The theory of structures and the study of materials have advanced
together as more and more refined stress analysis of structures
and systematic testing has been done. Modern designers not only
have advanced theories and readily available design data, but
structural designs can now be rigorously analyzed by computers.
Construction
The
promotion of civil engineering works may be initiated by a private
client, but most work is undertaken for large corporations,
government authorities, and public boards and authorities. Many
of these have their own engineering staffs, but for large specialized
projects it is usual to employ consulting engineers.
The consulting engineer may be required first to undertake feasibility
studies, then to recommend a scheme and quote an approximate
cost. The engineer is responsible for the design of the works,
supplying specifications, drawings, and legal documents in sufficient
detail to seek competitive tender prices. The engineer must
compare quotations and recommend acceptance of one of them.
Although he is not a party to the contract, the engineer's duties
are defined in it; the staff must supervise the construction
and the engineer must certify completion of the work. Actions
must be consistent with duty to the client; the professional
organizations exercise disciplinary control over professional
conduct. The consulting engineer's senior representative on
the site is the resident engineer.
A
phenomenon of recent years has been the turnkey or package contract,
in which the contractor undertakes to finance, design, specify,
construct, and commission a project in its entirety. In this
case, the consulting engineer is engaged by the contractor rather
than by the client.
The
contractor is usually an incorporated company, which secures
the contract on the basis of the consulting engineer's specification
and general drawings. The consulting engineer must agree to
any variations introduced and must approve the detailed drawings.
Maintenance
The
contractor maintains the works to the satisfaction of the consulting
engineer. Responsibility for maintenance extends to ancillary
and temporary works where these form part of the overall construction.
After construction a period of maintenance is undertaken by
the contractor, and the payment of the final installment of
the contract price is held back until released by the consulting
engineer. Central and local government engineering and public
works departments are concerned primarily with maintenance,
for which they employ direct labour.
Research
Research
in the civil engineering field is undertaken by government agencies,
industrial foundations, the universities, and other institutions
Many are government-aided but depend partly on income from research
work promoted by industry.
Branches
of civil engineering
In
1828 Thomas Tredgold of England wrote:
The most important object of Civil Engineering is to improve
the means of production and of traffic in states, both for external
and internal trade. It is applied in the construction and management
of roads, bridges, railroads, aqueducts, canals, river navigation,
docks and storehouses, for the convenience of internal intercourse
and exchange; and in the construction of ports, harbours, moles,
breakwaters and lighthouses; and in the navigation by artificial
power for the purposes of commerce.
It is applied to the protection of property where natural powers
are the sources of injury, as by embankments for the defence
of tracts of country from the encroachments of the sea, or the
overflowing of rivers; it also directs the means of applying
streams and rivers to use, either as powers to work machines,
or as supplies for the use of cities and towns, or for irrigation;
as well as the means of removing noxious accumulations, as by
the drainage of towns and districts to . . . secure the public
health.
A
modern description would include the production and distribution
of energy, the development of aircraft and airports, the construction
of chemical process plants and nuclear power stations, and water
desalination.
These
aspects of civil engineering may be considered under the following
headings:
structures such as buildings, bridges, construction, transportation,
maritime and hydraulic engineering, power, and public health.
Structural
engineering
A
structure is the part of building that carries its weight, lateral
loads (wind, earthquake, blast, etc.) and for at least half
the world's civil engineers, structures are most of civil engineering.
We should also remember that anything built is a structure.
A structure may be dwelling house, or a pyramid in Egypt, the
statue of Christ on the Andes, or a dam built by beavers across
a Canadian river. A building is a structure with a roof and
much of civil engineering structural design is the design of
building structures.The building as a whole is designed by an
architect, particularly in a densely populated area.
The
structural design itself includes two different tasks, the design
of the structure, in which the sizes and locations of the main
members are settled, and the analysis of this structure by mathematical
method, to work out how the loads pass through the structure
with the particular members chosen. For a common structure such
as a building frame,shear frame, many methods have been developed
for analysis, so that the design and analysis will be relatively
easy and may need to be performed only once or twice.
Bridge
design is probably the hardest brain work in structural engineering.
Bridge designers have a long period of training, only the best
of them succeed, and only a small fraction of the bridges they
design are built. The time from the first proposal for a bridge
to the provision of the money for its construction is usually
long and many bridges have been built only the after the death
of their designer.
Construction
Almost
all civil engineering contracts include some element of construction
work. The development of steel and concrete as building materials
had the effect of placing design more in the hands of the civil
engineer than the architect. The engineer's analysis of a building
problem, based on function and economics, determines the building's
structural design.
Transportation
Roman
roads and bridges were products of military engineering, but
the pavements of McAdam and the bridges of Perronet were the
work of the civil engineer. So were the canals of the 18th century
and the railways of the 19th, which, by providing bulk transport
with speed and economy, lent a powerful impetus to the Industrial
Revolution. The civil engineer today is concerned with an even
larger transportation field--e.g., traffic studies, design of
systems for road, rail, and air, and construction including
pavements, embankments, bridges, and tunnels.
Maritime
and hydraulic engineering
Harbour
construction and shipbuilding are ancient arts. For many developing
countries today the establishment of a large, efficient harbour
is an early imperative, to serve as the inlet for industrial
plant and needed raw materials and the outlet for finished goods.
In developed countries the expansion of world trade, the use
of larger ships, and the increase in total tonnage call for
more rapid and efficient handling. Deeper berths and alongside-handling
equipment (for example, for ore) and navigation improvements
are the responsibility of the civil engineer.
The
development of water supplies was a feature of the earliest
civilizations, and the demand for water continues to rise today.
In developed countries the demand is for industrial and domestic
consumption, but in many parts of the world--e.g., the Indus
basin--vast schemes are under construction, mainly for irrigation
to help satisfy the food demand, and are often combined with
hydroelectric power generation to promote industrial development.
Dams
today are among the largest construction works, and design development
is promoted by bodies like the International Commission on Large
Dams. The design of large impounding dams in places with population
centres close by requires the utmost in safety engineering,
with emphasis on soil mechanics and stress analysis. Most governments
exercise statutory control of engineers qualified to design
and inspect dams.
Power
Civil
engineers have always played an important part in mining for
coal and metals; the driving of tunnels is a task common to
many branches of civil engineering. In the 20th century the
design and construction of power stations has advanced with
the rapid rise in demand for electric power, and nuclear power
stations have added a whole new field of design and construction,
involving prestressed concrete pressure vessels for the reactor.
The exploitation of oil fields and the discoveries of natural
gas in significant quantities have initiated a radical change
in gas production. Shipment in liquid form from the Sahara and
piping from the bed of the North Sea have been among the novel
developments.
Public
health
Drainage
and liquid-waste disposal are closely associated with antipollution
measures and the re-use of water. The urban development of parts
of water catchment areas can alter the nature of runoff, and
the training and regulation of rivers produce changes in the
pattern of events, resulting in floods and the need for flood
prevention and control. (see also Index: urban planning)
Modern
civilization has created problems of solid-waste disposal, from
the manufacture of durable goods, such as automobiles and refrigerators,
produced in large numbers with a limited life, to the small
package, previously disposable, now often indestructible. The
civil engineer plays an important role in the preservation of
the environment, principally through design of works to enhance
rather than to damage or pollute.

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