Civil engineering is arguably the oldest engineering discipline. It
deals with the built environment and can be dated to the first time
someone placed a roof over his or her head or laid a tree trunk across a
river to make it easier to get across.
The built environment encompasses much of what defines modern
civilization. Buildings and bridges are often the first constructions
that come to mind, as they are the most conspicuous creations of
structural engineering, one of civil engineering's major
sub-disciplines. Roads, railroads, subway systems, and airports are
designed by transportation engineers, another category of civil
engineering. And then there are the less visible creations of civil
engineers. Every time you open a water faucet, you expect water to come
out, without thinking that civil engineers made it possible. New York
City has one of the world’s most impressive water supply systems,
receiving billions of gallons of high-quality water from the Catskills
over one hundred miles away. Similarly, not many people seem to worry
about what happens to the water after it has served its purposes. The
old civil engineering discipline of sanitary engineering has evolved
into modern environmental engineering of such significance that most
academic departments have changed their names to civil and environmental
engineering.
These few examples illustrate that civil engineers do a lot more than
design buildings and bridges. They can be found in the aerospace
industry, designing jetliners and space stations; in the automotive
industry, perfecting the load-carrying capacity of a chassis and
improving the crashworthiness of bumpers and doors; and they can be
found in the ship building industry, the power industry, and many other
industries wherever constructed facilities are involved. And they plan
and oversee the construction of these facilities as construction
managers.
Civil engineering is an exciting profession because at the end of the
day you can see the results of your work, whether this is a completed
bridge, a high-rise building, a subway station, or a hydroelectric dam.
Please look at the Web pages of our individual faculty members to learn
more about their special interests as examples of what civil
engineering and engineering mechanics is and can be about.
Civil engineering is arguably the oldest engineering discipline. It
deals with the built environment and can be dated to the first time
someone placed a roof over his or her head or laid a tree trunk across a
river to make it easier to get across.
The built environment encompasses much of what defines modern
civilization. Buildings and bridges are often the first constructions
that come to mind, as they are the most conspicuous creations of
structural engineering, one of civil engineering's major
sub-disciplines. Roads, railroads, subway systems, and airports are
designed by transportation engineers, another category of civil
engineering. And then there are the less visible creations of civil
engineers. Every time you open a water faucet, you expect water to come
out, without thinking that civil engineers made it possible. New York
City has one of the world’s most impressive water supply systems,
receiving billions of gallons of high-quality water from the Catskills
over one hundred miles away. Similarly, not many people seem to worry
about what happens to the water after it has served its purposes. The
old civil engineering discipline of sanitary engineering has evolved
into modern environmental engineering of such significance that most
academic departments have changed their names to civil and environmental
engineering.
These few examples illustrate that civil engineers do a lot more than
design buildings and bridges. They can be found in the aerospace
industry, designing jetliners and space stations; in the automotive
industry, perfecting the load-carrying capacity of a chassis and
improving the crashworthiness of bumpers and doors; and they can be
found in the ship building industry, the power industry, and many other
industries wherever constructed facilities are involved. And they plan
and oversee the construction of these facilities as construction
managers.
Civil engineering is an exciting profession because at the end of the
day you can see the results of your work, whether this is a completed
bridge, a high-rise building, a subway station, or a hydroelectric dam.
Please look at the Web pages of our individual faculty members to learn
more about their special interests as examples of what civil
engineering and engineering mechanics is and can be about.