Sunday, February 17, 2013

Explanation of Your Field-Civil Engineering


Civil engineering is one of the oldest disciplines of engineering.  Dating back to the construction of the Great Pyramids and the Great Wall of China, and even earlier, man has been designing and creating magnificent structures to make life safer and more enjoyable.  The field of civil engineering is very broad and encompasses many more specialized disciplines such as transportation, water, geotechnical, structural, and environmental engineering just to name a few.  A great way to think about it is that every piece of infrastructure you see around you, a civil engineer had a large hand in designing it. 
 
 
Have you ever thought of what life would be like without running water for a shower, indoor plumbing, or roads to drive on?  Many people take for granted all of the hard work men and women put into designing and constructing the complex systems that are responsible for these great luxuries.  Clean and renewable energy sources for instance.  The Hoover Dam is an example of a civil engineering marvel that allowed the Southwest region of our country to be inhabited.  It supplies electricity to the surrounding area as well as supplies water for irrigation and consumption.  In my local area, the Fargo landfill has been using solid waste disposal as a means of energy.  They have currently installed 62 natural gas wells to collect the methane that the waste produces.  This gas is then carried by pipelines to the Cargill plant and use to create energy.  We have civil engineers to thank for this and many other waste to energy processes for giving us energy and keeping our environment clean.
 
Ethics play a very large role in civil engineering.  When you think of the consequences of doing a poor job on the design or inspection of a bridge, such as the I-35W bridge that collapsed in Minneapolis, you see why civil engineers need to hold themselves to a high standard.  Even with projects not as visible to the public such as water treatment, cutting corners can pose serious risks.  If not always paying attention and doing the job that is required, harmful chemicals such lead and arsenic end up in our drinking water.  Health and safety are just part of the ethical standards civil engineers.  Many of the projects in civil engineering are for public interests, and therefore funded by taxes.  It is the ethical responsibility of these engineers to use this money properly.  They should work hard to finish the project on time and under budget if possible.  Doing a lackadaisical job with public funds goes against the ethical responsibility engineers are entrusted with when given control of these public works projects.

It is hard to imagine a world without civil engineers.  In fact, I do not think it would even be possible.  As long as there has been man, he has been trying to engineer a better world.  We have come a long way in the last several hundred years, and I am excited to see what new and innovative ideas civil engineers such as myself will bring about in the future.

               

5 comments:

  1. I never thought of civil engineers as the individuals responsible for our transportation routes, buildings, etc. It is interesting to have a perspective from an aspiring civil engineer such as yourself, and to have great examples of how civil engineering has impacted the world around us. The world would be much different if we didn't have civil engineers in the background, making sure everything works effectively.

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  2. I liked how you talked about the ethics of civil engineering. That is something that had never occurred to me and I liked your examples. I also had only thought of roads when I thought about civil engineering. I liked your examples of other infrastructure that fall under the field.

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  3. When it comes to a discipline that we take for granted, it's civil engineering. Without the roads, bridges and water systems that we use each and every day, our life would truly be unbearable.

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  4. I thought the the way you described the field we are both in was dead on. I like that you incorporated ethics into the post becasue it is my opinion that a lot of people dont think about that aspect of the profession when it is one of the most important aspects about it.

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  5. When discussing the impossibility of a word without a profession, it is absolutely necessary to maintain the notion of other vital careers. I realize this posting was to promote/discuss your profession, which is civil engineering, so it wasn't exactly asking you to examine other options.

    Regardless, it's apparent that civil engineers have provided an incredibly significant role in our day-to-day lives. Your post definitely promotes awareness for this fact. Hopefully more are aware of what a civil engineer accomplishes because of your post, because I certainly understand it more and, in turn, respect it more.

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