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Source: www.aboutcivil.org Source: www.aboutcivil.org

Source: www.aboutcivil.org - PowerPoint Presentation

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Slide1

Source: www.aboutcivil.org)Slide2

Instructions for this presentationTo be able to see all of the content in this presentation:Be sure to click “enable content”

Be sure to watch the presentation in “slide show mode”

If you have any questions, or would like further information, feel free to contact:

John Stansbury,

Assoc

Chair of Civil Engineering

402-554-3896 (402-554-2462 – secretary)

jstansbury2@unl.edu

Enjoy!Slide3

Civil Engineering

H

as Five Areas

Environmental

Geotech and Materials Structural Transportation Water Resources

Geotech

and Materials EngineeringSlide4

What do civil engineers do?

Design Critical Infrastructure

Waste Management Systems

Airports

Water Treatment & Supply

Bridges

Roads

Railroads

Buildings

Wastewater treatment & DisposalSlide5

Environmental Engineering

Air pollution control

Hazardous waste treatment

Water supply

Waste water management

Storm water management

Solid waste disposalSlide6

Environmental Engineering

Water treatment and

distribution

(source: www.drinkingwater.esr.cri.nz)

Wastewater

treatment and disposal (source: www.hsy.fi) Air pollution control (source:questgarden.com)Solid and hazardous waste management (source:pianormin.wordpress.com)Slide7

Environmental Engineering Courses offered by department

Biosystems Engineering

326 Intro to

Env

Eng* 344 Env. Transport Processes 422 Pollution Prevention* 425 Env Eng Process Design* 441 Animal Waste Mgmt

455 Nonpoint Source Pollution*

Chemical Engineering

489 Air Pollution

Civil Engineering

125 Ecology

326 Intro to

Env

Eng

*

327

Env

Eng

Lab

421 Hazardous Waste

Mgmt

422 Pollution Prevention*

424 Solid Waste

Mgmt

425

Env

Eng

Process Design* 426 Water Treatment Design 427 Wastewater Treatment Des 430 Water Quality Modeling 431 Small Treatment Systems 432 Bioremediation of Haz Waste 455 Nonpoint Source Pollution*

Environmental Engineering? Which Department?

*Taught by two departmentsSlide8

You might be interested in

Environmental Engineering

if:

You like chemistry

You follow public health issues You’re concerned about pollutionSlide9

What does an environmental engineer do?Slide10

Geotechnical and

Materials Engineering

Concrete

Pavements

Foundations

Dams Soil Properties Site StudiesSlide11

Geotechnical engineering

Soil properties and

mechanics

(

source:sentryair.com

)Materials engineering (Concrete, asphalt) (source: www.engr.wisc.edu)Foundation engineeringSlide12

You might be interested in

Geotech

and Materials

Engineering if:

You like geology You like the outdoors You like laboratories You are interested in elements that build civil infrastructureSlide13

What does a Geotechnical Engineer do?Slide14

Structural

Engineering

Building structures

(

source:dailynewsdig.com

)Earthquake engineering (source: mathspig.wordpress.com)Civil engineering structures (Bridges, Dams, Roads)(source:www.wisegeek.com)Slide15

Structural Engineering

Buildings

Towers and Columns

Dams

BridgesSlide16

You might be interested in

Structural Engineering

if:

You like physics

You like mathematics You like computers You can think in 3-DSlide17

Example of a bridge designSlide18
Slide19
Slide20
Slide21
Slide22

What does a structural engineer do?Slide23

Transportation engineering

Highway engineering

(source: wonderfulengineering.com)

Port and harbor

engineering

(source: www.jamaicaobserver.com)Airport engineering(source:smseng,com)

Railroad engineeringsource: images.search.yahoo.comSlide24

Roadways,

Airports,

Port facilities,

Traffic control,

Pavement markings,

Intelligent Transportation Systems.

Transportation EngineeringSlide25

You might be interested in

Transportation Engineering

if:

You like working with people

You like mathematics & computer simulations

You can think in 3-D You’re concerned about traffic congestionSlide26

Do we need help, or what?Slide27

What do transportation engineers do?

They design

projects

like the Port Miami Tunnel. This is located 40 feet underneath the ocean floor that connects multiple interstates to Port Miami reducing traffic congestion in the

Miami

area. By placing this connection underground (rather than using a bridge), engineers are able to protect infrastructure from frequent hurricanes in the region.Slide28

Water

Resources Engineering

Storm sewers

Water resource planning

Dams

Irrigation systems

Water distribution systems

Groundwater modeling Slide29

Water resources engineering

Hydraulic Engineering

(source: images.search.yahoo.com)

River Engineering

(

source:www.geograph.org.uk)Groundwater Engineering(source: www.cgenarchive.org)Slide30

You might be interested in

Water Resources

Engineering if:

You like working with models

You like mathematics You like the outdoors

You’d like to harness the POWER of waterSlide31

What do water resources engineers do?Slide32

Civil engineering career options

Consulting Firm

Private Industry

Government Agency

(Source: search.Yahoo.com)

(Source: search.Yahoo.com)

(Source: search.Yahoo.com)Slide33

Working in a consulting firm

Perform engineering for outside clients

Solve engineering problems for clients (e.g., design a bridge)

 

Involved

with a project from the outset work closely with the client managing the projects on their behalf Involves occasional visits to the site, but largely office-based.Slide34

Career options in civil engineering

Government Agencies

US Army Corps of Engineers

Service Branches (Army, Navy, Air-Force, Marines)

Environmental Agencies

Highway Departments

Department of Defense

Department of Agriculture

Forest Service

Agricultural Research StationsSlide35

Salary expectations

Entry-level

$55,995 per year

(

source: www.payscale.com)

Mid-career

$87,130 per year

(source: www.bls.gov)

Management or late

career (Top 10

%)

$

128,110 per year

(source

:

www.bls.gov)Slide36

Why is civil engineering important?

Keeps people safe

Buildings

that

don’t collapseWater that won’t make you sick

Transportation systems that minimize hazardsEnvironment free of harmful pollutantsProvides infrastructure that improves economy and life-styleTransportation of people and goodsProductive work spaces (buildings)Healthy water to drink and air to breatheSlide37

How would I benefit from being a civil engineer?

Excellent job security

Satisfaction of doing something important

Work on projects that allow me to use my creativity

(Source: Images.search.Yahoo.com)Slide38

What cool things have civil engineers designed?

Golden gate bridge

(source: www.tes.com)

Hoover Dam

(source: www.jabbour.org)

Skyscrapers(source: skyscraper.org)Slide39

Storm Sewer System

Signal Timing

Streets and Sidewalks

Pavement Markings

Structures

Column Supports

Pole Foundations

Retaining Walls

Solid Waste Disposal

Can you find at least on object in this picture that involves a civil engineer specializing in the areas of:

Environmental Engineering;

Geotechnical/Materials Engineering;

Structural Engineering;

Transportation Engineering; and

Water Resources Engineering?Slide40

What is a workday like for a civil engineer?

Not a 9:00 to 5:00 job

Generally project-orientated

Most work is in the office solving problems, designing systems, writing project reports

Often work in multidisciplinary teams:

engineers, geologists, regulatory experts, chemists, biologists, etc.Engineers don’t “build” things, they designHow big? How strong? What material?Slide41

University of Nebraska: Big 10 Engineering

Civil

E

ngineering Department offers its program on two campuses:

Lincoln

OmahaSlide42

Why consider the University of Nebraska?

Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) Exam as a measure of program quality

Taken by most

engineering

students nearing graduation

FE Exam: a baseline measure of how well a student has learned principles of engineeringUniversity of Nebraska FE pass rate = 83%National average FE pass rate = 67%Carnegie I Research

Universities FE pass rate = 70%Some Carnegie I Universities: Boston College,

Cal-

Berkely

,

Cal Tech,

Colorado,

Columbia, Cornell, Duke, Georgia Tech, Illinois,

Iowa,

Iowa State, Michigan, MIT,

Nebraska

, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Princeton, Purdue, Rice, Stanford, Texas, UCLA, Virginia Tech, Yale

Quality engineering instructionSlide43

Programs on each campus

~200 - 250 undergrad students (each campus)

~25 -

40

graduates (BS) per year (each campus)

~40 - 60 graduate (MS, PhD) students (each campus)~25 MS and 15 PhD graduates per year (total)All degrees are offered on both campuses: BS, MS, and PhDEntire program offered on both campusesSlide44

For more information

Dan Linzell:

Department Chair (Lincoln campus)

402-472-8036

dlinzell@unl.edu

John StansburyAssociate Chair (Omaha campus)402-554-3896jstansbury2@unl.edu