View allAll Photos Tagged Civil_Engineering

Civil Engineering students defy gravity in their concrete canoes at the American Society of Civil Engineers’ National Concrete Canoe Competition, Monday, June 22, 2015, near Clemson, S.C. The competition which spanned three days featured 22 teams from universities across the country and Canada. (John Amis/AP Images for American Society of Civil Engineers)

Civil Engineering Books (Review Books, Reference Books, Manuals, Textbooks)

Faculty of BSCE 1997-1998

 

Mr. Rodrigo Agno

Mr. Alex Balaan

Prof. Constantino Bristol

Prof. Tomas Ganiron Jr

Mr. Enrique Sundiam

 

Civil Engineering students defy gravity in their concrete canoes at the American Society of Civil Engineers’ National Concrete Canoe Competition, Monday, June 22, 2015, near Clemson, S.C. The competition which spanned three days featured 22 teams from universities across the country and Canada. (John Amis/AP Images for American Society of Civil Engineers)

 

The outer cladding on the building was fitted during an upgrade some years ago, this must know be removed along with all the insulation and wall fixings

 

Our Soo Locks tour boat takes us under the International Bridge connecting Sault Sainte Marie, Ontario to Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan as we head towards the Canadian Lock.

Audiência com representantes da China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC), no gabinete do COI-SSP.

Foto: Wuiga Rubini/GOVBA

 

Black and white photo of the Civil Engineering building at John Hopkins University. In front of the building is a tennis court, which in the picture features two people playing. Written below the photo is, "Civil Engineering Building".

 

2012.200.520

This photograph was taken by Harry F. Baker (1905-1994) and comes from the Baker Family papers (2012.200) at the Nabb Research Center. For more information, visit the finding aid at libapps.salisbury.edu/nabb-archives/local-history-archive...

Civil Engineering Books (Review Books, Reference Books, Manuals, Textbooks)

Pelham Ridge Elementary School was designed by Goodwyn Mills Cawood. Pelham Ridge Elementary is the first new construction school designed for the newly-formed Pelham City School Board. The new elementary school is a two-story brick and stone building with wood elements, which reflects the desired character and materiality of the existing schools in the district. Pelham Ridge incorporates a variety of learning environments in addition to the typical classroom. These supplemental learning spaces include two “break-out” learning spaces, a flexible classroom, and two courtyards. Two of the classroom wings adjacent to the courtyards are designed to function as storm shelters and meet the Alabama Building Commission’s state standard for storm shelters, ICC 500.

 

For more information on GMC's education experience see www.gmcnetwork.com or follow us on social media.

Parallel Sessions

"Monday Late Afternoon"

 

ICASP13

 

2019.05.27

SNU, Seoul, Korea

Tech. Sgt. Matthew Hamilton and Staff Sgt. Matthew Driggers, heavy equipment technicians from the South Carolina Air National Guard’s 169th Civil Engineer Squadron at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, S.C., level mixed concrete for multi-purpose building foundations being constructed in support of a Deployment for Training in Israel, June 30, 2015. The construction project is to help S.C. PRIME BEEF Airmen maintain their civil engineering specialties. Swamp Fox civil engineers are working alongside 200th RED HORSE Squadron and U.S. Navy SEABEES civil engineers during the training exercise. (South Carolina Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Caycee R. Watson / RELEASED)

Jackson Civil Engineering Compound Matlock Christmas Tree

U.S. Airmen from the South Carolina Air National Guard’s 169th Civil Engineer Squadron at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, S.C., tour the Jordan River in Israel on a day off during a 19-day deployment constructing multi-purpose buildings in support of a Deployment for Training, July 11, 2015. The construction project is to help S.C. Prime BEEF Airmen maintain their civil engineering specialties. Swamp Fox civil engineers are working alongside 200th RED HORSE Squadron and U.S. Navy SEABEES civil engineers during the training exercise. (South Carolina Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Caycee R. Watson / RELEASED)

Part of Dad's troop in Iraq: EOD + Fire Department. I think this is at Tallil Air Base.

 

There are the twin towers... I wonder if they still use that for a backdrop when they take pictures.

 

My dad retires in early 2007.

Together We CAN Break Through the Wall of Hunger

Discover one of the finest Civil engineering companies in Bahrain, Kooheji Contractors. Get commercial and industrial urban development projects. Connect now at: www.koohejicontractors.com/

2007-03-06 神奈川県川崎市高津区 久地円筒分水 1941年

As the footprint of the former RNAS Daedalus has shrunk, development around the outside of what is now the thriving Solent Airport has continued apace. One of the latest projects is the construction of CETC, the Civil Engineering Training Centre which is on the site of Hangar D, once occupied by Bournemouth Avionics and logically near CEMAST [qv] and Fareham Innovation Centre [also qv]. This is a view from Meteor Way just three weeks after my first photographs of the site and much of the glazing is in place.

 

5300_DSC_0614C

Firefighters from the 86th Civil Engineering Squadron (CES) assist USAF Senior Airman Kyle Ledford, a fire fighter with the 86th CES, while exiting a confined quarters shaft during a technical rescue course at the 435th Construction and Training Squadron’s training facility outside the gates of Ramstein Air Base, Germany on 19 Feb, 2015. The confined quarters training was part of a three week course that allows firefighters to utilize advanced harnessing and rope techniques in order to possibly save lives. (DoD News photo by SSgt Brian Kimball)

Civil Engineering students defy gravity in their concrete canoes at the American Society of Civil Engineers’ National Concrete Canoe Competition, Monday, June 22, 2015, near Clemson, S.C. The competition which spanned three days featured 22 teams from universities across the country and Canada. (John Amis/AP Images for American Society of Civil Engineers)

Christmas Day Bridge works Petts Hill/Northolt Road.

Civil engineering students gather with professor Bob Gilbert and members

of industry and Texas Department of Transportation at research site near

Austin's airport. The collaborative project is investigating load

transfers of drilled shafts in Taylor shales.

Civil Engineering Books (Review Books, Reference Books, Manuals, Textbooks)

Audiência com representantes da China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC), no gabinete do COI-SSP.

Foto: Wuiga Rubini/GOVBA

 

Audiência com representantes da China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC), no gabinete do COI-SSP.

Foto: Wuiga Rubini/GOVBA

 

Civil Engineering students defy gravity in their concrete canoes at the American Society of Civil Engineers’ National Concrete Canoe Competition, Monday, June 22, 2015, near Clemson, S.C. The competition which spanned three days featured 22 teams from universities across the country and Canada. (John Amis/AP Images for American Society of Civil Engineers)

York, Maine

Constructed 1761

 

Sewall's Bridge is a singular example of an era when wooden trestle bridges carried highway traffic across New England waterways. It is the earliest pile-trestle bridge for which an authentic construction record exists, and the oldest for which builder's drawings survive. Spanning the York River, it was named for Major Samuel Sewall, Jr., the civil engineer who designed and constructed it.

 

Authorized in 1742, the bridge was delayed 20 years due to a depression and a war with the French Colonies. It remained in continuous use for 173 years, until it was replaced in 1934 by a treated wooden pile structure. The replacement bridge resembles the original, but is wider and stronger to accomodate greater traffic.

 

The original structure was 270 feet long and 25 feet wide. Its deck was supported by 13 braced bents of four piles each. The bents were assembled on land, floated out to position, and sunk through soft mud to a stable footing. The 14-span bridge included a 30-foot drawspan.

For more information on civil engineering history, go to www.asce.org/history.

  

Title: Civil Engineering

Digital Publisher: Digital: Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

Physical Publisher: Physical: Agricultural Communications Office of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, Texas A&M University

Date Issued: 2011-08-17

Date Created: 1952

Dimensions: 4 x 5 inches

Format Medium: Photographic negative

Type: image

Identifier: Photograph Location: Graphic Services Photos, Box 40, File 39-649

Rights: It is the users responsibility to secure permission from the copyright holders for publication of any materials. Permission must be obtained in writing prior to publication. Please contact the Cushing Memorial Library for further information

 

Together We CAN Break Through the Wall of Hunger

October 30, 2009

Civil engineering alumni Jeff Stewart, WSB and Glenn Schreiner, SEH visit at afternoon session.

1 2 ••• 18 19 21 23 24 ••• 79 80