Civil Engineering, BAR-BUL
Civil engineering, the profession of designing and executing structural works that serve the general public. The term was first used in the 18th century to distinguish the newly recognized profession from military engineering, until then preeminent.
Civil Engineering Encyclopedia Articles By Title
barcode, a printed series of parallel bars or lines of varying width that is used for entering data into a computer......
bargeboard, exposed board or false rafter running underneath the slopes of a projecting gable roof. Such a board......
George Nicoll Barnes was a trade-union leader, socialist, a founder (1900) and chairman (1910) of the British Labour......
barracks, military housing facility, usually spoken of, or written of, in the plural. Though permanent buildings......
barrel vault, ceiling or roof consisting of a series of semicylindrical arches. See...
Florence Bascom was an educator and geological survey scientist who is considered to be the first American woman......
basilica, in the Roman Catholic and Greek Orthodox churches, a canonical title of honour given to church buildings......
George Bass was a surgeon and sailor who was important in the early coastal survey of Australia. Bass was apprenticed......
bastion, element of fortification that remained dominant for about 300 years before becoming obsolete in the 19th......
bath, process of soaking the body in water or some other aqueous matter such as mud, steam, or milk. The bath may......
batten, term used in joinery for a board 4 to 7 inches (10 to 17.8 cm) wide and not more than 3 inches (7.6 cm)......
battlement, the parapet of a wall consisting of alternating low portions known as crenels, or crenelles (hence......
Jean-Maurice-Émile Baudot was an engineer who, in 1874, received a patent on a telegraph code that by the mid-20th......
bay, in architecture, any division of a building between vertical lines or planes, especially the entire space......
Bay Bridge, complex crossing that spans San Francisco Bay from the city of San Francisco to Oakland via Yerba Buena......
bay window, window formed as the exterior expression of a bay within a structure, a bay in this context being an......
Sir Joseph William Bazalgette was a British civil engineer who designed the main drainage system for London. After......
Henri-Émile Bazin was an engineer and member of the French Corps des Ponts et Chaussées (“Corps of Bridges and......
beam, in engineering, originally a solid piece of timber, as a beam of a house, a plow, a loom, or a balance. In......
beam bridge, simple bridge in which a horizontal beam is supported at each end. The beam bridge is the most common......
bearing wall, Wall that carries the load of floors and roof above in addition to its own weight. The traditional......
Sir Chester Beatty was a naturalized British mining engineer and company director who played an important role......
Alphonse Beau de Rochas was a French engineer who originated the principle of the four-stroke internal-combustion......
Sir Henry Thomas De La Beche was a geologist who founded the Geological Survey of Great Britain, which made the......
Stephen D. Bechtel was an American construction engineer and business executive, president (1936–60) of W.A. Bechtel......
George Ferdinand Becker was a geologist who advanced the study of mining geology from physical, chemical, and mathematical......
beehive house, primitive type of residence designed by enlarging a simple stone hemisphere, constructed out of......
Peter Behrens was an architect noted for his influential role in the development of modern architecture in Germany.......
Sir Edward Belcher was a naval officer who performed many coastal surveys for the British Admiralty. The grandson......
belfry, bell tower, either attached to a structure or freestanding. More specifically, it is the section of such......
Bernard Forest de Belidor was a military and civil engineer and author of a classic work on hydraulics. After serving......
Édouard Belin was a French engineer who in 1907 made the first telephoto transmission, from Paris to Lyon to Bordeaux......
Henry Bell was a Scottish engineer who launched the first commercially successful steamship in Europe. After serving......
bema, (Greek bēma, “step”), raised platform; in antiquity it was probably made of stone, but in modern times it......
Arden L. Bement, Jr. is an American metallurgical engineer who served as director of the National Science Foundation......
Asher Benjamin was an American architect who was an early follower of Charles Bulfinch. His greatest influence......
Sir Samuel Bentham was a British engineer, naval architect, and navy official in Russia (1780–91) and England (from......
Karl Benz was a German mechanical engineer who designed and in 1885 built the world’s first practical automobile......
Bereguardo Canal, historic canal in Lombardy, Italy, the first canal in Europe to use a series of pound locks (locks......
Lloyd Viel Berkner was an American physicist and engineer who first measured the extent, including height and density,......
Hendrik Petrus Berlage was a Dutch architect whose work, characterized by a use of materials based on their fundamental......
Henry Bessemer was an inventor and engineer who developed the first process for manufacturing steel inexpensively......
Jacques Besson was an engineer whose improvements in the lathe were of great importance in the development of the......
Beyer-Garratt, type of steam locomotive characterized by tremendous hauling capacity and light axle loads. This......
Bian Canal, historic canal running northwest-southeast through Henan, Anhui, and Jiangsu provinces of eastern China.......
Big Boy, one of the largest and most powerful series of steam locomotives ever built. Produced from 1941 to 1944......
Big Dig, the largest and most expensive highway infrastructure project in American history. Initially conceived......
Bihar train disaster, train wreck that killed hundreds of people on June 6, 1981, when a passenger train derailed......
biochar, form of charcoal made from animal wastes and plant residues (such as wood chips, leaves, and husks) that......
bioengineering, the application of engineering knowledge to the fields of medicine and biology. The bioengineer......
bionics, science of constructing artificial systems that have some of the characteristics of living systems. Bionics......
biosolids, sewage sludge, the residues remaining from the treatment of sewage. For use as a fertilizer in agricultural......
blasting, process of reducing a solid body, such as rock, to fragments by using an explosive. Conventional blasting......
block mill, Earliest mechanized factory for mass production. It was conceived by Samuel Bentham, with machinery......
Blue Ridge Parkway, scenic motor route, extending 469 miles (755 km) primarily through the Blue Ridge segment of......
Johann Georg Bodmer was a Swiss mechanic and prolific inventor of machine tools and textile-making machinery. Information......
Boegoebergdam, concrete irrigation dam, on the middle Orange River, Northern Cape province, South Africa. The Orange......
Germain Boffrand was a French architect noted for the great variety, quantity, and quality of his work. Boffrand......
bond, in masonry, systematic arrangement of bricks or other building units composing a wall or structure in such......
Bonnet Carre Spillway, emergency floodway in St. Charles parish, southeastern Louisiana, U.S. Located about 30......
Robert Bosch was a German engineer and industrialist who was responsible for the invention of the spark plug and......
Boston and Maine Corporation, largest of the New England railroads, operating in central and northern Massachusetts,......
boulevard, broad landscaped avenue typically permitting several lanes of vehicular traffic as well as pedestrian......
Matthew Boulton was an English manufacturer and engineer who financed and introduced James Watt’s steam engine.......
the Bowery, street and section of Lower Manhattan, New York City, U.S., extending diagonally from Chatham Square......
box frame construction, method of building with concrete in which individual cells, or rooms, are set horizontally......
bracket, in architecture, device of wood, stone, or metal that projects from or overhangs a wall to carry a weight.......
John Bradfield was an Australian engineer known as “the father of modern Sydney.” Bradfield was known for his lead......
Joseph Bramah was an engineer and inventor whose lock-manufacturing shop was the cradle of the British machine-tool......
Alfred Brandt was a German civil engineer who was primarily responsible for the successful driving of the Simplon......
Edward Bransfield was an Irish-born English naval officer believed to have been the first to sight the Antarctic......
Thomas Brassey was an early British railway contractor who built railway lines all over the world. Brassey began......
Bratsk Dam, gravity earth-fill dam on the Angara River, Russia, completed in 1964. The dam is 410 feet (125 m)......
breakwater, artificial offshore structure protecting a harbour, anchorage, or marina basin from water waves. Breakwaters......
Marcel Breuer was an architect and designer, one of the most-influential exponents of the International Style;......
brick and tile, structural clay products, manufactured as standard units, used in building construction. The brick,......
bridge, structure that spans horizontally between supports, whose function is to carry vertical loads. The prototypical......
- Introduction
- Truss Design, Construction, Types
- Concrete, Design, Construction
- Cantilever, Design, Construction
- Live Load, Dead Load, Structural Design
- Roman, Arch, Engineering
- Medieval, Construction, Arches
- Timber, Truss, Engineering
- Suspension, Design, Construction
- Maillart, Innovations, Design
- Engineering, Tacoma, Narrows
- U.S. Designs, Construction, Types
Bridgewater Canal, British canal now extending from Worsley to Liverpool. An engineering masterpiece of the 18th......
Francis Egerton, 3rd duke of Bridgewater was the founder of British inland navigation, whose canal, built from......
Sir Charles Tilston Bright was a British engineer who superintended the laying of the first Atlantic telegraph......
James Brindley was a pioneer canal builder, who constructed the Bridgewater Canal from Worsley to Manchester, which......
brise-soleil, sun baffle outside the windows or extending over the entire surface of a building’s facade. Many......
Britannia Bridge, railroad bridge in northern Wales spanning Menai Strait, between Bangor and the Isle of Anglesey.......
British Railways, former national railway system of Great Britain, created by the Transport Act of 1947, which......
British South Africa Company (BSAC, BSACO, or BSA Company), mercantile company based in London that was incorporated......
broadcasting, electronic transmission of radio and television signals that are intended for general public reception,......
- Introduction
- British, Company, Formation
- Radio, TV, Networks
- Radio, TV, Satellite
- Public Authorities, Private Interests
- Educational, Radio, TV
- TV Production, Audio, Visuals
- Dramatic Techniques
- Entertainment, Radio, TV
- Radio, Podcasts, Audio
- Religion, Media, Audience
- Regulation, Administration, Control
Broadway, New York City thoroughfare that traverses the length of Manhattan, near the middle of which are clustered......
J.H. van den Broek was a Dutch architect who, with Jacob B. Bakema, was especially associated with the post-World......
Brooklyn Bridge, suspension bridge spanning the East River from Brooklyn to Manhattan in New York City. A brilliant......
Joseph Rogers Brown was an American inventor and manufacturer who made numerous advances in the field of fine measurement......
Libéral Bruant was the builder of the Hôtel des Invalides in Paris, a French architect noted for the gravity, dignity,......
Brugge-Zeebrugge Canal, waterway built between 1896 and 1907 to connect Brugge (Bruges) in Belgium with the North......
Isambard Kingdom Brunel was a British civil and mechanical engineer of great originality who designed the first......
Sir Marc Isambard Brunel was a French-émigré engineer and inventor who solved the historic problem of underwater......
Erik Bryggman was an architect notable for his role in bringing modern functionalist architecture to Finland. Bryggman......
Buckingham Canal, navigation canal in eastern Andhra Pradesh state and northeastern Tamil Nadu state, southeastern......
building, a usually roofed and walled structure built for permanent use. Rudimentary buildings were initially constructed......
building code, Systematic statement of a body of rules that govern and constrain the design, construction, alteration,......
building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPVs), photovoltaic cells and thin-film solar cells that are integral components......
Jean Bullant was a dominant figure in French architecture during the period of the Wars of Religion (1562–98),......