Civil Engineering, BUL-CHO
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
bulldozer, powerful machine for pushing earth or rocks, used in road building, farming, construction, and wrecking;......
bulletproof vest, protective covering worn to protect the torso against bullets. Metal body armour fell into disuse......
Philippe-Jean Bunau-Varilla was a French engineer and a key figure in the decision to construct the Panama Canal.......
bungalow, single-storied house with a sloping roof, usually small and often surrounded by a veranda. The name derives......
Gordon Bunshaft was an American architect and corecipient (with Oscar Niemeyer) of the prestigious Pritzker Prize......
burial mound, artificial hill of earth and stones built over the remains of the dead. In England the equivalent......
Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation, American railway company formed in 1995 when Burlington Northern, Inc.,......
Burma Railway, railway built during World War II connecting Bangkok and Moulmein (now Mawlamyine), Burma (Myanmar).......
Burma Road, highway linking Lashio, in eastern Burma (now Myanmar), with Kunming, in Yunnan province, China, a......
Daniel Burnham was an American architect and urban planner whose impact on the American city was substantial. He......
Lake Burragorang, major reservoir for Sydney, east-central New South Wales, Australia. The lake fills the Burragorang......
bus, any of a class of large, self-propelled, wheeled vehicles that are designed to carry passengers, generally......
Pierce Butler was an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1923–39). Butler was admitted to the......
William Butterfield was a British architect who was prominent in the Gothic Revival in England. Sometimes called......
Stephen Decatur Button was an American architect whose works influenced modern tall-building design, particularly......
buttress, in architecture, exterior support, usually of masonry, projecting from the face of a wall and serving......
buttress dam, concrete dam in which the smooth upstream face is supported by buttresses on the downstream side.......
John By was an English military engineer whose Rideau Canal, connecting the Ottawa River and Lake Ontario (1832),......
Bydgoszcz Canal, canal in north-central Poland that links the Vistula River basin with that of the Oder River.......
St. Bénézet ; feast day April 14) was a builder who instigated and directed the building of the Pont d’Avignon,......
cable structure, Form of long-span structure that is subject to tension and uses suspension cables for support.......
cable-stayed bridge, bridge form in which the weight of the deck is supported by a number of nearly straight diagonal......
Cahora Bassa, arch dam and hydroelectric facility on the Zambezi River in western Mozambique. The dam, located......
caisson, in engineering, boxlike structure used in construction work underwater or as a foundation. It is usually......
caitya, (Sanskrit: “that which is worthy to be gazed upon,” thus “worshipful”), in Buddhism, a sacred place or......
Caledonian Canal, waterway running southwest to northeast across the Glen Mor fault of northern Scotland and connecting......
California Aqueduct, principal water-conveyance structure of the California State Water Project, U.S., and one......
Camino Real, (Spanish: Royal Road), highway that in the 16th century connected the cities of Gijón, León, and Madrid,......
camp, in military service, an area for temporary or semipermanent sheltering of troops. In most usage the word......
campanile, bell tower, usually built beside or attached to a church; the word is most often used in connection......
Canadian National Railway Company (CN), corporation created by the Canadian government in 1918 to operate a number......
Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. (CP), privately owned company that operates one of Canada’s two transcontinental......
Canal du Midi, historic canal in the Languedoc region of France, a major link in the inland waterway system from......
canals and inland waterways, natural or artificial waterways used for navigation, crop irrigation, water supply,......
- Introduction
- 16th-18th Century, Engineering, Trade
- 19th Century, Engineering, Trade
- US History, Construction, Navigation
- Suez, Shipping, Egypt
- Engineering, Construction, Maintenance
- Locks, Navigation, Engineering
- Boat Lifts, Aqueducts, Navigation
- Navigation, Irrigation, Transport
- European Rivers, Navigation, Trade
- North America, Rivers, Lakes
- Trade, Transport, Navigation
Felix Candela was a Spanish-born architect, known for his designs of reinforced-concrete (ferroconcrete) structures......
candle, light source now mostly used for decorative and ceremonial purposes, consisting of wax, tallow, or similar......
canopy, in architecture, a projecting hood or cover suspended over an altar, statue, or niche. It originally symbolized......
cantilever, beam supported at one end and carrying a load at the other end or distributed along the unsupported......
cantilever bridge, bridge that uses projecting beams (called cantilevers)—each of which is supported only at one......
Cape Cod Canal, artificial waterway in southeastern Massachusetts, U.S. A part of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway,......
capital, in architecture, crowning member of a column, pier, anta, pilaster, or other columnar form, providing......
United States Capitol, meeting place of the United States Congress and one of the most familiar landmarks in Washington,......
Baths of Caracalla, public baths in ancient Rome begun by the emperor Septimius Severus in ad 206 and completed......
caravansary, in the Middle East and parts of North Africa and Central Asia, a public building used for sheltering......
carbon capture and storage (CCS), the process of recovering carbon dioxide from the fossil-fuel emissions produced......
carbon offset, any activity that compensates for the emission of carbon dioxide (CO2) or other greenhouse gases......
carbon sequestration, the long-term storage of carbon in plants, soils, geologic formations, and the ocean. Carbon......
Cariboo Road, wagon trail that was constructed (1862–65) in the Fraser River valley, in southern British Columbia,......
carpentry, the art and trade of cutting, working, and joining timber. The term includes both structural timberwork......
caryatid, in classical architecture, draped female figure used instead of a column as a support. In marble architecture......
Cascade Tunnel, the longest railroad tunnel in the United States, located in central Washington about 60 miles......
casement window, earliest form of movable window, wood or metal framed, with hinges or pivots at the upright side......
César-François Cassini de Thury was a French astronomer and geodesist, who continued surveying work undertaken......
Dominique, comte de Cassini was a French geodesist and astronomer who completed his father’s map of France, which......
castle, medieval stronghold, generally the residence of the king or lord of the territory in which it stands. Strongholds......
catafalque, ornate, often theatrical, usually movable funereal structure mounted on a stage to support a coffin......
cathedral, in Christian churches that have an episcopal form of church government, the church in which a residential......
cavity wall, in architecture, a double wall consisting of two wythes (vertical layers) of masonry separated by......
ceiling, the overhead surface or surfaces covering a room, and the underside of a floor or a roof. Ceilings are......
cella, in Classical architecture, the body of a temple (as distinct from the portico) in which the image of the......
cellar, room beneath ground level, especially one for storing fruits and vegetables, both raw and canned, on a......
cenotaph, (from Greek kenotaphion, “empty tomb”), monument, sometimes in the form of a tomb, to a person who is......
Central Pacific Railroad, American railroad company founded in 1861 by a group of California merchants known later......
chain mail, form of body armour worn by European knights and other military men throughout most of the medieval......
chalet, timber house characteristic of Switzerland, the Bavarian Alps, Tirol, and the French Alps. The name originally......
Joseph Chamberlain was a British businessman, social reformer, radical politician, and ardent imperialist. At the......
Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin was a U.S. geologist and educator who proposed the planetesimal hypothesis, which held......
Chambly Canal, navigational waterway bypassing a series of rapids on the Richelieu River between the Chambly Basin......
Champs-Élysées, broad avenue in Paris, one of the world’s most famous, which stretches 1.17 miles (1.88 km) from......
chancel, portion of a church that contains the choir, often at the eastern end. Before modern changes in church......
Channel Tunnel, rail tunnel between England and France that runs beneath the English Channel. The Channel Tunnel,......
chantry, chapel, generally within a church, endowed for the singing of masses for the founder after his death.......
Octave Chanute was a leading American civil engineer and aeronautical pioneer. (Read Orville Wright’s 1929 biography......
chapel, small, intimate place of worship. The name was originally applied to the shrine in which the kings of France......
Claude Chappe was a French engineer and cleric who converted an old idea into a reality by inventing the semaphore......
chapter house, chamber or building, often reached through the cloister, in which the chapter, or heads of monastic......
Jean-Baptiste-Étienne-Auguste Charcot was a French explorer and oceanographer who carried out extensive charting......
Charles Bridge, stone arch bridge built between 1357 and 1402 over the Vltava River in Prague, Czech Republic.......
Charminar, historic monument located at the heart of Hyderabad, west-central Telangana state, south-central India.......
Chartwell, country house near Westerham, Kent, England, that from 1922 until shortly before his death in 1965 was......
checkerwork, in architecture, masonry built of two materials, usually stone and flint or stone and brick, so arranged......
chemical engineering, the development of processes and the design and operation of plants in which materials undergo......
Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, American waterway 22 km (14 miles) long connecting the head of the Chesapeake Bay......
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, former waterway, extending 297 km (184.5 miles) along the east bank of the Potomac River......
Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Company (C&O), American railroad company established in 1868 with the consolidation......
Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, complex of trestles, artificial islands, tunnels, and bridges that runs across the......
Francis Rawdon Chesney was a British soldier, explorer, and Middle East traveler whose fame rests on his projects......
chevet, eastern end of a church, especially of a Gothic church designed in the French manner. Beginning about the......
Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, main railway station in Mumbai, India, and the headquarters of the city’s Central......
Chicago and North Western Transportation Company (C&NW), former American railroad that was once one of the largest......
Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, U.S. waterway linking the south branch of the Chicago River with the Des Plaines......
Chicago Water Tower, one of the few buildings to survive the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. Completed in 1869, the......
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, American railway company founded in 1859 by John Murray Forbes,......
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Company, U.S. railway operating in central and northern states.......
Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad Company, U.S. railroad company founded in 1847 as the Rock Island and......
chigai-dana, in Japanese architecture, shelves built into a wall, a feature of the shoin style of domestic architecture,......
chimney, structure designed to carry off smoke from a fireplace or furnace. A chimney also induces and maintains......
chimneypiece, originally, a hood projecting from the wall over a grate, built to catch the smoke and direct it......
Chinese Eastern Railway, railroad constructed in Manchuria (northeastern China) by Russia in the late 19th century.......
choir, in architecture, area of a church designed to accommodate the liturgical singers, located in the chancel,......