Structural Engineering

Structural Engineering

What gives an engineer confidence to project and build something as large and graceful as the Golden Gate Bridge (the creation of late Purdue professor Charles A. Ellis) knowing that it has to withstand the demands of gravity, wind, and earthquakes?

Golden Gate Bridge
The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California

Why did Gaudi think of the Sagrada Familia “upside-down” before he started building it?

Sagrada Familia
The Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, Spain (inverted model on the left, actual structure on the right)

Who decides how much reinforcing steel goes into a reinforced concrete column supporting 100 floors in a skyscraper? And how do they make that decision?

How far apart can we place the supports of steel girders in our bridges?

If these questions spark your interest, if you would like to test to failure structural models in one of the largest laboratories in the country, then structural engineering is the right career choice for you. Join Purdue’s School Civil Engineering and enroll in structural engineering courses to leave a mark that will benefit and inspire many, and last the test of time as the Golden Gate has.


Spotlights

February 22, 2012

Prof. Dyke delivers keynote lecture at national workshop

Prof. Shirley Dyke was invited to deliver a keynote lecture at the 2nd Workshop on China-US Collaboration for Disaster Evolution/Resilience of Civil Infrastructure and Urban Environment in December 2011.
February 8, 2012

Prof. Connor honored by AISC

Prof. Robert Connor has been honored by the American Institute of Steel Construction with the Special Achievement Award.
November 16, 2011

Prof. Kreger wins ACI Award

Prof. Mike Kreger has been selected to receive the American Concrete Institute Foundation - Concrete Research Council Arthur J. Boase Award.
October 10, 2011

New 'core wall' may speed skyscraper construction

Researchers are perfecting a new technique that could speed construction of skyscrapers while also providing enough stiffness and strength to withstand earthquakes and forces from high winds.
September 28, 2011

Hoon Sohn named SHM Person of the Year

Hoon Sohn, Curtis Visiting Professor of Civil Engineering at Purdue University, is the recipient of this year's Structural Health Monitoring Person of the Year.
March 25, 2011

2010 Chile Earthquake Engineering Lessons

This two-part seminar on 4/5 & 4/14 is a joint effort between structural engineering teams at Purdue University and Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile.
March 23, 2011

Prof. Varma named Faculty Scholar

Congratulations to Amit Varma for being named a 2011 Purdue University Faculty Scholar. The program recognizes outstanding faculty members at the West Lafayette campus who are on an accelerated path for academic distinction.
February 15, 2011

2020 Vision Report on Earthquake Engineering

CE faculty led in the development of a report summarizing the community vision for the future of earthquake engineering research. This report will be used to define the next generation of research and the role of the cyberinfrastructure and experimental facilities within the NEES network.
February 8, 2011

Drag Distinguished Lecture Series

The 2011 Drag Distinguished Lecture will be held on Friday, Feb. 18th, 4:30pm in FRNY G140, and will feature Paul M. Skelton, PE, with a lecture titled "Moveable Structures."
January 12, 2011

Prof. Sozen honored by EERI

Congratulations to Prof. Mete Sozen, honored by the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute with the 2011 George W. Housner Medal for his extraordinary and lasting contributions to public earthquake safety through keystone research and the development and application of earthquake hazard reduction codes, practices and policies.
November 23, 2010

2010 International Bridge Contest

On Friday, Nov. 19th, two teams of CE students placed first and second in an international competition involving students from eight universities in Japan, Turkey & the U.S.
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