Civil Engineering, CHI-DAK
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
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,......
choragic monument, large, freestanding pedestal that formed the display base for an athletic or choral prize won......
Chrysler Building, office building in New York City, designed by William Van Alen and often cited as the epitome......
church, in architecture, a building designed for Christian worship. The earliest churches were based on the plan......
château, in France, during the 13th and 14th centuries, a castle, or structure arranged for defense rather than......
Châtelet, in Paris, the principal seat of common-law jurisdiction under the French monarchy from the Middle Ages......
citadel, fortified structure that is often located within a city or town. While designed to protect or subjugate......
Walter McLennan Citrine, 1st Baron Citrine was an English trade union leader and general secretary of the Trades......
André-Gustave Citroën was a French engineer and industrialist who introduced Henry Ford’s methods of mass production......
civic centre, grouping of municipal facilities into a limited precinct often adjacent to the central business district.......
civil engineering, the profession of designing and executing structural works that serve the general public, such......
clapboard, type of board bevelled toward one edge, used to clad the exterior of a frame building. Clapboards are......
Adam Clark was a British civil engineer who is associated with the construction of the Széchenyi Chain Bridge (Széchenyi......
Georges Claude was an engineer, chemist, and inventor of the neon light, which found widespread use in signs and......
Appius Claudius Caecus was an outstanding statesman, legal expert, and author of early Rome who was one of the......
clean room, in manufacturing and research, dust-free working area with strict temperature and humidity control......
Joseph Clement was a British engineer who has been called the “first computer engineer” for his work on inventor......
Cleopatra’s Needle, either of two monumental Egyptian obelisks. See...
clerestory, in architecture, any fenestrated (windowed) wall of a room that is carried higher than the surrounding......
Sir Dugald Clerk was a British engineer who invented the two-stroke Clerk cycle internal-combustion engine, widely......
cliff dwelling, housing of the prehistoric Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazi) people of the southwestern United States,......
cloister, quadrilateral enclosure surrounded by covered walkways, and usually attached to a monastic or cathedral......
cloud whitening, untested geoengineering technique designed to increase the reflectance of Earth’s cloud cover......
CN Tower, broadcast and telecommunications tower in Toronto. Standing at a height of 1,815 feet (553 metres), it......
coach, railroad passenger car. In early railroad operation, passenger and freight cars were often intermixed, but......
cofferdam, watertight enclosure from which water is pumped to expose the bed of a body of water in order to permit......
colonnade, row of columns generally supporting an entablature (row of horizontal moldings), used either as an independent......
colossal order, architectural order extending beyond one interior story, often extending through several stories.......
columbarium, sepulchral building containing many small niches for cinerary urns. The term is derived from the Latin......
column, in architecture, a vertical element, usually a rounded shaft with a capital and a base, which in most cases......
Composite order, an order of Classical architecture, developed in Rome, that combines characteristics of both the......
composting toilet, waterless sewage-treatment system that decomposes human excreta into an inert nitrogen-rich......
compound pier, in Romanesque and Gothic architecture, feature of a nave arcade designed for the support of arches......
computer security, the protection of computer systems and information from harm, theft, and unauthorized use. Computer......
computer vision, field of artificial intelligence in which programs attempt to identify objects represented in......
Cyrus B. Comstock was a Union army officer and engineer who commanded the Balloon Corps during the American Civil......
Pont de la Concorde, stone-arch bridge crossing the Seine River in Paris at the Place de la Concorde. The masterpiece......
concrete, in construction, structural material consisting of a hard, chemically inert particulate substance, known......
conduit, channel or pipe for conveying water or other fluid or for carrying out certain other purposes, such as......
confessional, in Roman Catholic churches, box cabinet or stall in which the priest sits to hear the confessions......
Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers, public institution of higher learning in Paris, dedicated to applied......
conservatory, in architecture, building in which tender plants are protected and displayed, usually attached to......
console, in architecture, type of bracket or corbel, particularly one with a scroll-shaped profile: usually an......
Consolidated Rail Corporation, publicly owned American railroad company established by the federal government under......
construction, the techniques and industry involved in the assembly and erection of structures, primarily those......
- Introduction
- Bronze Age, Urban Cultures
- Roman, Architecture, Engineering
- Romanesque, Gothic, Architecture
- Timber, Brick, Building
- Renaissance, Architecture, Engineering
- Industrialization, Materials, Techniques
- Building Science, Materials, Processes
- Steel, High-Rises, Engineering
- Domes, Concrete, Structures
- Skyscrapers, Safety, Technology
- Design, Materials, Processes
- Design, Development, Planning
- Design, Materials, Planning
- Interior Design, Finishes, Materials
- Low-Rise, Commercial, Institutional
- Mixing, Pouring, Curing
- Flooring, Finishes, Materials
- Electrical, Wiring, Systems
- Skyscrapers, Design, Engineering
- Enclosure, Framing, Materials
- Prefabrication, Steel, Concrete
- Reinforced, Precast, Structures
convent, local community or residence of a religious order, particularly an order of nuns. See...
William Martin Conway, Baron Conway was a British mountain climber, explorer, and art historian whose expeditions......
cooling system, apparatus employed to keep the temperature of a structure or device from exceeding limits imposed......
corbel, in architecture, bracket or weight-carrying member, built deeply into the wall so that the pressure on......
corbel table, in architecture, a continuous row of corbels (a block of stone projecting from a wall and supporting......
corbie step, stone used for covering any of the steps or indentations in the coping (uppermost, covering course)......
Le Corbusier was an internationally influential Swiss architect and city planner, whose designs combine the functionalism......
Corinth Canal, tidal waterway across the Isthmus of Corinth in Greece, joining the Gulf of Corinth in the northwest......
Corinthian order, one of the classical orders of architecture. Its main characteristic is an ornate capital carved......
Gaspard-Gustave de Coriolis was a French engineer and mathematician who first described the Coriolis force, an......
cornerstone, ceremonial building block, usually placed ritually in the outer wall of a building to commemorate......
cornice, in architecture, the decorated projection at the top of a wall provided to protect the wall face or to......
cortile, internal court surrounded by an arcade, characteristic of the Italian palace, or palazzo, during the Renaissance......
Sir Arthur Thomas Cotton was a British irrigation engineer whose projects averted famines and stimulated the economy......
County Hall, former seat of the London County Council and its successor, the Greater London Council. Since 1997......
court, in architecture, an open area surrounded by buildings or walls. There have been such courts from the earliest......
covered bridge, timber-truss bridge carrying a roadway over a river or other obstacle, popular in folklore and......
Weetman Dickinson Pearson, 1st Viscount Cowdray was a British engineer and a developer of the Mexican petroleum......
Ralph Adams Cram was an architect and writer, and the foremost Gothic revival architect in the United States. Inspired......
crane, any of a diverse group of machines that not only lift heavy objects but also shift them horizontally. Cranes......
crannog, in Scotland and Ireland, artificially constructed sites for houses or settlements; they were made of timber,......
August Leopold Crelle was a German mathematician and engineer who advanced the work and careers of many young mathematicians......
John Crerar was a U.S. railway industrialist and philanthropist who endowed (1889) what later became the John Crerar......
Paul Phillippe Cret was an architect and teacher, a late adherent to the Beaux Arts tradition. Introduced to architecture......
Charles Crocker was an American businessman and banker, chief contractor in the building of the Central Pacific......
Rookes Evelyn Bell Crompton was a British inventor and pioneer in electrical development. After military service......
Hardy Cross was a U.S. professor of civil and structural engineering whose outstanding contribution was a method......
Croton Dam, Reservoir, and Aqueduct, part of the extensive water supply system for New York City. The reservoir,......
cruse lamp, small, iron hanging lamp with a handle at one end and a pinched spout for a wick at the other. It had......
cryopreservation, the preservation of cells and tissue by freezing. For the production of low-temperature phenomena,......
crypt, vault or subterranean chamber, usually under a church floor. In Latin, crypta designated any vaulted building......
cryptoporticus, a covered gallery that was a characteristic feature of the ancient Roman palazzo. It was usually......
Crystal Palace, giant glass-and-iron exhibition hall in Hyde Park, London, that housed the Great Exhibition of......
Crédit Mobilier Scandal, in U.S. history, illegal manipulation of contracts by a construction and finance company......
CSX Corporation, company formed by the merger of the Chessie System, Inc., and Seaboard Coast Line Industries,......
Ctesibius Of Alexandria was a Greek physicist and inventor, the first great figure of the ancient engineering tradition......
Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot was a French military engineer who designed and built the world’s first true automobile—a......
cuirass, body armour that protects the torso of the wearer above the waist or hips. Originally it was a thick leather......
Carl Culmann was a German engineer whose graphic methods of structural analysis have been widely applied to engineering......
cupola, in architecture, small dome, often resembling an overturned cup, placed on a circular, polygonal, or square......
curtain wall, Nonbearing wall of glass, metal, or masonry attached to a building’s exterior structural frame. After......
cyclopean masonry, wall constructed without mortar, using enormous blocks of stone. This technique was employed......
dado, in Classical architecture, the plain portion between the base and cornice of the pedestal of a column and,......
Gottlieb Daimler was a German mechanical engineer who was a major figure in the early history of the automotive......
dais, any raised platform in a room, used primarily for ceremonial purposes. Originally the term referred to a......
dakhma, (Avestan: “tower of silence”), Parsi funerary tower erected on a hill for the disposal of the dead according......