29 October 202510:00 - 17:30 GMT
Online
Member early booking: £295 + VAT Member: £335 + VAT Standard: £445 + VAT
Available until one month prior
This one-day course examines changes between BS 5950 and Eurocode 3. The emphasis is on buildings and the provision of general rules for buildings of EN 1993-1-1 and design of joints to EN 1993-1-8.
By the end of the course, you should be able to:
Design simple building structures to Eurocode 3
Navigate effectively around parts of Eurocode 3 necessary for the design of steel structures
Design tension members, compression members, restrained and unrestrained beams, column base plates, and simple joints
Identify the practical issues in steel buildings design
Graduate engineer
Mid-career engineers
25% discount on associated publications: Manual for the design of steelwork building structures to Eurocode 3. Please contact [email protected] for more information.
Bob is a Chartered Structural Engineer with experience working for consulting engineers and contractors designing building and civil engineering structures including bridges. He is a visiting lecturer at the University of the West of England teaching post-graduate and mid-career engineers. He has also authored education material for the British Standards Institution.
Email - [email protected]
This course provides an introduction to structural steelwork design to Eurocode 3 for building design.
This one-day, online course offers an introduction to timber design to Eurocode 5.
This course covers the design of common structural elements to Eurocode 2. Participants will be introduced to concrete material properties and learn about designing for durability and fire.
This two-day, online course introduces seismic design of civil engineering structures. It builds on the basics of structural dynamics and engineering seismology. The course focuses on seismic loading and design codes, conceptual seismic design principles and analysis for seismic loading, and design and detailing of structural members.
This two-day course extends the principles developed in the Understanding structural behaviour course. It covers more complex real structures and failures, and the important skills of approximate analysis for checking computational output and member sizing.
This two-day course shows engineers how to arrive at a qualitative solution to both create a structure and check computational results.