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The Structural Engineer, Volume 77, Issue 1, 1999
The Institution’s Logo Various readers have responded to the suggestions in Verulam 15 September 1998 (Vol 76 No 18). Ronald Deen from Glasgow writes: We have talk of bending moment diagrams with a lion scratching on a post or sliderules or workers in hard hats to meet with the spirit of the new millennium. Even civil engineers have their beaver and stork. How strange that engineers, supposedly the most practical and pragmatic of professions have for so long ignored the greatest builders that have ever lived. I refer to the family of Arachne - the spiders.
This paper reviews the changing use of Information Technology (IT) in the construction process and the benefits that are attainable to clients and practitioners. The introduction of integrated 3-dimensional project modelling is a key enabling technology and its potential and challenges to designers and contractors are described from their contrasting viewpoints. The factors restricting its uptake in the construction sector are examined. The conclusions are that the inhibitions to its use are founded in our construction culture. Sturat Cowperthwaite, Graham Raven and Mervyn Richards
Adhesive technology may not be familiar to many structural engineers as adhesives have been used mostly in the aerospace and automotive industries. In these sectors much research has been carried out on the behaviour of adhesively bonded joints.