Green Structural Engineering
Structural
- Oct 30, 2019
- 1
Top 3 problems you encounter and have to overcome working in structural engineering.... GO!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Sandman21 said:How much? Experts think AGI by 2060 and then it would have to be specialized and scaled down in both cost and power.
KootK said:I feel that the root causes of frustration within our industry have more to do with higher lever, systemic issues than the day to day stuff.
KootK said:All my money, a child, and a thumb. I think it's game over once the general AI is created as the general should go singularity and just partition itself off to handle the specialized.
RPMG said:Engineering professors teach math, and their students do algebra instead of sketching a section with a free-body-diagram
My thoughts exactly. Seems like an opportunity for some good ole' collusion!Tomfh said:Regarding engineering fees - We only have ourselves to blame. We race each other to the bottom and then complain we’re not getting paid enough.
MIStructE said:I believe if more buildings actually fell down we would be much richer men!
KootK said:While I'm sure that this was meant rather facetiously, I believe it to be an important part of this problem. In a statistical sense, the quality of structural engineering work truly does NOT have meaningful consequences. So why should clients pay for good work? I have exactly one idea for how this might get fixed without going to straight protectionism. It's based on my expectation that, baring frequent earthquakes, only a structural engineer can really parse out good structural engineering work from bad. So I'd like to see all jurisdictions legislate a mandatory, anonymous, 3rd party peer review for all structural works of any significance. Set the fees at 15% of the EOR fees or something. I feel that this would lead to several desirable outcomes:
1) Higher quality structural work.
2) More volume of structural work available.
3) Crap structural work would hold up permits etc and cause delays. At long last... consequences.
Some of the seismic jurisdictions like California and New Zealand have already taken meaningful steps in this direction which I feel is great.
Kootk said:If a client chooses a crappy structural engineer what is the likely consequence? Nuttin'. If a client chooses a crappy real estate agent what is the likely consequence? The loss of sacks and sacks of gold doubloons.