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Conceptual design of multi-disciplinary civil engineering projects; regulatory planning; professional skills; economic, social and environmental assessments.
The overall course objective is:To develop professional skills in integrated and conceptual design.More specifically at the completion of the course you will be able to:Explain the value of integration in engineering design,Be able to work on “complex” (as defined by IPENZ) engineering problems andappreciate this uniqueness,Scope a project in terms of client wishes and the key engineering issues involved,Determine the resource management issues and constraints on a project,Describe conceptual issues and constraints associated with project requirements,Prepare an estimate of cost for a civil engineering project,Undertake a peer review of another engineer’s work,Prepare engineering drawings of sufficient detail for cost estimates and funding decisions,Prepare a professional report and poster for a client, andDevelop group skills by working in a team.
ENCN213, ENCN261, ENCN242, ENCN371
ENCI312, ENNR313
ENNR313
Roger Nokes
This course, because of its nature, is taught primarily by industry practitioners, while coursecoordination lies within the department. This year the Course Coordinator is Professor RogerNokes. Kim Parrent, a PhD student in English, will coordinate the assessment ofcommunication skills and those assessments that contribute towards the CommunicationPortfolio.This course is tightly focussed on the major design project. This year the Project Leader isHumphrey Archer, the Technical Director of Environmental Engineering at Beca, Christchurch.Humphrey has developed the project concept and will give the first few lectures introducingthe project.
1. You cannot pass this course unless you achieve a mark of at least 40% in each ofthe test and the final exam. A student who narrowly fails to achieve 40% in either the test orexam, but who performs very well in the other, may be eligible for a pass in the course.2. All assignments must be submitted by the due date. Each assessment describes thepenalty for a late submission. If a student is unable to complete and submit an assignment bythe deadline due to personal circumstances beyond their control they should discuss this withthe lecturer involved as soon as possible.3. Students in this course can apply for aegrotat consideration provided they have satthe test, the final exam or both.4. The mark allocated to each student for the group project will be modified through apeer evaluation process. Details of this process will be included in the design brief document.
Civil Engineering Design Studio 2 is an essential course in your civil engineering education.Unlike the majority of your lecture courses that focus on providing you with the fundamentalsof engineering science, whether it be in geomechanics, transportation engineering, materials,structural mechanics or any of the other disciplines covered in your programme, Design Studio2 aims to provide you with a realistic design experience where the emphasis is on high-levelconceptual design.While studying civil engineering it is tempting to see engineering problem-solving as beingassociated with analysing design details – for example the pump in a water supply system, thebeams used in a building, or the piles for the foundations of a bridge. While civil engineers arevery much concerned with such details they must also be able to take large-scale, complexprojects and conceptualise solutions that achieve the specific design goals for the project, whileat the same time being technically feasible, financially viable, environmentally sustainable, andsocially and culturally acceptable. Such large-scale projects never have a single, clear solution.Many factors need to be considered in making design decisions and your creativity as aprofessional engineer plays a key role in producing a solution that meets the goals of yourclient.The success of such large scale projects is grounded in the engineering science of the core civilengineering disciplines, but that engineering science in itself is insufficient to handle thesecomplex problems and to produce design solutions that satisfy the many, and often conflicting,requirements.Our goal in this course is to provide you with your first encounter with a complex civilengineering design problem that will require you to think in a different way to the detaileddesign problems with which you are rather more familiar. At times this experience will feeldisconcerting. There will not be hard and fast rules to fall back on in making your designdecisions. You won’t be able to look over the shoulder of others working on the same project tosee if they have the right answer, as there simply isn’t a “right” answer. This “blank sheet” typeproblem where your creativity, reinforced by your technical knowledge, is free to exploremultiple possible solutions and weigh up their advantages and disadvantages against a set ofrequirements imposed by your client, the local consenting authority and other stakeholders, isexciting, challenging and liberating. This notion of working for a client and finding solutionsthat satisfy their needs, and that help them to achieve their goals, is a fundamental aspect ofengineering practice.To achieve this goal the course is designed around a complex project that you couldrealistically encounter in your future professional career. The course resources and activities arespecifically designed to support your development as a design engineer such that by the end ofthe course you will possess a range of skills that will enable you to approach such problemswith some degree of confidence.In order to bring the flavour of the professional world to the classroom you will do the majorityof the work in this course as part of a team of four or five members. Your team will besupported by a practising engineer who will act as a mentor throughout the semester, offeringyou guidance and advice on how you might tackle the problem you are confronted with. Theirperspective will provide you with an insight into how professional design engineers approachcomplex problems.It is our hope that you will find this experience stimulating and educational and leave you witha sense of what might lie in store for you in your future career.
Domestic fee $874.00
International fee $4,725.00
* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.
For further information see Civil and Natural Resources Engineering .