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csd72
Structural
- May 4, 2006
- 4,574
In response to some questions made in the Architectural/Structural Fee Residential post I felt that this topic needed its own thread. This topic has been covered before in the more social forums but usually they get overrun with the mechanical/electrical types which, in my experience seem to have a much better deal than those of our particular profession.
I read the website of the burj dubai under design and found the following paragraph second down on the page.
"Ultimately, the honour of designing the world's tallest tower was awarded the global leader in creating ultra-tall structures, the Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP (SOM) with Adrian Smith FAIA, RIBA, consulting design Partner. The selected design was subject to an extensive peer review program to confirm the safety and effectiveness of the structural systems."
The reason why I point this out is that the only person mentioned is an architect followed by a description of tasks that would have been carried out by structural engineers. In my brief search I found no mention of the structural engineer who was the person responsible for the design.
If we cannot get recognition for one of the greatest engineering achievements this decade then when are we going to get it? It was an engineering achievement, it was not an architectural achievement. Architecturally impressive, yes, but there are far more ground breaking architectural achievements out there. But somehow it is an architect that gets the only mention.
Is our problem that we are constantly in the shadow of architects? The only parallel I have been able to find is that of nurses to doctors even though I am not happy with the comparison.
I am a strong believer that we only have our peers to blame and that only ourselves to pull us out of this. I disagree with those who say that we just need to educate the public and all will be alright. If you could get a lawyer for $20 and hour would you offer to pay them more because they deserved it? Of course not!
I also strongly disagree with those who say that the knowledge of our profession is not as unique as those of a dentist e.t.c. To those people I say that a dentist only needs to understand teeth, gums, the effects of drugs and the effects of working with the required materials, a structural engineer needs to understand steel, concrete, aluminium, glass, timber, structural analysis, corrosion, and has training in mathematics, materials, physics, chemistry.... We often underestimate the breadth of what we have learned to get to where we are.
As far as comparing our responsibility to that of a surgeon I will quote one of my university lecturers. "a surgeon can only kill one person at once, as a civil engineer you can kill thousands of people!"
I have rambled on enough, but I am interested in hearing any comments regarding fees, the state of the profession, what to do about it and anything else that people want to air about this great but underappreciated profession.
I read the website of the burj dubai under design and found the following paragraph second down on the page.
"Ultimately, the honour of designing the world's tallest tower was awarded the global leader in creating ultra-tall structures, the Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP (SOM) with Adrian Smith FAIA, RIBA, consulting design Partner. The selected design was subject to an extensive peer review program to confirm the safety and effectiveness of the structural systems."
The reason why I point this out is that the only person mentioned is an architect followed by a description of tasks that would have been carried out by structural engineers. In my brief search I found no mention of the structural engineer who was the person responsible for the design.
If we cannot get recognition for one of the greatest engineering achievements this decade then when are we going to get it? It was an engineering achievement, it was not an architectural achievement. Architecturally impressive, yes, but there are far more ground breaking architectural achievements out there. But somehow it is an architect that gets the only mention.
Is our problem that we are constantly in the shadow of architects? The only parallel I have been able to find is that of nurses to doctors even though I am not happy with the comparison.
I am a strong believer that we only have our peers to blame and that only ourselves to pull us out of this. I disagree with those who say that we just need to educate the public and all will be alright. If you could get a lawyer for $20 and hour would you offer to pay them more because they deserved it? Of course not!
I also strongly disagree with those who say that the knowledge of our profession is not as unique as those of a dentist e.t.c. To those people I say that a dentist only needs to understand teeth, gums, the effects of drugs and the effects of working with the required materials, a structural engineer needs to understand steel, concrete, aluminium, glass, timber, structural analysis, corrosion, and has training in mathematics, materials, physics, chemistry.... We often underestimate the breadth of what we have learned to get to where we are.
As far as comparing our responsibility to that of a surgeon I will quote one of my university lecturers. "a surgeon can only kill one person at once, as a civil engineer you can kill thousands of people!"
I have rambled on enough, but I am interested in hearing any comments regarding fees, the state of the profession, what to do about it and anything else that people want to air about this great but underappreciated profession.