Course: Main CVG5112 CVG5124 CVG5144 CVG5149 CVG5156 CVG5192 CVG5214 CVG5314 CVG5366 CVG6310
Course: Main CVG5112 CVG5124 CVG5144 CVG5149 CVG5156 CVG5192 CVG5214 CVG5314 CVG5366 CVG6310
CVG5112
CVG5124
CVG5144
CVG5149
CVG5156
CVG5192
CVG5214
CVG5314
CVG5366
CVG6310
5000,60
Course
CVG6310
CVG6320
CVG7109
CVG7151
main
Description Units When
COMPUTATIONAL HYDRODYNAMICS 3
COASTAL ENGINEERING 3 Tue 7.00-9.50 pm
ADVANCED REINFORCED CONCRETE 3 Wen 2.30-5.20 pm
STRUCTURAL STABILITY 3 Mon 2.30-5.20 pm
FINITE ELEMENT METHODS 3 Mon 11.30-12.50 pm
Characterization Methods for M 3
SUSTAINABLE & RESILIENT INFRA 3 wen 7.00-9.50 pm
GEOTECHNICAL HAZARDS 3 th 2.30 - 5.20 pm
MASTER'S SEMINAR IN CIVIL ENG. 3
SPEC. TOP. IN CIVIL ENGINEE. 3
preting the results of each method as well as the insight into the interrelationships between characterization methods and their interdepe
ent, triple bottom line accounting, life cycle costs, and carbon accounting. Development of infrastructure design strategies to meet objecti
and risk assessment: fundamentals, solutions (prevention, stabilization) for landslides and slope instability; monitoring of landslides and sl
ds, introduction to other methods in hydrodynamics: finite element, finite difference, Chebyshev and Fourier spectra, semi Lagrangian and
nt and prediction, hydrodynamics of coastal circulation. Sediment transport and coastal morphodynamics to include: wave and current-ind
5000,60
Course
CVG6301
CVG6315
CVG7105
CVG7123
CVG7128
main
Description Units When
Advanced Timber Design 3 mon 2.30-5.20 PM
RANDOM VIBRATION 3
SEDIMENT TRANSPORT 3
MECHANICS OF UNSATURATED SOILS 3
Decentralized Wastewater Manag 3
Project Information Management 3
Rock Mechanics 3
Blast Engineering 3
Diagnosis and Prognosis of Con 3 thu 2.30 - 5.20 Pm
BRIDGE DESIGN 3 mon 7 -9.5 PM
elastic and inelastic response; incremental equation of motion and nonlinear analysis; development of resistance functions; pressure-imp
nceZealand,
ew techniques
andaccording
the Britishtobridge
damage type The
codes). and topics
extent;covered
“Serviceability
include performance” and “appraisal
the following: main structuralguides” for aging
components infrastructure;
of highway bridges;Design
types
in structural embers; principles of capacity design in highway bridges. This course is equivalent to CIVJ 5310 at Carleton University.
sign (wind and seismic loading) for light-frame, CLT and hybrid structures; advanced connection design including design of proprietary con
308 at Carleton University.
include
nd contaminated
measurement sediments, shear
of permeability, local scour, morphodynamic
strength modelling,
theory: history, fluvial habitat.
failure envelope This course
for unsaturated is equivalent
soils, triaxial andtodirect
CIVJ 5503
shearat Carleton
tests, typic
tance functions; pressure-impulse (P-I) diagrams; design of blast-resistant buildings and building components, including glazed windows, c
or aging
ents infrastructure;
of highway bridges;Design
types for durability
of highway through
bridges; performanceand
serviceability based design
ultimate (PBD)
limit approaches.
state design requirements; design loads (dead loads, tra
0 at Carleton University.
ding design of proprietary connections.
alent
ial andtodirect
CIVJ 5503
shearat Carleton
tests, University.
typical results, simple testing procedures, volume change behavior including expansive soils behavior. Soil-water
ts, including glazed windows, curtain walls, and blast-resistant doors as per codes and standards; progressive collapse analysis; blast retrofi
s; design loads (dead loads, traffic loads, seismic loads, and wind loads); load combinations; code specifications for loading due to traffic (d
nsive soils behavior. Soil-water characteristic curve: