ASCE 9780784407127 2004
$70.42
Principles of Applied Civil Engineering Design
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
ASCE | 2004 | 244 |
Ying-Kit Choi details the guidelines, principles, and philosophy needed to produce design documents for heavy civil engineering projects.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
6 | Contents |
11 | List of Figures |
13 | List of Tables |
14 | Preface |
17 | Acknowledgments |
18 | Part 1 Introduction |
20 | Chapter 1 Purpose and Scope 1.1 Applied Civil Engineering Design |
21 | 1.2 Objectives 1.3 Special Features and Approaches |
22 | 1.4 Use of Design Guidelines |
24 | Chapter 2 Contract Documents 2.1 Purpose 2.2 Competitive Bidding |
26 | 2.3 Bid Documents 2.4 Contract Documents |
27 | 2.5 Engineers Joint Contract Documents Committee Documents |
28 | 2.6 Permits |
30 | Chapter 3 Characterization of Project Site 3.1 Site Characterization 3.2 Geology |
31 | 3.3 Subsurface Investigation |
33 | 3.4 Prior Site Use Research |
34 | 3.5 Topographic Survey |
35 | 3.6 Topographic Map |
38 | 3.7 Levels of Investigation |
40 | Part 2 Construction Drawings |
42 | Chapter 4 Civil Design Drawings 4.1 Introduction |
43 | 4.2 Levels of Design Drawings |
46 | 4.3 Drawing Information |
48 | Chapter 5 Building a Set of Construction Drawings 5.1 Drawing Sheet Size |
49 | 5.2 Drawing Title Block |
50 | 5.3 Sheet Organization |
54 | Chapter 6 Layout of a Civil Design Plan 6.1 Design Controls |
55 | 6.2 Stationing and Offsets |
56 | 6.3 Scale Selection |
57 | 6.4 Scale Display |
58 | Chapter 7 Graphical Representation of Civil Design 7.1 General 7.2 Plan View |
61 | 7.3 Section View |
64 | 7.4 Elevation View 7.5 Profile View |
65 | 7.6 Details |
66 | 7.7 Line Types |
73 | 7.8 Effective Use of Line Weights |
74 | 7.9 Lettering |
76 | Chapter 8 Legend, Abbreviations, and Notes 8.1 Legend and Symbols |
79 | 8.2 Abbreviations |
80 | 8.3 Notes |
84 | Chapter 9 Drawing Production Techniques 9.1 General 9.2 Establishing Catch Points and Catch Lines |
87 | 9.3 Effective Use of Hatching and Shading |
89 | 9.4 Use of Callouts and Dimensioning |
91 | 9.5 Use of Scaled and Unsealed Details |
93 | 9.6 Enlarging Details |
94 | 9.7 Distinguishing New and Existing Work |
96 | 9.8 Representing Symmetry |
97 | 9.9 Use of Three-Dimensional Graphics |
98 | 9.10 Checking Drawings |
100 | Chapter 10 Designing with the Metric System 10.1 General 10.2 Metric System Design Practice |
102 | 10.3 Equipment and Products |
104 | Chapter 11 Computer-Aided Drafting 11.1 Current Trend 11.2 Computer-Aided Tools and Capabilities |
106 | 11.3 Roles and Responsibilities |
108 | 11.4 Handling of Files |
110 | Chapter 12 Certifying Construction Drawings 12.1 Common Practice of Drawing Certification |
111 | 12.2 Who Should Certify Drawings? |
112 | 12.3 Electronic Stamp and Signature |
114 | Chapter 13 Design Changes and Record Drawings 13.1 Design Changes |
116 | 13.2 Record Drawings |
118 | Part 3 Technical Specifications |
120 | Chapter 14 Purpose and Use 14.1 Role of Technical Specifications |
121 | 14.2 Users of Specifications |
122 | 14.3 Relationship with General and Supplemental Conditions 14.4 Relationship with Drawings |
126 | Chapter 15 Technical and Design Issues 15.1 The Specification Writer |
128 | 15.2 Problem Areas |
132 | 15.3 Philosophical Approach |
135 | 15.4 Technical Correctness and Quality Control |
136 | 15.5 Contractor’s Means and Methods |
137 | 15.6 Specifying Materials/Products |
139 | 15.7 Contractor’s and Manufacturer’s Roles 15.8 Specifying Tolerances |
141 | 15.9 Engineer’s Discretion and Control |
142 | 15.10 Handling Unknowns and Changed Conditions |
145 | 15.11 Owner-Furnished Equipment and Materials 15.12 Site-Safety Issues |
148 | Chapter 16 Good Specification-Writing Practices 16.1 Literary Style 16.2 Recommended Guidelines |
154 | Chapter 17 Types of Construction Specifications 17.1 General 17.2 Descriptive Specifications |
155 | 17.3 Performance Specifications |
157 | 17.4 Standard Reference Specifications |
159 | 17.5 Proprietary Specifications |
160 | 17.6 Agency Specifications |
162 | 17.7 Considerations for Federal Projects |
164 | Chapter 18 Construction Specifications Institute Format 18.1 Introduction 18.2 MasterFormat |
166 | 18.3 SectionFormat |
169 | 18.4 PageFormat |
170 | 18.5 Summary |
172 | Chapter 19 Measurement and Payment Provisions 19.1 Importance of Payment Provisions |
173 | 19.2 Formulation of a Bid Schedule |
176 | 19.3 Methods of Payment |
177 | 19.4 Definition of Measurement Methods |
178 | 19.5 Payment of Lump Sum Work 19.6 Writing Measurement and Payment Clauses |
182 | Chapter 20 Presenting Reference Data 20.1 General |
183 | 20.2 Relevant Data |
184 | 20.3 CSI Format |
185 | 20.4 Examples |
186 | Part 4 Cost Estimate |
188 | Chapter 21 Purpose and Use 21.1 Introduction 21.2 Levels of Estimate |
189 | 21.3 Role and Responsibility |
192 | Chapter 22 Quantity Estimate 22.1 Units |
194 | 22.2 Quantity Calculations |
195 | 22.3 Methods of Computations |
199 | 22.4 Earthwork Calculations |
201 | 22.5 Allowance for Quantity Difference |
203 | 22.6 Quantity Survey |
206 | Chapter 23 Price Estimate 23.1 General |
207 | 23.2 Cost Components |
209 | 23.3 Engineer’s Approach |
211 | 23.4 Means Cost Data |
214 | 23.5 Other Considerations |
216 | 23.6 Cost-Risk Analysis |
218 | Chapter 24 Allowances and Contingencies 24.1 General 24.2 Design Contingency |
219 | 24.3 Construction Contingency |
220 | 24.4 Escalation Adjustment |
222 | Chapter 25 Evaluation of Bids 25.1 General |
223 | 25.2 Bid Summary 25.3 Unbalanced Bidding |
226 | 25.4 Bid Verification |
228 | References |
230 | Appendix: Example Specifications for Reference Data Presentation |
234 | Glossary A B C |
235 | D E F G I L M N O P |
236 | R S U V |
238 | List of Resources |
240 | Index A B C |
241 | D E |
242 | F G H I J L M N |
243 | O P Q R S |
244 | T U V W |