Bridging the Years: A Short History of British Civil EngineeringE. Arnold, 1956 - 212 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 31
Página 61
... considerable employment of engineering services , whilst in West- minster and the larger provincial centres there was an ever - growing demand for consulting engineers to cope with the increasing appli- cations for Parliamentary powers ...
... considerable employment of engineering services , whilst in West- minster and the larger provincial centres there was an ever - growing demand for consulting engineers to cope with the increasing appli- cations for Parliamentary powers ...
Página 140
... considerable economy in the bridge steelwork . At another bridge site on the Sutlej River the construction of Bell Bunds enabled the length of the existing Empress Bridge to be reduced by half . Completed in 1878 with sixteen spans of ...
... considerable economy in the bridge steelwork . At another bridge site on the Sutlej River the construction of Bell Bunds enabled the length of the existing Empress Bridge to be reduced by half . Completed in 1878 with sixteen spans of ...
Página 169
... considerable imports from the United States of heavy mechanical earth moving plant , the manufacture of which in Britain , before the war , had been only sparsely undertaken . This created calls upon dollar resources and had it not been ...
... considerable imports from the United States of heavy mechanical earth moving plant , the manufacture of which in Britain , before the war , had been only sparsely undertaken . This created calls upon dollar resources and had it not been ...
Contenido
CHAPTER PAGE | 1 |
Contracting in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Cen | 89 |
Some Notable British Civil Engineering Works I 1825 | 106 |
Otras 35 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
activity arch bank became began better bridge Britain British brought building built called Canal carried century changes channel civil engineering companies completed concrete considerable construction consulting continuous contracting contractors cost created demands difficulties direct early economic effected electricity erection established example experience feet firm flood foundations gate give greater heavy important improvements increased industrial Institution interest iron James John knowledge later length lock London materials mechanical methods miles nature opening operation opportunities original period ports possible practical pressure problems profession professional railway Rennie river road scheme scientific Ship showed Sir John Smeaton Society spans started steel Stephenson structure success supply Telford Thames theory Thomas tion traffic transport tunnel wide World