Structural Design from First Principles

Author:   Michael Byfield
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138503496


Pages:   315
Publication Date:   07 February 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Structural Design from First Principles


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Author:   Michael Byfield
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   CRC Press
Weight:   0.771kg
ISBN:  

9781138503496


ISBN 10:   1138503495
Pages:   315
Publication Date:   07 February 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

If you read this book, absorb its timeless principles and work your way through the examples, you will learn a great deal and it will serve you well in your career. --Allan Mann, FREng The skill of the structural engineer lies in creating possibilities where others see the impossible. This skill requires years of nurture and practice, which is why this book is a must have on any book shelf. It focuses on the embedment of fundamental principles in structural mechanics to design. Read it! Enjoy it! Apply it! -- Tim Ibell, University of Cambridge and past-president of the Institution of Structural Engineers Mike Byfield has hit on an essential first principle of his own: To make things as simple as possible but no simpler. His illustrations are deceptively minimal, but they demonstrate another engineering first principle....to an engineer, a line is not just a line....it is short-hand, code, for a real structure, responding to mathematics, physics, environment, gravity, people, money, time, weather. The structure to which these first principle should apply are practical, useful, modest, connected to the rest of the world....they have foundations, mass, structural integrity, and in the right hands can be made to actually work beginning with the principles in the book. Here is an approach that brings first principles in an accessible way to everyone whether student engineer or ancient practitioner. After all, why would any engineer learn second principles , without nailing the first ones first? As I looked through his examples I found myself thinking: You know what, perhaps engineering's not quite so hard after all.... -- Chris Wise, FREng, HonFRIBA, Expedition, UK I consider this book to be good value for money. I would recommend it especially to those who are interested in crossovers between building structure design and bridge structure design. -- John Lyness in The Structural Engineer


If you read this book, absorb its timeless principles and work your way through the examples, you will learn a great deal and it will serve you well in your career . -- Allan Mann, FREngã The skill of the structural engineer lies in creating possibilities where others see the impossible. This skill requires years of nurture and practice, which is why this book is a must have on any book shelf. It focuses on the embedment of fundamental principles in structural mechanics to design. Read it! Enjoy it! Apply it! -- Tim Ibell, University of Cambridge and past-president of the Institution of Structural Engineers Mike Byfield has hit on an essential first principle of his own: To make things as simple as possible but no simpler. His illustrations are deceptively minimal, but they demonstrate another engineering first principle....to an engineer, a line is not just a line....it is short-hand, code, for a real structure, responding to mathematics, physics, environment, gravity, people, money, time, weather. The structure to which these first principle should apply are practical, useful, modest, connected to the rest of the world....they have foundations, mass, structural integrity, and in the right hands can be made to actually work beginning with the principles in the book. Here is an approach that brings first principles in an accessible way to everyone whether student engineer or ancient practitioner. After all, why would any engineer learn second principles , without nailing the first ones first? As I looked through his examples I found myself thinking: You know what, perhaps engineering's not quite so hard after all.... -- Chris Wise, FREng, HonFRIBA, Expedition, UK


The skill of the structural engineer lies in creating possibilities where others see the impossible. This skill requires years of nurture and practice, which is why this book is a must have on any book shelf. It focuses on the embedment of fundamental principles in structural mechanics to design. Read it! Enjoy it! Apply it! -- Tim Ibell, University of Bath and past-president of the Institute of Civil Engineers Mike Byfield has hit on an essential first principle of his own: To make things as simple as possible but no simpler. His illustrations are deceptively minimal, but they demonstrate another engineering first principle....to an engineer, a line is not just a line....it is short-hand, code, for a real structure, responding to mathematics, physics, environment, gravity, people, money, time, weather. The structure to which these first principle should apply are practical, useful, modest, connected to the rest of the world....they have foundations, mass, structural integrity, and in the right hands can be made to actually work beginning with the principles in the book. Here is an approach that brings first principles in an accessible way to everyone whether student engineer or ancient practitioner. After all, why would any engineer learn second principles , without nailing the first ones first? As I looked through his examples I found myself thinking: You know what, perhaps engineering's not quite so hard after all.... -- Chris Wise, FREng, HonFRIBA, Expedition, UK


Author Information

Michael Byfield is a lecturer at the University of Southampton, UK and runs his own engineering consultancy. He was awarded the Parkman Medal by the Institution of Civil Engineers and his research focuses on blast loading of buildings.

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