Affiliation:
1. Mitretek Systems, Inc., 600 Maryland Avenue, Suite 755, Washington, D.C. 20024.
Abstract
Context-sensitive design (CSD), also referred to as context-sensitive solutions, is an increasingly important topic for transportation design engineers. More and more projects need to incorporate community wishes and environmental and land use constraints, integrate historic elements, and blend aesthetically with environs. Introducing CSD explicitly in undergraduate civil engineering classes is a good way to encourage our future engineers to think about design challenges. Resources for teaching CSD are presented here, as well as descriptions of activities and assignments used in university civil engineering courses. A casual survey of students who had been exposed to CSD as undergraduates was conducted. Their responses are provided here. CSD has the benefit of attracting students to transportation design, asking engineers to consider public involvement and interdisciplinary elements in their projects, and addressing some of the new skills recommended for professional engineers. This paper describes why undergraduate engineers should be taught CSD, how CSD should be taught, and what the benefits of teaching CSD to undergraduate engineers are.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Civil and Structural Engineering
Reference26 articles.
1. Project for Public Spaces. What is CSS? www.contextsensitivesolutions.org/content/topics/what_is_css. 2005. Accessed Nov. 12, 2005.
2. Body of Knowledge Committee of the Committee on Academic Prerequisites for Professional Practice. Civil Engineering Body of Knowledge for the 21st Century: Preparing Engineers for the Future. ASCE, New York, Jan. 2004.
3. New Master of Science in Transportation Degree Program at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
4. Urban Transportation Planning Education Revisited: Reading the Dials and Steering the Ship
5. Education of Transportation Planning Professionals