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  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Introduces principles of environmental engineering management and design pertaining to water supply and treatment, wastewater treatment, solid waste management, air pollution control, noise pollution measurement and control, and environmental impact assessment. Notes Credit is not given for both CEIE 355 and 555. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0 When Offered F
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Introductory course in the study of environmental laws as they pertain to urban systems infrastructure management. Reviews the National Environmental Policy Act, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, and other environmentally related legislation. Also reviews laws for allocation of surface and groundwater supplies, and reviews environmental law databases. Notes Credit is not given for both CEIE 456 and 556. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0 When Offered S
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Analyzes public transportation systems in terms of their role in urban transportation. Topics include history of public transportation in the United States, quantitative performance attributes of different modes, analytical techniques for planning and operation, and management and administrative concepts. Prerequisites CEIE 360. Notes Credit is not given for both CEIE 460 and 560. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0 When Offered F
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Covers elements of traffic engineering analysis; system components of traffic operations: driver, vehicle, and roadway; traffic flow design elements including volume, density, and speed; intersection design elements including traffic control device warrants, signal timing, delay, capacity, and accident countermeasures; and terminal design elements including inflow, outflow, and circulation. Prerequisites CEIE 360. Notes Credit is not given for both CEIE 461 and 561. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0 When Offered F
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Covers technical and qualitative aspects of urban transportation planning process. Topics include urban travel characteristics and data collection methods; urban transportation modeling system, including land use, trip generation and distribution, mode choice, and trip assignment models; site traffic impact studies; environmental impacts; project and plan evaluation; and technology options for urban transport. Prerequisites CEIE 360. Notes Credit is not given for both CEIE 462 and 562. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0 When Offered S
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Covers street and highway facilities design emphasizing interaction among driver, vehicle, and geometric design elements. Design of interchanges and intersections; highway roadside safety and tort liability; pavement design, maintenance and safety; edge drop-off; clear zone concept; roadside barriers; guiderail treatments; traffic calming; pedestrian and bicycle and transit design challenges; and work-zone traffic control. Provides skills to understand interaction among driver, vehicle, and environment, and how to incorporate better design practices. Also introduces concepts of forgiving highway design and highway tort liability. Prerequisites CEIE 360. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Examines the principals of project planning and administration using modern specification and project delivery techniques. The role of the project manager as facilitator, constructability advisor, and on-site administrator is emphasized. Project risk transference, market conditions, and legal requirements are explored in the construction contract environment. Other topics include green specifications, design-build delivery, job order contracting, turnkey construction, and public-private partnerships. Appropriate for students, engineering and design professionals, project managers, contract administrators, and owners interested in the planning and administration needs of construction. Notes Credit is not given for both CEIE471 and 571.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Virtual design and construction techniques are covered using modern 3D Building Information Modeling (BIM) software. Historical and technological basis for virtual building and infrastructure design are presented. Design and construction coordination are emphasized using clash detection, conflict management, constructability analysis, specification mapping, and asset management. Industry-supported model component databases are used with commercial software design environments for hands-on simulated design and construction projects. Notes Credit is not given for both CEIE 472 and 572.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Study of planning and management practices applicable to the life cycle of the physical urban infrastructure including roads, sewers, water distribution and other pipelines, telecommunications, and energy distribution systems. Includes study of relationship of urban growth and infrastructure reinvestment; mechanisms of deterioration; direct and indirect methods of assessment and degradation models; capital finance, budgeting, and programming; planning integration and coordination; quantitative applications in planning; uncertainty and reliability; public-private partnerships; operation and maintenance strategies; and future issues. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
  • 3.00 Credits

    Credits: 3 Concepts of modeling for infrastructure engineering. Covers modeling, simulation, optimization, deterministic and stochastic models, and limitations of modeling approaches. Also includes multiple objective, multiple decision-maker problems, and case studies in areas such as transportation, water resources, the environment, energy, telecommunications, and construction. Prerequisites CEIE 605 Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0 When Offered S
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