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Course Criteria
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Lectures, conferences, discussions and laboratory. Topics in environmental and resource engineering not covered in established courses. Designed for the beginning graduate student or selected upperdivision undergraduate. Fall and/or Spring.
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3.00 Credits
One-half hour lecture, two-and-one-half hour laboratory per week; and a minimum of six hours additional laboratory is required. This course introduces the student to the fundamentals of computeraided design and drafting. It covers the commands needed to create a two-dimensional drawing, with particular emphasis on techniques used in the design profession applications. The requirements for the course include completing self-tutorials, creating drawings and the completion of two major projects. Prerequisite: General knowledge of manual drafting. Note: Credit will not be granted for both WPE 410 and ERE 610.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours of lecture/discussion per week. Lean production theory and the Lean project management system and their relations to the Architect, Engineering, and Construction industries. Topics include the Toyota production system, lean principles, the Last Planner System, and supply chain management. Through independent research students learn how to identify and improve the value stream of the construction process. Fall. Prerequisite: Three credits of management or permission of instructor. Note: Credit will not be granted for both ERE 615 and WPE 415.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Guided individual study. Projects that will be estimated, scheduled or managed exclusively by industry-standard, construction-related software, including Timberline Precision Estimating, Quest Earthworks, Quest for Contractors, Primavera Project Planner, SureTrak Project Manager by Primavera and Expedition by Primavera. A final report with annotated bibliography is required. Spring. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. Note: Credit will not be granted for both ERE 630 and WPE 430.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours of lecture per week. Historical, current and future uses of biomass as a source of renewable energy for the production of bioenergy, biofuels and bioproducts. Characteristics of biomass, their conversion to different forms of energy and end products and an assessment of their sustainability. Spring. Prerequisite: ESC 525, ESC 535 or permission of instructor. Note: Credit will not be granted for both BPE 441 and ERE 641.
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3.00 Credits
Two hours of lecture and three hours of laboratory per week. Introduction to the physical, chemical and biological parameters of wastewater treatment processes and to the principles of the unit operations involved. Study of the design parameters and design procedures of wastewater treatment systems. Fall. Prerequisites: Physics and CHE 356 or permission of instructor. Note: Credit will not be granted for both ERE 440 and ERE 643.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours of lecture per week. Deterministic and stochastic models of hydrologic phenomenon. Model development and the use of computer programming to construct, manipulate, and interpret hydrologic models. Theoretical and analytical approaches to describing hydrologic processes, including precipitation, evapotranspiration, infiltration, surface runoff, percolation, groundwater movement and discharge, and streamflow. Distributed, semi-distributed, and lumped parameter models and techniques for model calibration and validation. Fall. Pre- or co-requisite(s): Introductory computer programming. Note: Credit will not be granted for both ERE 445 and ERE 645.
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3.00 Credits
Two hours of lecture supplemented with individual and group projects per week. Principles and procedures for processing modern remote sensing imagery for extracting useful information. Types and characteristics of modern sensors, geometric transformation and restoration, enhancement and interpretation of digital imagery, and fundamental aspects of assessing the accuracy of remote sensing analyses. Spring. Prerequisite: ERE 552 or equivalent.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours of lecture/discussion per week. The use of Gantt, Activity on Node, Precedence Diagram, PERT and Linear schedules. Identification of activities and duration analyses of these activities. Update schedules, plan and assign resources, plan cost and schedule. Schedule development is performed both manually and with industry accepted software. A term paper describing how the relevant topics of the course fit a specific industry application and an additional project utilizing the software are required. Fall. Prerequisite(s): Estimating experience and/or equivalent scheduling experience. Note: Credit will not be granted for both ERE 653 and WPE 453.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours of lecture/discussion per week. How to define and properly identify company organizational structures. Project delivery systems, integration of estimating, bidding, scheduling and cost control into the management process. How safety, quality control, value engineering, procurement, labor relations and insurance and bonding requirements are integral parts of a construction project. A term paper describing how the relevant topics of the course fit a specific industry application and a project based upon Expedition project management software are required. Spring. Prerequisites: ERE 653, equivalent experience or permission of instructor. Note: Credit will not be granted for both ERE 654 and WPE 454.
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