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Geotechnical design and analysis software GEO5 consists of 20+ individual programs for: - Excavation design - Slope stability analysis - Foundations design - Retaining wall design - Soil Settlement analyses - Digital terrain model - Underground structure Download Free Trial Version |
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The Project of the Month introduces interesting geotechnical construction projects. The projects are sorted by month. Each month one of them will be featured in a special position in our Newsletter. You can see a short description and pictures of the project. Our goal is to highlight some exciting geotechnical projects and promote them to the geotechnical community. Feel free to contact us if you want to submit your project. The photos of this section can also be viewed in our Photo Gallery.
New Searchable Online Database of Geoengineering Papers!
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After 2 years of development, we are pleased to announce the launch of GeoLiFi, a searchable online database of Geoengineering Papers. GeoLiFi allows users to search, query, identify and purchase the publications of their interest in an effective, easy and immediate manner. Read more... |
1/2/12,
Online Training: Introduction to DIANA- ID#GEO-200
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DIANA is a multi-purpose finite element software package that is dedicated to a wide range of applications in Civil engineering including structural, geotechnical, tunnelling, earthquake, and oil & gas engineering. The aim of this sessions is to provide a general overview on the modelling and analysis capabilities of DIANA in conjunction with series of live demonstrations. Read more and Register...
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1/2/12,
Online Training: Technical Course - Nonlinear Dynamic Analysis with DIANA- ID#GEO-199
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This online session, on Tuesday, February 14, 2012 (11:00AM - 12:00PM CET), gives a concise, but clear, overview on the different methods that DIANA offers to perform dynamic analysis of civil engineering structures, along with the possibilities to use viscous dampers in the models to successfully absorb the propagating waves at the boundaries. Read more and Register...
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31/1/12,
The January Issue of the Geoengineer.org Newsletter has been released- ID#GEO-198
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View the January Issue of the Geoengineer.org Newsletter. Subscribe for free to receive the latest information in geoengineering in your inbox once a month!
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27/1/12,
Deep Foundations for Landslides/Slope Stabilization Seminar- ID#GEO-197
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This event is being hosted at the Nashville, TN on August 15-16, 2012. The Deep Foundations for Landslides/Slope Stabilization Committee of the Deep Foundations Institute (DFI) is organizing a one and a half day event featuring lectures by industry experts that will include presentations on current technologies, as well as key design concepts and several case histories that illustrate effective application of deep foundations for stabilization of landslides/slopes. Read more...
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24/1/12,
New Release - DIANA 9.4.4- ID#GEO-196
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TNO DIANA BV is pleased to announce that the new DIANA version 9.4.4. has now been released. Amongst the many new functions, DIANA 9.4.4. offers new application modules for reinforcement design checks and stiffness adaptation analysis. For a full summary of the new features read the Release Notes...
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31/10/11,
SPile 1.0 sneak preview
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We are almost ready to release our new software for the estimation of single pile bearing capacity based on SPT data. If you wish to participate in our beta testing program then please feel free to contact our support team.
Original post blogged on Geoengineer.org. Read more... |
15/7/11,
Construction Marketing 101
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Written by George Compton and Paul Cunningham. This article was originally published in the June/July 2011 Foundation Drilling Magazine, the Magazine of ADSC: The International Association of Drilled Shaft Contractors. Reprinted with permission.
Imagine a typical construction firm, with no Marketing Department, no Director of Marketing, and little marketing effort except what the principals and a few key individuals can muster when time permits. Some construction firms have the luxury of dedicated marketing and business development departments. Many organizations get by with cooperative efforts by talented individuals who have developed skills outside their specialties. It is these skills which contribute towards the marketing of the company’s expertise and professionalism. Everyone can contribute to the marketing of the organization! Project superintendents, for example, often serve as ‘ambassadors’ to the communities they work in. A superintendent whose highway project, runs alongside a neighborhood with a extremely active group of 'sidewalk superintendents' may use his public relation skills as frequently as his construction skills. Adjacent neighbors and curious bystanders can often be counted on to oversee the project from their side of the fence. The superintendent should plan on spending a fair amount of time talking with and answering questions, politely running interference so the task at hand; 'on time and under budget' can be accomplished. “Good Morning, this is ABC Construction Company, How may I help you?”, a positive, professional receptionist is the first person many of 'Joe Publics' the people on the other side of the phone are introduced to within the organization. This person is the voice of the company. Customers prefer a pleasant, professional, helpful, voice on the other end of the phone. We all know that trying to undo a poor first impression of your business is no way to start a successful relationship. Do you have an Accounts Payable specialist who is paying untold invoices each day only to be interrupted to field phone calls from vendors looking for payments? These vendor phone calls seldom arrive at a convenient time: nonetheless courtesy and professionalism with a measure of patience may often be required to insure the organization is reflected in a positive light. Consider the Accounts Receivable specialist collecting from your customers, walking the fine line between “Give me the $#@% Money’ and ‘We look forward to working with you again!” These vital individuals represent the company on a daily basis. AR Specialists contribute best by developing positive relationships with their counterparts at the company’s customers. Construction is a relationship based business, positive relationships result in positive results across the board, and especially while trying to collect money! Are the following quotes commonly heard around your office: “Do you have any current photos we can use?”, “How about a little background on the workers performing the work?”, or “What are the specifics of the project itself?” The jobsite is a great photography location with great characters, intense action, massive elements and dramatic angles. The Engineer, taking progress photos, week in and week out, is measuring and reporting the project progress. A site visit can mean 50 to 100 photos just to measure the work. Progress photos have a practical use internally, but can also illustrate the essence of what is possible to a prospective audience. If you are going to take photos you may as well take good ones. A financial analyst, who is talented not only with spreadsheets and the accounting platform, may also enjoy the opportunity to acquire desktop publishing and presentation software expertise. What about the IT person, no doubt proficient with systems software, but perhaps Social Media as well? Becoming aware and proficient in the flourishing Social Media environment of today will provide a significant boost too your companies communication and marketing efforts. Need data to fuel your marketing communications outreach? Start reading in reverse. (The IT Guy, The Analyst, The Engineer…) Is it fair asking your receptionist, superintendents, accounting staff and your technical people to contribute to the marketing process through these indirect roles? Is it good business to know that they in their daily duties are working towards marketing the company? In a small company a few talented people who can take the photos, write the text, arrange the layout and design while also interfacing with the associations, editors, advertising departments, et al. may successfully market their organization. Hundreds of construction companies rely on such a process. This formula of finding talents, combining skill sets and taking advantage of opportunities can present your organization with the means and a method to delivering your message. The assets you require to market your company may be closer than you think. Currently doing your marketing in house but considering a little extra to get your message out? Everyone within your organization has something to offer the marketing process, and take some ownership of the responsibility. If you are fortunate enough to have someone working on marketing in house, they need you as much as you need them, possibly more. Corporate marketers may be expert in navigating the channels of communications, reaching the right market, design, art direction, or in capturing the essence of the message, but do they know construction? Have they ever worked on a three year project calling a 10' x 36' office trailer home for 12 hour days? Have they ever called the concrete plant looking for the last load of concrete to be told the 'truck just left' the plant? Yes, they might be a little different, and they probably don't track as much mud into their homes at the end of the day, but they are an invaluable resource to the organization. They are helping the 'dirty boots' folks and the back office folks and the top floor guys. They’re communicating the great job you do on your clients’ behalves day in and day out. What if you keep doing a great job for your clients and nobody knows it? The question is how can you help them to do their job better? Educate them about the decision makers. Engage their creativity with the stories of the jobsites. Show them the resources around them. Ask them what they need. Professionals in the field of marketing and business development should have a clear vision of the resources available and coordinate those resources towards a sustainable model engineered to get the word out - as efficiently as possible. All of a construction company’s employees can and should do their part to further the successful deployment of a company’s brand name, corporate image and most importantly, corporate identity where it relates to safety, ethics, environmental responsibility and social commitment. George R. Compton III is Principal of Construct Marketing, LLC and Paul B. Cunningham is Manager of Financial Reporting, Underpinning & Foundation Skanska Original post blogged on Geoengineer.org. Read more... |
11/5/11,
CLiq v.1.50 sneak preview
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It has been a long time since our last post but now the time has come to share some information with you. We are working on a "minor" upgrade for CLiq which will introduce 2 new main features. Hearing our valued customers opinions on one hand and trying to keep CLiq a CPT based liquefaction assessment software on the other, we decided to include 2 new modules. The modules will provide tools necessary to perform SPT and Vs complimentary analysis against soil liquefaction.
Original post blogged on Geoengineer.org. Read more... |
17/3/11,
Abraham Lincoln on Marketing…
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This article was originally published in the March/April 2011 Foundation Drilling Magazine, the Magazine of ADSC: The International Association of Drilled Shaft Contractors. Reprinted with permission. "Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend four sharpening the axe." I don’t think President Lincoln meant after sharpening your axe for four straight hours, start whacking at your tree for two. If you budget 6 hours for marketing, 4 hours will be necessary for data management and maintenance, research, preparation and organization, and 2 hours for deployment of your outreach, whatever that may be. Sharpen, Sharpen, Whack! Sharpen, Sharpen, Whack! Sharpen, Sharpen, Whack! This means doing the little things constantly at a rate of 3:1 to the big things. When the time comes for the big sexy stuff, the effort will be more developed, more thought out, based on a larger body of work and experience over time, and your output will have greater support at the ready. Further, since you won’t be starting from a dead stop, you’ll take advantage of some perpetual motion and save some money and energy by having some assets at your disposal. Anyway, I like Abe’s rate of 3 to 1 . . . If your marketing starts with an idea that you need a really nice brochure, or the zippy website, or a beautiful exhibit display, you’re chopping with a dull axe. It doesn’t even mean that it starts with you need a list of good addresses to send the brochure to, but you’re getting closer. It means that before either of those fundamental marketing elements takes place, something even more fundamental is required. If you wish be successful with your marketing, it is critical. This something critical is the belief that the perpetual effort of marketing your company and its goods or services is at the root of your firm’s survival, and that the constant vigilance for good contacts, ideas, opportunities, information and support is the foundation of the marketing effort. It’s “Always be Marketing” (Sharpen, Sharpen, Whack!) vs. “OK, time to do some marketing.” Thud. Sharpen… This means taking a look at your marketing budget and planning on a cycle, instead of an effort to effort basis, on where you spend those marketing dollars. Sharpen: Advertising or Conferences? Conferences! Whack! This means not just following up the leads from that seminar and conference once you get back with a nice merge letter and the fancy company brochure. Whack! Been working on that merge letter since before the seminar so it’s well written and ready to go? Sharpen. Is the brochure an asset built on refinements of prior versions and improvements? Sharpen. Did you think about and note a more direct way to convey your message for the copy in the next version of the brochure? Sharpen. This means not just following up the leads from that seminar and conference with a phone call 3 months down the line just to check in. Whack! Got a good contact management software you like and use it? Sharpen. Did you enter notes in the contact’s record during the call? Sharpen. This also means the review of the database containing all the above contacts you’ve diligently collected over the past 5 years and keeping that asset in tune for constant use. Sharpen. This means sending out a merge letter first class to your contacts on a 12 month basis. Yes it will help you stay in touch and hopefully remind them that you are out there, (Whack!) but also, if the Post Office returns your letter, it indicates a contact lost, moved up, or moved on. Sharpen. If you really want to put a nice edge on that axe, follow up those returned contacts, investigate and update your records. Sharpen. This means always keeping in mind what can be done to improve your efforts. Got a great job out there? Representative work? Interesting work? Possibly a good site for getting some good Photographs? Moving lots of equipment? Maybe the scenery’s good? Get out there with your camera or get a professional to the site! Sharpen. Then you’ll be ready when its time to update that website, brochure or exhibit display, and really make a difference. Whack! Marketing is a creative process and sometime the muses aren’t ready when you are. Keep a notebook dedicated to marketing your company. When inspiration strikes or the competition gets you thinking, you’ll have a central location to air your insights! When its time to swing the axe, you’ll have a nice sharp axe, and make a nice deep cut. Sometimes the strike will be off the mark. That’s a drag and it ticks you off because that’s energy that could have been used towards your objective. Unavoidable. Even the best miss sometimes, but what can the miss teach you? What did you learn? How do you apply the experience to the next swing to cut deeper and wider? Even a miss can be beneficial to the overall goal. Just as you can’t bring down a tree with one massive swing, nor can you depend on a marketing program to show any results with a chop here, and a chop there. Sharpen, swing, sharpen. How the cuts work together, in succession of the cuts before and what is to follow, is what will make the difference in the aggregate effort. A lot of marketing efforts fail to live up to their expectations and therefore marketing fails because of the stress on the sexy expensive ad, the one-and-out direct mail campaign, or the tons of money spent on sending everyone to the big conference. Unfortunately, and unwittingly, these efforts were not failures, just over stressed parts of a marketing program with priorities out of whack. Original post blogged on Geoengineer.org. Read more... |
22/12/10,
Marketing Help: Hire? Contract? DIY?
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This article was originally published in November 2010 Foundation Drilling Magazine, the Magazine of ADSC: The International Association of Drilled Shaft Contractors. Reprinted with permission. Your competition - they might do great work. They might attend every pre-bid meeting in a 200 mile radius. They might even attend a conference now and then. But if they’re not engineering their marketing to position their market presence in the best light, and into productive channels, they’re passively doing half the job. When a contract get awarded in your market area and the contract recipient starts slicing and dicing through the subcontracts, do you want your company to be in or out? When the wheels start to turn on the matter of, “who will handle this part of the job?” does your company come to mind? In the pre-bid phase, if you have established your company as a leader in the particular element of the design and a preferred work partner within the industry, you will have the advantage. Do you agree? In the design phase, would your system, technique or product be known and understood in order to be included in the spec? Can your system, technique or product or equipment save the project money? Is the market aware of this? Are your potential clients aware of this? Let’s start at the end: How much money do you have to spend in 2011 to help build 2012? 1. Hire someone. This is a preliminary decision that needs thought before any Marketing Plan discussion. The Marketing Plan conversation ideally takes place in advance of a needs assessment, but we don’t work in a vacuum so give yourself some slack. The discussion of means takes place last, i.e. do we spend our marketing dollars on 1 big fat ad in ENR or do we run an ad for 3years in Foundation Drilling, and launch a newsletter, and launch a direct mail campaign, and tune in a social media program, and get our data organized, and exhibit at the DFI and ADSC, and brand our materials like professionals? Hmmmm… All in good time. First consider your options to take on marketing seriously within your budget… Hire Contract DIY The Mighty Marketing Plan Make sure you and the other decision makers mark the distinction between: “Marketing”, “Advertising”, “Business Development” and “Sales”. For this discussion’s purposes, it’s not important how we see these interrelated and interdependent business areas. It’s more important how those relationships are working in your company, and that they are working toward the same thing, than subscribing to some set of rules. But please have this discussion. You’ll be surprised how blurry the lines are in different people’s minds. Marketing Cycle and Check-down This doesn’t mean however that adjustments can’t be made along the way. Performance Measurement Decision: To measure marketing performance market or not to measure marketing performance? This depends on how many marketing dollars are on the line and what percentage you want to allow for performance measurement to determine how the remaining marketing dollars are working. Again, it is an important consideration to make at the beginning of the marketing cycle, so you can establish a baseline and set sophisticated markers, simple markers or make the strategic decision to say “the hell with performance measurement.” More on performance measurement later. You have a marketing program to run. Original post blogged on Geoengineer.org. Read more... |
7/2/12,
3 American Cities: Future Forecasting
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© Wikimedia Commons / Jonik
The AIA recently published a reprint from the National Associates Committee journal Forward by author Wellington Reiter, FAIA. The hot topic essay goes into great detail discussing how three U.S. cities – Detroit, Phoenix, and New Orleans – are serving as examples of ...
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7/2/12,
Science Getaways: Update | Bad Astronomy
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I love science. OK, duh, but I really do. And when I go on vacation, I can’t help but see science everywhere, and in every case it makes the trip more fun for me. Seeing local geology, biology, how the stars might look different at a different latitude… it adds to the vacations, makes...
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7/2/12,
Arthur E. Berman, Petroleum Geologist: Magical Thinking and Fracking
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James Howard Kunstler speaks by phone with Arthur E. Berman, who is a petroleum geologist and consultant to the energy sector; editorial board member of The Oil Drum; associate editor of the AAPG Bulletin; director of The Association for the Study of Peak Oil. Berman has published more than 100 a...
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6/2/12,
Mediterranean Oil & Gas update on Malta, offshore area 4 (Blocks 4, 5, 6 and 7) PSC
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Further to the announcement dated 8th November 2011 the operational update dated 22nd November 2011 and the completion of the acquisition of 1000 sq km of 3D seismic data on 14th December 20
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6/2/12,
New Zealand: Tree rings show extreme weather on the rise
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Australian Broadcasting Corporation: Silent sentinels If history is anything to go by, periods of droughts and flooding rains could become more common in south-eastern Australia and New Zealand, according to a new study.The study, which appears today in the journal Nature Climate Change suggests ...
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1/2/12,
New Fixed Beam Calculator is launched
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New Fixed Beam Calculator is now available at http://civilengineer.webinfolist.com/fbcalc.htm This is very useful tool to easily calculate fixed end moments,
Read more... |
23/1/12,
Revised version of deflection & slope calculator
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Revised version of deflection & slope calculator for beams http://civilengineer.webinfolist.com/str/sdcalc.htm is now giving the values of deflection & slope
Read more... |
16/1/12,
Many other problems are fixed by running diagnostic programs
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Many other problems are fixed by running diagnostic programs
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13/1/12,
Ventilation systems to operate smoothly
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5/1/12,
2012 Conferences in civil engineering
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2012 conferences in civil engineering are now posted at http://civilengineer.webinfolist.com/conferences.htm
Read more... |

Traylor Bros. Inc
Inner Harbor Navigation Canal Floodwall.
(Winner of DFI Outstanding Project of the Year Award)
Read more...
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Geotechnical Engineering: Principles & Practices, 2/E Author(s): Donald P. Coduto, Man-Chu Ronald Yeung, William A. Kitch Publisher: 03/29/2010, Prentice Hall |
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An Introduction to Geotechnical Engineering, 2/E Author(s): Robert D. Holtz, William D. Kovacs, Thomas C. Sheahan Publisher: 10/18/2010, Prentice Hall |
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Recommendations for Design and Analysis of Earth Structures using Geosynthetic Reinforcements - EBGEO Author(s): Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Geotechnik e.V. |
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Practical Guide to Green Technology for Ground Engineering
Publisher: iSmithers Rapra Publishing 2011
ISBN: 9781847355300
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Laboratory Testing of Soils, Rocks and Aggregates Author(s): N. Sivakugan, A. Arulrajah and M.W. Bo Publisher: July 2011, J. Ross Publishing Inc. |
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Special Deep Foundation Package Vol I and II Compendium Methods and Equipment |
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Deep Foundations for Landslides/Slope Stabilization Seminar. Nashville, TN - August 15-16, 2012. Read More... |
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DFI's 37th Annual Conference on Deep Foundations. 16-19 October, 2012. George R. Brown Convention Center, Houston, TX, USA. CALL FOR ABSTRACTS Read More... |
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Tunnel Design & Construction Asia 2012. 28 - 29 February 2012. Hong Kong Exhibition and Convention Centre.Read More... |
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DFI's 4th International Conference on Grouting and Deep Mixing. Marriott New Orleans, New Orleans Louisiana, USA - February 15-18, 2012. Read More... |
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55th AEG Annual Meeting. 15-23 September 2012. Hilton Hotel, Salt Lake City, UT.Read More... |
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Geo-Institute's "Geocongress 2012:State of the Art and Practice in Geotechnical Engineering" Conference. San Francisco Bay Area, USA. March 25-29. Read more...
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