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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
Table of Contents
2 3 4 5 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 10 11 12 13 18 21 25 30 31 35 36 36 37 38 38 39 40 > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Table of Contents Personal data Agenda for the academic year 2005 - 2006 Preface Education and Examination Regulations Education Administration and information provision Results Marks list CT-nieuws Registering for exams Enrol for the Propedeuse and Bachelor Examschedule The Central Student Administration body at TU Delft (CSA) Study advisor appointments and open consultation Student Health Care Studying abroad Traineeship Oce Emergencies Quality assurance Graduation Schedules masters program: Structural Engineering Schedules masters program: Building Engineering Schedules masters program: Hydraulic and Geotechnical Engineering Schedules masters program: Water Management Schedules masters program: Transport & Planning Overview of MSc courses General information Structural Engineering General information Building Engineering General information Hydraulic and Geotechnical Engineering General information Water Management General information Transport & Planning Graduation in Technology in Sustainable Development Project group Education in Sustainable Development (ODO) Course Descriptions
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Personal details
name address postalcode / city phone mobile, phone e-mail
NOTIFY IN CASE OF EMERGENCY: name address postalcode / city country phone MEDICAL INFORMATION: medications allergies passport / ID blood group organ donor: yes / no; card:
In case of loss, the nder of this student guide is kindly requested to contact the owner. Your help is much appreciated.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
Opening Academic Year Lectures Lecture-free Week Examinations Lectures Christmas Holidays Lecture-free Week Examinations
5/5 9/6
16/6 7/7
Lectures Lecture-free Week Examinations Lectures Good Friday Easter Monday May-holiday Lectures Ascesion Free Day Whit Monday Lecture-free Week Examinations Resits Resits
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Preface
A lot of attention has been paid to this study guide. Because of the pocket-size of this guide all subjects are in short version. For detailed information please check the internet. Have a look at: the extended education and course information: www.citg.tudelft.nl/dos and/or http://blackboard.tudelft.nl the schedules: www.citg.tudelft.nl/iris registering for exams: www.tas.tudelft.nl If you are not able to nd the extended information, please e-mail us at DienstO&S@citg.tudelft.nl. We will make sure that your mail reaches the right person. Because the OOD-operation (reorganization supporting services) within the Delft University of Technology telephone and, room numbers mentioned might change during the course of the year. As soon as the operation is nished (December 2005, to be expected), changes will be published. Drs. Mrs. E. Touw Department of Education and Student Aairs Education of Civil Engineering
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EDUCATION AND EXAMINATION REGULATIONS The educational body presumes that each student will familiarise himself or herself with the Students Statute, the Education and Examination Regulations and also with the accompanying Implementation Regulations and the Rules and Guidelines laid down by the Board of Examiners. There one can nd, for instance: the ocial masters degree course study programme rules, the admission requirements applicable for certain course parts, the pass and fail regulations, the test or examination appeal rules . The statute, the regulations and the guidelines may all be found on the following website: www.citg.tudelft.nl/dos and they are also available, upon request, from the education administration desk. Finally, they may be obtained from the reader sales point as a compilation. ADMISSION TO THE MASTERS DEGREE COURSE (Education and Examination Regulations Article 5) 1. All students possessing a certicate clearly proving that they have successfully completed their bachelor of science studies in civil engineering at Delft University of Technology may be automatically admitted to the masters degree course which is divided into the following variants: Structural engineering, Building engineering, Hydraulic and geotechnical engineering, Water management, Transport and planning. 2. In contrast to subsection 1, students who do not yet possess the degree referred to in subsection 1, have permission to follow subjects of the course for just one year, once they have successfully rounded of the bachelor nal project.
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However, in case a student has reached the nal phase of the bachelors degree course but is not yet allowed to do the bachelor nal project, he can do three masters degree subjects, the traineeship, the multidisciplinary project, the additional graduation work and the graduation work excluded. 3. For those students who do not possess the degree mentioned in subsection 1 proof of admission to the course is required by the board of examiners. 4. In order to obtain such proof the student must meet or, as the case may be, possess: a. the general relevant criteria laid down by the executive board, laid down in Section 2 of the Students Statute (central part), b. a degree together with the accompanying marks list proving that he/she possesses knowledge which is of a suciently high enough level and standard to complete the chosen variant within the specied studying period. 5. In order to meet the stipulations outlined in subsection 4, clause b, knowledge may be lacking in various subjects as long as it does not exceed the level of 16 ECTS credits. The missing subjects should be integrated into the course instead of the parts referred to in Article 3, subsection 1, clause c of the Implementation Regulations.
EDUCATION ADMINISTRATION AND INFORMATION PROVISION Education Administration The Education Administration section is responsible for recording all the study results of students doing a degree in Civil Engineering. Opening times. The Education Administration section is located in, room 2.73 and is opened daily from 10.00 until 12.00 hours and from 12.45 until 15.00 hours. Results. The results of examinations are always posted on Blackboard. Results will not be passed on by telephone.
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Marks list. Anyone wishing to obtain his or her marks list can apply to the Education Administration section. Forms. Various forms can be obtained from the Education Administration centre and from the website. CT-nieuws. CT-nieuws is the ocial information bulletin for the Civil Engineering department. It appears weekly and contains information that is important to students. Website. If you go to the Department Education and Student Aairs (www.citg.tudelft.nl/dos) website you will nd there a great deal of topical information for students. Monitors. Much information is also relayed on the monitors to be found in the hallways. Registering for exams. Anyone wishing to register for written exams advertised in the examination timetable can do so via the Examination Registration System (i.e. TAS). Closing date. The closing date for written examinations is two weeks before the examination day. After that date it is no longer possible to register. Other course examinations. It is necessary to register for other course examinations at the respective departments. This therefore also applies to the obligatory mathematics subjects. Enrol for the Propedeuse and Bachelor. Not later than 6 weeks before the point of time when the resultmeeting for the Propedeuse and the Bachelor-examination take place, you have to apply for the exam by the Education Administration (room 2.73). The closing date to apply can also be found in the CT-nieuws. Examschedule. The examschedule for the written exams can be found on the Department Education and Student Aairs website (www.citg.tudelft.nl/dos). The Central Student Administration body at TU Delft (CSA) You can report to the CSA for matters such as: Reporting and registering for a course of study at the TU Delft, Paying your tuition fees at a cash-point, Second course registrations, when switching to a dierent degree course, when withdrawing or terminating the registration, for tuition fee reimbursement, Graduation fund, Technology fund, Administration grant, achievementbased grant,
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Ocial declarations for various bodies in Dutch, English, German and French in conjunction with tuition fees, Authentication of copies of certicates/degrees and marks lists, Signing and stamping of forms emanating from various bodies, Student ID card duplicates, Address change (also possible via the Education Administration section), Amendment forms for the Information Control Group (i.e. the centralised national university administrative body). (Again, also available from the Education Administration section), TU Delft university prospectus. The inquiry desk for the Central Student Administration is situated in the Bureau van de Universiteit (i.e. the University Oce), Julianalaan 134, room 0.004 and it is open from Monday to Friday from 08.30 until 16.45 hours. Telephone: (015) 27 84249. E-mail address: Balie1.CSA@tudelft.nl Study advisor appointments and open consultation For general information or if you wish to have an appointment with one of the study advisors you rst have to contact the study advisors Secretariat, room 2.65, tele-phone (015) 27 87436. In exceptional cases they will be able to put you in immediate contact with the study advisors. If you have brief information-related questions you can also go along to one of the open consultation sessions. Time: Monday to Friday from 12.45 until 13.30 hours. Place: the bay opposite the Education Administration centre (between, rooms 2.72 and 2.74). Student Health Care The student doctors belong to the Student Health Care organisation (in Dutch the: SGZ). The SGZ is an independent organisation which also oers students preventive medical care. At the same time the student doctors also operate as ordinary general practitioners. The SGZ is located in the SGZ health care centre, Surinamestraat 4, 2612 EA, Delft, telephone number (015) 212 1507. The healthcare centre also has a physiotherapist
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and an ordinary doctors practice. Opening times: from 08.30 until 12.30 hours and from 13.30 until 17.00 hours. You can report to the student doctors for vaccinations, medical check-ups and medical declarations. The doctors also help and advise students who have physical or psychological problems that could be detrimental to their studying activities. Studying abroad Within the Civil Engineering department it is quite easy to arrange to complete a part of your studies abroad. Various cooperative arrangements already exist with dierent other European universities, all of which make international exchange simpler. For addresses in the various countries go to the www.tudelft.nl/buitenland site. For further information please contact Marian Schalker, International Oce Citg, room 2.59, phone: (015) 27 84800. Traineeship Oce The Traineeship Oce can inform and support you on all matters concerning a traineeship. For general information, registration (through a written form, not via Blackboard) or to obtain the course manual, please come to the desk in, room 2.59 (open every working day from 8.30 till 17.00 hours, except Wednesday), where Maaike Kraeger-Holland will be glad to assist you (phone (015) 27 81174). She can also make an appointment for you with the Traineeship Coordinator, Peter van Eck, if you wish to contemplate your traineeship ideas or plans. Emergencies When you are on the way to the place where you have to sit an examination it is always possible that something could go wrong. You could be confronted with unexpected trac jams, a railway power cut or something else entirely beyond your control which causes you to be late or to have to miss the exam altogether. In such cases it is always wise to, if possible, directly contact the secretarial division of the Education and Student Affairs Service (phone:
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(015) 27 87436) or to get in touch with the Education Administration centre (phone: (015) 27 85445). They will then immediately contact the individuals responsible for the examination and every endeavour will be made to nd a suitable solution. Bear in mind that such steps can only be taken in the event of real emergencies and that the perfect solution cannot always be found. Students who arrive late for the examination because of travel delays are obliged to report immediately to the invigilator. He or she will then decide on the best plan of campaign. The ruling outlined above only of course applies to students who have registered in time for examinations through the usual channels and according to the usual procedures. Quality assurance To determine the quality of the education, the students opinion is important. With this opinion bottlenecks can be tracked down. Therefore, a quarterly course evaluation is helt with the education director, a student advisor, a quality assurance employee, the education commissioner of the student society Praktische Studie and the yearly committees. The course evaluations are meant to quarantee the quality of the education, so there are positive and negative matters. All this is published on the website www.citg.tudelft/dos. The summary of the course evaluations are realized on the basis of: course evaluation report drawn up by the yearly committees (FYC*, SYC*, TYC* and the HTS-committee), reaction of the teacher, report of the Sensor survey, course evaluation with the education director, the student advisor, a quality assureance employee and the yearly committees. The yearly committees have an important role in these evaluations. They often contribute information that doesnt directly come to the fore from the surveys. If you are interested to join a yearly committee, please contact Praktische Studie.
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* FYC = rst year committee, SYC = second year committee, TYC = third year committee, Graduation The administrative steps behind graduating: 1. Complete the Graduation commencement application form available from the education administration oce. 2. Take the Proof of graduation commencement form to your graduation coordinator or to the graduation sections secretary (if the indication V is given on blackboard under CT5060 for 1 ECTS credit then this means that the form is ready). 3. Fill in a graduation card, in cooperation with the graduation coordinator. 4. The graduation coordinator will then send that card on to the Education Administration oce for further processing and verication. (The examination programme has to be approved by the Board of Examiners). 5. Make sure to register in time for the nal MSc degree exam (by handing in the Education Administration form together with a passport photo). 6. If, for any reason, you are under time pressure do not forget to withdraw in time (see the Education Administration form). When embarking on the graduation programme it is also important to observe what is laid down in the Board of Examiners MSc Rules and Regulations: Article 17: the graduation work. Article 18: composition of the examination committee. Article 19: the examination committees approach.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
13
*** not for the specialisation Road an Railway Engineering 1 If Elastostatics of Slender Structures (CT3110) has not been followed in the Bachelor programme, then CT3110 must be completed in place of Structural Dynamics (CT4140) If Steel Structures 2 (CT3121) has not been followed in the Bachelor programme, then CT3121 must be completed in place of Steel Structures 3 (CT4121)
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Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
14 ECTS 4 Semester 2.1 CT3150 Concrete Structures 2 CT5123 Finite element method for structures ECTS 4 Semester 2.2 4 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Specialisation Steel and Timber Construction: choose 12 ECTS from the following courses
ECTS CT5123 Finite element method for structures CT5124 Timber structures 2 4 CT4150 Theory of plasticity 4 CT4125 Steel Case Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 ECTS 3
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
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Specialisation Road and Railway Engineering: choose 21 ECTS from the following courses
ECTS 3 CT4860 Structural Pavement Design CT4870 Structural design of railway structures 4 6 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 ECTS
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
16 ECTS 4 CT3310 Open channel ow CT3330 Hydraulic Structures CT4140 Structural Dynamics1 CT5129 Hydraulic steelconstructions Semester 2.1 ECTS 5 Semester 2.2 4 4 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
If Elastostatics of slender Strucures (CT3110) has not been followed in the Bachelor program, then CT3110 must be completed in place of Structural Dynamics (CT4140)
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
Semester 2.1
ECTS
Semester 2.2
ECTS
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
17 3
CT5122 Capita Selecta steel 4 and aluminum structures CT5129 Hydraulic steelconstructions 4
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THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING ELEC TIVE COURSES) REGUIRES 28 EC TS, WHICH CAN BE CHOSEN FROM: 1. Reguired:
ECTS Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 WM0312CT Philosophy, Technology Assessment and Ethics for CT ECTS 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
18 ECTS 4 4 CT4221 Advanced Building Physics 4 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
CT4211 Facades
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
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Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
CT5230 Technical building 3 services CT5250 Structural Design, 4 special structures CT5930 System dynamics 4
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT5940 = Civil engineering informatics exercise CT5950 = Special subjects: Civil Engineering Information Systems CT5960 = Special subjects: Model integration and simulation in CE CT5970 = Special subjects: graphic data analysis
28 EC TS REQUIRED PER SPECIALISATION Specialisation: Hydraulic engineering and environmental uid mechanics
ECTS 4 CT4310 Bed, Bank and Shoreline Protection 4 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 WM0312CT Philosophy, Technology Assessment and Ethics for CT ECTS 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
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Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
22 ECTS 4 CT4310 Bed, Bank and Shoreline Protection CT4140 Structural Dynamics 4 Semester 2.1 ECTS 4 Semester 2.2 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Choose within the required 43 ECTS courses which have not been followed in the Bachelor programme or as part of the required programme.
ECTS 4 4 3 CT3330 Hydraulic Structures CT4740 Plan and project evaluation CT5303 Coastal inlets and tidal basins 3 CT5314 Flood Defences CT5129 Hydraulic steelconstructions TA5700CT Geology for Civil Engineers 4 4 CT3150 Concrete Structures 2 4 CT3121 Steel Structures 2 4 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 CT3110: Elastostatics of slender structures CT3340 River Engineering CT4170 Construction Technology of Concrete Structures CT5301 Consolidation theory 3 3 4 3 CT5300 Dredging technology CT5302 Stratied ows CT5304 Waterpower Engineering CT5305 Bored and immersed tunnels CT5307 Coastal zone management ECTS 4 4 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
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4 3 3 4 3
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CT5312 Turbulence in hydraulics CT5315 Computational hydraulics CT5330 Foundation and construction CT5340 Soil dynamics 3 4 3
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Sanitary Engineering
ECTS 7 CT4490 Sewerage 1 4 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 WM0312CT Philosophy, Technology Assessment and Ethics for CT CT5550 Pumping stations and transport pipelines ECTS 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
CT4420 Geohydrology 1
ELECTIVE COURSES
ECTS Semester 2.1 CT5121 Concrete structures for sanitary applications ECTS 3 Semester 2.2 CT5520 Drinking water treatment 2 CT5531 Wastewater treatment 2 CT5540 Sewerage 2 ECTS 3
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
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4 3
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Hydrology and Ecology Required HYD-courses (including required CT- and WAM-courses)
ECTS 4 CT4431 Hydrologic models CT4440 Hydrological measurements 4 4 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 WM0312CT Philosophy, Technology Assessment and Ethics for CT CT5450 Hydrology of Catchments, Rivers and Deltas CT5550 Pumping stations and transport pipelines ECTS 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
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CT4420 Geohydrology 1
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ELECTIVE COURSES
ECTS AES1640 Environmetal Geotechnics CT5440 Geohydrology 2 CT5570 Soil Erosion and sedimentation in Civil Engineering 3 4 3 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 CT5471 Hydrological and ecological eldwork in riversystems ECTS 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
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LAND AND WATER MANAGEMENT - Required LWB-courses (including required CT- and WAM-courses)
ECTS Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 WM0312CT Philosophy, Technology Assessment and Ethics for CT 4 CT5550 Pumping stations and transport pipelines ECTS 4
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
28 4 ECTS Semester 2.1 CT4460 Polders and ood control CT5500 Water law and organisation CT5510 Water management in urban areas ECTS 4 3 * Semester 2.2
CT4420 Geohydrology 1
and choose 8 ECTS from (dependent upon choice of graduation project, and to be chosen in consultation with the graduation committee)
ECTS
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ELECTIVE COURSES
ECTS CT4460 Polders and ood control CT5500 Water law and organisation CT5510 Water management in urban areas * 3 CT5510 Water management in urban areas 4 4 Semester 2.1 ECTS Semester 2.2 ECTS
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
CT5318 At the start of Semester 1.1, the eldwork will be placed on Blackboard.
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Course schedule
Semester 1.1
ECTS
Semester 1.2
Required courses
Elective courses CT5802 Advanced transport modelling and network design CT5803 Rail trac management and delay propagation Spm9437 Transport and Infrastructure Law 3
CT4010 Economics*
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT4352 CT4360 CT4370 CT4399 CT4400 CT4410 CT4420 CT4431 CT4440 CT4450 CT4460 CT4471 CT4481 CT4490 CT4701 CT4740 CT4790 CT4801 CT4811 CT4821 CT4822 CT4830 CT4831 CT4850 CT4860 CT4870 CT5050 CT5060 CT5100 CT5101 CT5102 CT5120 CT5121 CT5122 CT5123
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Continuum Mechanics Material models for soil and rock Experimental research in soil mechanics Basic Soil Mechanics for non-Civil Engineers Water Quality Management Irrigation and drainage Geohydrology 1 Hydrologic models Hydrological measurements Integrated Water Management Polders and ood control Drinking water treatment 1 Wastewater treatment 1 Sewerage 1 Infrastructure planning Plan and project evaluation Subsurface space Technology Transportation and Spatial Modeling Design and Control of Public Transport Systems Trac ow theory and simulation Dynamic trac management I: trac control Laboratory experiments on road building materials Data collection and analysis Road paving materials Structural Pavement Design Structural design of railway structures Addition MSc thesis MSc Thesis Repair and maintenance of construction materials Concrete Science & Technology Capita Selecta Materials Science Capita Selecta concrete structures Concrete structures for sanitary applications Capita Selecta steel and aluminum structures Finite element method for structures
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT5124 CT5125 CT5126 CT5127 CT5128 CT5129 CT5131 CT5141 CT5142 CT5143 CT5144 CT5145 CT5146 CT5201 CT5211 CT5220 CT5230 CT5241 CT5250 CT5300 CT5301 CT5302 CT5303 CT5304 CT5305 CT5306 CT5307 CT5308 CT5309 CT5310 CT5311 CT5312 CT5313 CT5314
Timber structures 2 Steel bridges Fatigue Concrete Bridges Fibre-reinforced polymer (FRP) structures Hydraulic steelconstructions Fire Safety Design Theory of Elasticity Computational methods in non-linear mechanic Stresses in shells Stability and plasticity Random vibrations Micromechanics and computational modelling of building materials Building component and material specication High-rise buildings Conservation of structural heritage Technical building services Applied building physics Structural Design, special structures Dredging technology Consolidation theory Stratied ows Coastal inlets and tidal basins Waterpower Engineering Bored and immersed tunneling Ports and Waterways 2 Coastal zone management Breakwaters and Closure Dams Coastal Morphology and Coastal Protection Probabilistic design in hydraulic engineering River Dynamics Turbulence in hydraulics Hydraulic structures Flood Defences
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CT5315 CT5316 CT5317 CT5318 CT5330 CT5331 CT5340 CT5420 CT5440 CT5450 CT5460 CT5471 CT5480 CT5490 CT5500 CT5510 CT5520 CT5531 CT5540 CT5550 CT5560 CT5570 CT5720 CT5721 CT5730 CT5740 CT5750 CT5802 CT5803 CT5804 CT5810 CT5820 CT5850 CT5871 CT5910
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Computational hydraulics Wind waves Physical Oceanography Fieldwork Hydraulic Engineering Foundation and construction Soil and soil-moving constructions Soil dynamics Public hygiene and epidemiology Geohydrology 2 Hydrology of Catchments, Rivers and Deltas Ecology in water management Hydrological and ecological eldwork in riversystems Soil Science Operational Water Management Water law and organisation Water management in urban areas Drinking water treatment 2 Wastewater treatment 2 Sewerage 2 Pumping stations and transport pipelines Civil Engineering in Developing Countries Soil Erosion and sedimentation in Civil Engineering Environmental impact assessment Environmental impact assessment (condensed version) Spatial and Transport Economics Trenchless Technologies Planning: policy, methods and institutions Advanced transport modelling and network design Rail trac management and delay propagation Dynamic Trac Management II: Intelligent Transport Services Trac Safety Sociology and psychology in transport Road construction Capita selecta railway and road structures Functional design in Civil Engineering
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT5930 CT5940 CT5950 CT5960 CT5970 CT5981 OE4615 OE4624 Spm9437 TA5700CT WM0312CT
System dynamics Civil engineering informatics exercise Special subjects: Civil Engineering Information Systems Special subjects: Model integration and simulation in CE Special subjects: graphic data analysis Forms of collaboration in civil engineering Oceanography and waves Oshore Soil Mechanics Transport and Infrastructure Law Geology for Civil Engineers Philosophy, Technology Assessment and Ethics for CT
General information Structural Engineering Structural mechanics, materials science and structures play a very important role in educating civil engineers. In combination with materials science of concrete, steel, wood and composite materials the structural mechanics is applied for the design, construction and maintenance of structures, ranging from typical hydraulic engineering structures and bridges to tall buildings and roads and railways. Structural Engineering has six specializations: Structural Mechanics, Materials Science, Concrete Structures, Steel and Wood Structures, Road and Railway Engineering, and Hydraulic Engineering Structures. Depending on the students interest the thesis project can be concentrated on the functional or structural design, or on the construction or maintenance of a structure. However, the thesis project can also be devoted to theoretical or experimental research. In the thesis project a subject can be studied in a broad perspective. A specialized project, focused on a very specic topic, is however also possible. MSc-graduates in Structural Engineering are employed in a wide variety of functions (structural design, construction, maintenance, research) in dierent organizations such as public authorities, consultancy rms, contractors and research groups. Further information: Ir. L.J.M. Houben, coordinator Structural Engineering, Stevin II, room 2.27, phone (015) 27 84917.
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General information Building Engineering This variant is primarily concerned with technological and physical aspects of buildings. The appreciation of buildings depends not only on their architecture, but also on the quality of their functioning, the building physics and building technology. Emphasis is on solving building engineering problems and this demands precise scientic knowledge. To obtain the required insight and skills to tackle these problems, students must have acquired substantial knowledge of utility aspects of building, building physics, materials science, structural design, building services and nishing works. Further information: Ir. A. te Boveldt, coordinator MSc-variant Building Engineering, room 1.57 Stevin II; e-mail a.teboveldt@citg.tudelft.nl., phone (015) 27 84982.
General information Hydraulic and Geotechnical Engineering The Hydraulic and Geotechnical Engineering MSc variant oers three specialisations: Hydraulic Engineering and Environmental Fluid Mechanics, including Coastal Engineering (coastal morphology, coastal inlets, methods of coastal protection, design of breakwaters, dredging technology), River Engineering (ow in rivers, sediment transport, river morphology), Ports and Waterways (ports, waterways, simulation techniques to logistic aspects of ports, terminals and locks), Environmental Fluid Mechanics (free surface ows and related transport processes, turbulence, density currents, surface-waves and uid-structures interactions); Hydraulic Structures (all more or less rigid structures as water locks, weirs, piers, storm surge barriers and quay walls, the design of sub-soil infrastructure like immersed or bored tunnels and underground spaces; probabilistic design methods play an important role in e.g. the design of sea defences, but are implied nowadays in all elds of hydraulic engineering); Geotechnical Engineering (the Geo-engineering section provides soil mechanics, groundwater mechanics, foundation design expertise for the entire faculty, subsurface technology).
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Further information: Dr.ir. P.J. Visser, coordinator MSc-variant Hydraulic and Geotechnical Engineering, room 3.96, phone (015) 27 88005. A study guide Hydraulic and Geotechnical Engineering is available on Blackboard (Master Hydraulic Engineering) and at the Waterbouwdispuut, room 2.79, phone (015) 27 85437 and at the secretarys oce, room 3.91, phone (015) 27 83345. Ir. G. Arends, coordinator MSc-specialisation Subsurface Technology, room 2.02, phone (015) 27 85266. Ir. J.P. Oostveen, coordinator MSc-specialisation Geotechnical Engineering, room 0.09, phone (015) 27 85423. General information Water Management Water resources engineering is an important subject in the teaching and research programmes of Delft University of Technology. The Department of Water Management plays a central role in this. It consist of three closely cooperating sections, each with its own field of specialisation: Hydrology: Hydrology is the science of origination, the occurrence, behaviour and the chemical and physical properties of water in all its manifestations as surface water and as groundwater, with the exception of water in the oceans and seas. Land and Water Management: The teaching and scientic research of the Land and Water Management section concentrates on the planning, design, construction and operation of water management systems, including the organisational aspects. Sanitary Engineering: Good water quality for people and protection of the environment is the most important focus of attention at the Sanitary Engineering Section. To achieve this, knowledge of (drinking) water production, sewerage and wastewater treatment is essential. Engineers use basic knowledge of hydraulics, water chemistry, microbiology, constructive modelling, information technology and project design when designing constructional sanitary engineering projects.
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Further information: Dr. ir. J. de Koning, coordinator MSc-variant Water Management, room 4.59, Phone (015) 27 85274, at the Water management students group, room 4.74, phone (015) 27 84284 or at the secretarys oce, room 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347. General information Transport & Planning In the Bachelors Program of Civil Engineering the lecturers of the department of Transport & Planning teach general and introductory courses in transport and in the Transport & Planning Master variant they teach all obligatory courses. These are modelling of spatial developments, activities and trips in networks, trac ows on roads and intersections, application of informatics and communication technology for transport and trac management, design and control of public transport systems and evaluation of the eects of trac on economy, road users, and environment. In elective courses an accent in this eld of the Masters can be given, e.g. infrastructure planning or trac engineering. Graduates in Transport & Planning nd jobs at the government (Transport Ministry, Rijkswaterstaat, provincial and municipal transport and spatial departments), public transport companies, research institutes, and consulting rms. They are planners, designers, researchers, consultants, and, after some years of experience, managers. Further information: Information about Transport & Planning is available at the departments website www.transport.citg.tudelft.nl and at the coordinator, Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad (room 4.05, p.wiggenraad@ct.tudelft.nl, phone (015) 27 84916). Graduation in Technology in Sustainable Development In addition to a Masters degree, DUT students can acquire an appendix on Technology in Sustainable Development. To be eligible for this appendix three tasks have to be fullled: Participation in a two weeks course on recent developments in SD and the so-called Sustainable Technological Development method,
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Passing SD courses for 11 ECTS chosen from two clusters, Finishing a graduation project related to SD (45-60 ECTS). The referent advises a student on the content of their work on SD. This program broadens and deepens knowledge and skills that are needed to contribute eectively to sustainable technological development. Depth is guaranteed by the thesis project that has to be directed towards sustainability. For every engineering program, a so-called SD-referent determines before and afterwards if Sustainable Development has been suciently elaborated in the research question as well as in the nal thesis. Broadening of knowledge is achieved by the course Technology in Sustainable Development (wm0922TU) and a number of electives. WM0922 consists of 2 full weeks (one week boat trip) plus self-study, and is oered twice a year (autumn course is in English and spring course is in Dutch). Electives The student has to get at least 11 ECTS from courses that are oriented towards SD. These courses are divided in 2 clusters: A. Design, Analysis, Tools; B. Organization, Policy and Society. For a full list of electives: www.odo.tudelft.nl. Project group Education in Sustainable Development (ODO) The project group Education in Sustainable Development supports all departments in their eorts to integrate Sustainable Development in their educational programs. It is hosted at TBM. For more information www.odo.tudelft.nl or contact: Ir. C.F. Rammelt (C.F.Rammelt@tbm.tudelft.nl / (015) 27 88440) For civil engineering: Dr.ir. A. Fraaij (a.fraaij@citg.tudelft.nl / (015) 27 84974) Ir. M. Ertsen (m.w.ertsen@citg.tudelft.nl / (015) 27 87423)
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Course Descriptions
AE3-W01 Schedule Lecturer Contact for students CourseType Summary Introduction to Wind Energy MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr.ir. G.A.M. van Kuik Faculty Aerospace Engineering, Mrs. J.R. Eisma, room: 2.07, phone (015) 27 85912 Lectures and Assignment Introduction to wind energy application and design of wind energy conversion systems. Integration of knowledge from various elds of engineering on wind turbine design.This is multidisciplinary course, attented by students from various departments (AE, ITS, CiTG, 3ME). ECTS: 3
Environmental Geotechnics MSc-programme, semester 2.1. Dr.ir. G.A.M. Meurs Dr.ir. G.A.M. Meurs, phone (015) 26 93540 Lectures, exercise
ECTS: 3
Exercises are given during the lectures. The score of the exercises forms the result. Soil contamination, advanced concepts and technologies for site investigation, (mathematical) concepts for risk management, engineered barries, remediation and monitoring.
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Real Estate Economics, Finance and Planning MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Dr.ir. P.P. van Loon / Drs.ing. J.P. Soeter Ir. R. Binnekamp Lectures, exercise, instruction
ECTS: 4
Real Estate Economics, Finance and Planning deals with the development of buildings, urban areas and infrastructure from point of view of market absorption, government regulation, programming, nancial feasibility and project planning. The application of economic, nancial and planning principles will be instructed in an intensive course with lectures and computer exercises. The course is also followed by students of the MSc Real Estate & Housing in the faculty of Architecture..
Structural Mechanics 4 BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 1.2 Ir. J.W. Welleman Ir. J.W. Welleman, room: 6.15, phone (015) 27 84856 student assistent Tutorial
ECTS: 5
General method for analyzing the stresses in arbitrary cross sections, introduction to plasticity and failure.
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ECTS: 4
BSc-programme, semester 2.2 / MSc-programme, semester 2.2 / Ir. J.M.J. Spijkers, room: 5.25, phone: (015) 27 84781 / Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone: (015) 27 83332 Lectures, compulsory exercise, registration for the exercise by lling out an appropriate form which is provided during the rst lecture hours Uniform grading of all parts. The test concentrate on insight and understanding. Modelling of characteristic slender structures like tall buildings, bridges, roads and railroads, oshore structures. Systems with extension, bending, torsion, shear, cable action and distributed elastic spring support. Combinations of these types of action in tall buildings, suspension roofs, rail roads, suspension bridges, crane tracks and arches. Treatment on basis of dierential equations in a stiness method framework. Steel Structures 2 BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.ir. F.S.K. Bijlaard / Ir. A.M. Gresnigt / Prof.dr.ir. J. Wardenier Ir. ing. R. Abspoel, room: 4.28, phone (015) 27 85358 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures The result for the exam is the nal result Plastic design of girders and frames (failure mechanisms) Stability (column buckling, Torsional stability, lateral torsional buckling of beams, torsional buckling and load introduction) Joints (exible and partial strength joints, joints with preloaded bolts) Tubular Structures (properties and applications of hollow sections, design and calculation of tubular joints) Introduction to fatigue of steel structures Introduction to re resistance of steel structures ECTS: 4
CourseType
Grading Summary
CT3121 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for stud ents CourseType Grading Summary
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Plates and Slabs MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. C. Kasbergen / A. Scarpas MSc / M.J. Smits
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures, case study Plates loaded in plane: The three systems of basic equations (kinematic, constitutive, equilibrium); rigid body displacements and deformations; several analytic solutions for rectangular plates (displacement method); application of plane stress/strain engineering structures; introduction to the nite element method; formulation of plane stress/strain elements; numerical integration schemes Plates loaded out of plane (slabs): The three systems of basic equations for plate bending including shear deformation; simplication to the pure bending equation; formulation of special boundary conditions; several analytical solutions (displacement method) and various load and boundary conditions; nite element formulation of slab element; computational issues. Assignment: Application of the nite element method to a plane stress and a slab bending problem. The KOLA computer program is used. The results are presented in a professional report.
ECTS: 4
Ing. A. van der Marel / Prof.dr.ir. J.C. Walraven / C.B.M. Blom Ing. A. van der Marel, room: 5.05, phone (015) 27 81354 Lectures, exercise, practical For detailed information check the Study Guide BSc (in Dutch)
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ECTS: 5
Prof.dipl.-ing. J.N.J.A. Vambersky / Prof.dr.ir. J.C. Walraven / Ir. A.W. Toma / Dr.ir. J.W.G. van de Kuilen / Ir. ing. R. Abspoel / Ir. J.G.M. Raadschelders Ir. A. te Boveldt, room: 5.17 - CT-II, phone (015) 27 84982 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures Structural design of single-storey framed buildings in steel, wood and concrete. Functional requirements. Analysis of skeletal structures, types, systems, loadtranmission and behaviour, elements and connections. Floorsystems and foundation. House-building. Methods in concrete and wood. Behaviour. Structural stability.
CT3221 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Building physics and Building engineering BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 2.1
ECTS: 4
Ir. H.R. de Boer / Dr.ir. W.H. van der Spoel / Prof.ir. J.J.M. Cauberg / Ir. A.C. van der Linden Ir. A.C. van der Linden, room: Fac. TA, room 5.09, phone 06 - 22419606 / Ir. H.R. de Boer, room: 4.25, phone (015) 27 85482 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures, exercise, seminar Proportionally to number of course credit points Branch Building physics: The implications of thermal quality, humidity behaviour, sound insulation, sound adsorption, ventilation and light for external and internal separating constructions. Design exercises. Branch Building technique: Selection of materials, production and nishing of various faade constructions. Window and door frame constructions in various materials and how they t. Curtain walls. Design exercise about two faades and matching ttings for an utilitarian building with mixed functionality. F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
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CT3310 Schedule Lecturer Contact for students CourseType Summary CT3330 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Open channel ow BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. R.J. Labeur
ECTS: 5
Secretariat of the section Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Mrs. O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures, exercise For detailed information check the Study Guide BSc (in Dutch) Hydraulic Structures BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.drs.ir. J.K. Vrijling / Ir. W.F. Molenaar Ir. W.F. Molenaar, room: 3.75, phone (015) 27 89447 Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone 83348 Lectures, computer supported studying. Lectures and computer supported studying. Final mark = 0,1 * (average mark of all computer tests) + 0,9 * (mark for the written nal exam) functional analysis and structural design of hydraulic structures like: bridge piers articial islands, breakwaters, retaining structures, quays & jetties, construction pits and docks, oating docks, storm surge barriers, dams, locks/sluices, submerged and bored tunnels, etc. design aspects design governed by the functional analysis, the holistic approach, economic optimisation versus cost minimisation, project phasing how to deal with loads and material strength load and resistance factor or Working stress design, load combinations and Limit States construction aspects construction in the dry or using oating equipment, in-situ or prefab construction, construction pits, with of without pumping sluices and Locks ECTS: 4
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ECTS: 4
Prof.dr.ir. H.J. de Vriend / Ir. H. Havinga / Dr.ir. Z.B. Wang / Dr.ir. P.J. Visser Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Dr.ir. P.J. Visser, room: 3.96, phone (015) 27 88005 Lectures, tutorial Phenomenology of rivers (hydrology, hydraulics, sedimentology, ecology), river measurements, use of rivers, discharge, sediment transport, morphological processes, measures (structures, groynes, bend cut-os, dredging, etc.), eects of measures (backwater curves, long-term morphological consequences, ecological consequences), design of measures.
CourseType Summary
Water managing BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 1.2 Dr. R.R.P. van Nooyen / Ir. M.W. Ertsen / Ir. K.J. Breur Ir. M.W. Ertsen, room: 4.71, phone (015) 27 87423 Exercise, seminar
ECTS: 5
In this course the hydraulic design and functioning of water systems consisting of open channels and structures is central. Applications from dierent water management contexts (irrigation, drainage, urban) are discussed.
Sanitary engineering BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.ir. J.C. van Dijk / Prof.ir. J.H.J.M. van der Graaf / Prof.ir. F.H.L.R. Clemens Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures
ECTS: 4
For detailed information check the Study Guide BSc (in Dutch)
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CT3711 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Exercise geometrical and structural design of roads BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 1.2 Ir. L.J.M. Houben / Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad, room: 4.05, phone (015) 27 84916
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Transport and Planning, Mrs. B. Kerkhof, room: 5.53, phone (015) 27 89129 Instruction, exercise Final mark is mean of report and drawings mark and mark for oral examination. Geometric design of freeway, railway, urban streets with tramway; design of junction, o/on ramp, intersection, and tramway stop; Autocad drawings of cross section, vertical alignment, horizontal alignment with curves and transition curves; drawing of tramway stop facility. Calculation of settlements, altitude, stability embankment, trac loadings, material properties, construction thickness, construction costs, construction and maintenance plan. Structural design of railway based on vertical stresses, deection, contact pressure and construction costs.
CT3721 Schedule Lecturer Contact for students CourseType Summary CT3751 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Design Local Infrastructure BSc-, MSc- and HBO-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.ir. F.M. Sanders
ECTS: 5
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures For detailed information check the Study Guide BSc (in Dutch)
Urban development, transport systems and networks
ECTS: 4
BSc- and MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad / Dr.ir. R. van Nes / Ir. P.M. Schrijnen Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad, room: 4.05, phone (015) 27 84916 Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures, exercise, excursion Mark written examination For detailed information check the Study Guide BSc (in Dutch)
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Preparation and execution of works in construction BSc- and MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. ing. J.P. Noppen / Prof.dr.ir. H.A.J. de Ridder Ir. ing. J.P. Noppen, room: 3.45, phone (015) 27 86824 Exercise, lectures
ECTS: 4
Preparation and execution of works in the construction industry. Theoretical structure of the construction with reference to the tendency towards standardisation of communication. Design of an execution method using the steps of the elementary design cycle. Acquisition of a project, work preparation, site-management, sitearrangements, and logistics. Earth moving, on site construction, pre-fabrication and assembling. Control and inspection of the execution on the basis of the so-named TGKIO model. Delivery of the works and cost-reviews. Skills are developed by means of four practical assignments. Content is presented in Dutch only because of the specic character of the course: the Dutch building industry and culture.
CT4010 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Economics BSc- and MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe / Prof.dr. A.H. Kleinknecht Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe, room: 4.20, phone (015) 27 83401
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures Examination mark is nal mark Introduction to macro- and micro-economics, management accounting in private and public organizations, cost-benet analysis in feasibility studies. Introduction/illustration of special subjects in economics: public expenditure, nancing of infrastructure, innovation economics, environmental economics, economic models and (natural) resource management. Applications to civil engineering objects/projects.
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CT4030 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Methodology for scientic Research MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Dr.ir. A.L.A. Fraaij Dr.ir. A.L.A. Fraaij, room: 6.37, phone (015) 27 84974
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Materials Science and Sustainable Construction, Mrs. M. van der Veen, room: 6.35, phone (015) 27 87440 Lectures, discussion, case study, exercise Average of the cases and the examination questions This course is meant for those MSc students who plan to perform research activities and can be attended by students of dierent MSc studies in the technical educations. Contents: empirical cycle of scientic research dierent types of research the building up of a research data sampling data control and the drawing of conclusions out of dierent types of data cooperation and communication during the performance of research projects Traineeship MSc-programme, period free to choose Ir. P. van Eck, room: 4.25, phone (015) 27 84813 M.L.Y. Kraeger-Holland, room: 2.59, phone (015) 27 81174 Practical work experience Judgments by company supervisor, expert university sta member and traineeship coordinator (nal marking by traineeship coordinator, mainly based on his own marks and those of the university sta member) Practical work experience in day-to-day practice of civil engineering companies or institutes (contractors, consultancies, government, non-governmental organisations, etc) in the Netherlands or abroad. ECTS: 11
Summary
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Multidisciplinary project Msc-programme, semester 1.1, 1.2, 2.1 and 2.2 Tutors from all sections Ylva de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Team work Final report and presentation
ECTS: 11
Solve an actual and recent civil engineering problem in a multidisciplinary team. Integrate several studies and designs into a coherent entity, based on knowledge, understanding and skills acquired in the preceding years. Attention will be on quality control and the evaluation of the design process. Knowledge and skills obtained during the BSc projects will be used in this project. The course is divided into three phases: phase 1: inception plan; phase 2: preliminary design and studies; phase 3: process evaluation with respect to interdisciplinary aspects; nal report.
CT4100 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Materials and Ecological Engineering MSc-programme, semester 2.1 dr.ing. H.D. van Bohemen Dr.ir. A.L.A. Fraaij, room: 6.37, phone (015) 27 84974
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Materials Science and Sustainable Construction, Mrs. M. van der Veen, room: 6.35, phone (015) 27 87440 Lectures, discussion, exercise, practical, paper, case study 50%-50%, nal result is the combination of examination result and the result of the case This course focuses in depth on Materials and Ecological Engineering and is a obligatory course for students who chose the MSc-variant Mechanics and Constructions. The course deals with: materials and ecological engineering in wet and dry infrastructural works A further investigation on quality assessment in building constructions and focuses on certication and environmental care Decision models and methodologies for durable construction The Ecological City
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CT4110 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Timber Structures 1 MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Dr.ir. J.W.G. van de Kuilen / Ir. J.G.M. Raadschelders
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. J.W.G. van de Kuilen, room: 4.47, phone (015) 27 82322 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures, exercise Written exam grade is nal grade The course deals with material properties of timber and timber products, the design of timber structures including strength, stiness and stability verications for columns and beams. Bracings for stabilizing whole structures and the design of timber joints with several fastener types like bolts and dowels are included. Attention is also given to design and manufacturing of timber frame housing. Steel Structures 3 MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.ir. F.S.K. Bijlaard / Prof.ir. J.W.B. Stark Ir. ing. R. Abspoel, room: 4.28, phone (015) 27 85358 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures The result for the exam is the nal result Composite structures (composite beams, composite oors, composite columns, joints in composite steel concrete structures and re resistance of composite steel concrete structures). Plate buckling (linear elastic plate buckling theory, stress reduction method and eective width method). Special beams (plate girders, cold formed sections and castellated beams). ECTS: 4
CT4121 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
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Steel Case MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. ing. R. Abspoel / Dr. A. Romeijn Ir. ing. R. Abspoel, room: 4.28, phone (015) 27 85358
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 The result for the report is 80% of the nal result. The result for the drawing is 20% of the nal result. In this course a complete design, including calculations and drawings, of a steel hall or a steel bridge has to be made. The calculations have to be based on the Dutch or the Eurocodes. The following aspects have to be dealt with: Evaluation of the possibilities for the structural system Determination of the loads on the structural system Evaluation of the possibilities for the joints Design of the cross sections and the joints The verication of the structural safety Drawing the steel structure
CT4130 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Probabilistic Design MSc-programme, semester 1.1 and 1.2 Prof.drs.ir. J.K. Vrijling / Prof.ir. A.C.W.M. Vrouwenvelder
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. P.H.A.J.M. van Gelder, room: 3.87, phone (015) 27 86544 Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures One mark, based on written exam Probabilistic design approaches of civil structures, consisting of concrete, steel, timber, ground, rock, asphalt, etc. Stochastic loads coming from trac, oor, wind, waves, water levels, etc. Goal is the theoretical background of the reliability theorie, strongly applied to civil engineering applications.
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CT4140 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Structural Dynamics MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. J.M.J. Spijkers / A. Metrikine Ph.D, D.Sc. Ir. J.M.J. Spijkers, room: 5.25, phone (015) 27 84781
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures The nal grade is 2/3 of part 1 grade (67%) plus 1/3 of the part 2 (33%) grade Part 1: Structural vibrations. Analysis of continuous systems and systems with multiple degrees of freedom. Part 2: Wave dynamics. Tranverse and longitudinal waves in strings and rods and in piles respectively. Bendingwaves in railtracks.
CT4145 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Dynamics, Slender Struct. and intr. cont. mech. MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. J.W. Welleman / A. Metrikine Ph.D, D.Sc.
ECTS: 6
Ir. J.W. Welleman, room: 6.15, phone (015) 27 84856 / A. Metrikine Ph.D, D.Sc., room: 5.37, phone (015) 27 84749 Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures, discussion, exercise, computer supported studying Mark 1 to 10 Modelling of civil engineering structures by means of lumped and continuous systems. Static and dynamic analysis. Introduction to continuum elasticity and plasticity.
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CT4150 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 4
Prof.ir. A.C.W.M. Vrouwenvelder / Dr.ir. P.C.J. Hoogenboom Dr.ir. P.C.J. Hoogenboom, room: 5.24, phone (015) 27 88081 Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures, tutorial Judgement on understanding and competence; both questions carry equal marks General introduction on plastic material behaviour and the resulting consequence on the behaviour of the structure; incremental computations where the load is gradually increased from zero until the collapse limit (suitable for computer implementation); Upper- and Lower-Bound approximations (suitable for hand calculations); discussion on the theory and its application to beams, portals, frames and in-plane and laterally loaded plates; fundamental aspects of yield criteria (Von Mises, Tresca, reinforced concrete), interaction of bending moment, shear force and normal force, the normality rule, Upper- and Lower-Bound Theorems and deformation capacity.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ECTS: 4
Guest lecturer / Ir. W.J.M. Peperkamp / Prof.dr.ir. J.C. Walraven Ir. W.J.M. Peperkamp, room: 5.03, phone (015) 27 84576 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Structural Design and Concrete Structures, Mrs. J.M. van der Schaaf, room: 1.52 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83990 Instruction, lectures, case study The examination contributes 90% of the grade; the case study 10% of the grade. For each or both parts is a minimal grade of 5.0 is valid. This course concerns the fundamental aspects and points of interest in the design and detailing of prestressed concrete structures. A detailed overview of dierent techniques and their characterics are presented covering pre-tensioning, post-tensioning, partially prestressing, bonded, and unbonded tendons. The Load balancing approach as a general procedure in the exural analysis of statically determined and statically undetermined structures is introduced. The eects of shrinkage, creep and relaxation on loss of prestressing and redistribution of forces are discussed. Special attention is given to the control of crack width in partially prestressed members, the ultimate moment and shear resistance capacity design. Application of truss idealisation for shear and disturbed regions is considered as well as detailing of prestressed structures. In the nal part two-way slab design is treated.
Summary
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
Construction Technology of Concrete Structures MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. A.Q.C. van der Horst
ECTS: 4
Ir. W.J.M. Peperkamp, room: 5.03, phone (015) 27 84576 Lectures, instruction, case study, cases The examination and case study each contribute 50% of the grade. Understanding the nature and implication of selected structural design elements such as shape, dimensions, material and design approaches on the one hand and the construction elements such as execution methods, schedules and costs on the other hand and their interdependency in an integrated building process of a concrete structure. This involves thorough knowledge and understanding of project characteristics, control systems, methodology of the process and supporting systems in order to optimise cost driver aspects in conceptual and nal design.
CT4201 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Architecture and building engineering MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. G.G. Nieuwmeijer / Ir. I. Salomons Ir. G.G. Nieuwmeijer, room: Fac. BK, room 7.01, phone (015) 27 81012
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures, seminar Written exam : written assignment = 1 : 1 Denitions and principles of architectural design. History of architecture. Relations between architecture and structural design. History of structural design, with an accent on the period 1800-1970. Relations with architectural design. Analyses of structural design. Analyse of the evolution of functional, architectural and structural design on building type. Report.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT4211 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 4
Ing. O.S.M. van Pinxteren, room: 4.24, phone (015) 27 84424 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures,design studies Design studies: 75%, modelling exercises: 25% Design aspects of several types of facade: Exterior leaf of concrete and bricks. Double facades and atria. Criteria for selection Modelling in facade design: Resistance and deection of glass units. Wind loads on ventilated facades. Movement as a result of changes in temperature and moisture. Flexibility of joints and connections. Criteria for deformation of the load bearing structure
Advanced Building Physics MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr.ir. W.H. van der Spoel / Prof.ir. J.J.M. Cauberg / Ir. A.C. van der Linden
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. W.H. van der Spoel, Fac. TA, room 5.08a, phone (015) 27 83386 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Practical, lectures, exercise Individual test and exercises account for 65% and 35% of the nal mark resp.
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ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 Evaluation and presentation of the report in writing and orally with the oral examination Building Informatics MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti / Dr.ir. E. Dado Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti, room: 3.28, phone (015) 27 84893 Lectures, tutorial, exercise The nal mark of the course will be an average of the written report of the exercises, the presentation and the oral examination. This is an introductory course of theories, methods and techniques regarding the application of information and communication technologies, to improve the quality, eciency and eectivity of design and construction processes. The main emphasis of the course (and its accompanying course CT4270) is on information modelling and product data technology for the building and construction industry. ECTS: 4
Knowledge Management in Building Processes MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr.ir. E. Dado / Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti, room: 3.28, phone (015) 27 84893 Lectures, exercise, tutorial
ECTS: 4
The nal mark of the course will be an average of the written report of the exercises and the oral examination This is an introductory course of theories, methods and techniques regarding the application of information and communication technologies, to improve the quality, eciency and eectivity of design and construction processes. The main emphasis of the course (and its accompanying course CT4260) is on information management and knowledge technology for the building and construction industry.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT4281 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 4
Prof.dipl.-ing. J.N.J.A. Vambersky / Prof.dr.ir. J.C. Walraven / Prof.ir. J.W.B. Stark Ir. A. te Boveldt, room: 5.17 - CT-II, phone (015) 27 84982 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures The assessment of the written exam. Introduction review of multi-store buildings. Examples out of practice. Design principles. Structural systems and stability. Connections. In situ concrete. Pre-cast concrete. Steel, hybrid and composite structures
Introduction to Coastal Engineering MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. M.J.F. Stive / Dr.ir. J. van de Graa
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures This course intends to provide an initial insight into the physical phenomena and some related hydraulic engineering interventions that play a role in oshore, coastal and harbour engineering. The emphasis is on abiotic physical aspects, but also some attention is payed to biotic and management aspects.
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Bed, Bank and Shoreline Protection MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. H.J. Verhagen / Ir. J. Olthof Ir. H.J. Verhagen, room: 3.88, phone (015) 27 85067 Lectures, computer supported studying Based on oral examination
ECTS: 4
Design of shoreline protection along rivers, canals and the sea; load on bed and shoreline by currents, wind waves and ship motion; stability of elements under current and wave conditions; stability of shore protection elements; design methods, construction methods.
CT4320 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Short waves MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Dr.ir. A.J.H.M. Reniers Ir. T.T. Janssen, room: 2.88, phone (015) 27 84533
ECTS: 4
Ir. T.T. Janssen, room: 2.88, phone (015) 27 84533 / Secretariat of the section Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Mrs. O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures, exercise Based exclusively on written exam, using pre-assigned indicative weights per question Introduction to the mechanics of short gravity surface gravity waves, typically encompass both sea and swell waves, for applications in coastal and oshore engineering. Topics include (but are not restricted to) wave refraction, wave diraction, wave relection, wave energy balance, wave breaking, radiation stresses, wave statistics and forces on structures.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Ports and Waterways 1 MSc-programma, semester 1.2 and 2.1 Ir. R. Groenveld / Prof.ir. H. Ligteringen Ir. R. Groenveld, room: 3.84, phone (015) 27 84740 Lectures, case study
ECTS: 4
Based on the written examination and bonus points. The case study can be rewarded with a bonus of 1, 0.5 or 0 points; rewarding of the bonus only counts when the mark of next examination is at least 5 (not rounded o ).
Computational modelling of ow and transport MSc-programme, semester 1.1 and 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. G.S. Stelling / Dr. J.D. Pietrzak Dr. J.D. Pietrzak, room: 2.97, phone (015) 27 85466
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Mrs. O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures, practical Elementary notions of computational modelling of ow and transport.
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ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lectures, case study, exercise, instruction The aim of this teaching module is to clarify the process behind the composition of (black-box) industrial nite element software as Plaxis and Diana. The formulation and programming in F95 of some basic problem types occuring in geotechnical engineering are considered in detail, namely: a) foundations on elastic bedding, b) drained deformation and failure of slopes with material properties described by Mohr-Coulomb model, c) ground water ow through embankment with free and seepage surfaces, d) consolidation of elastic plane block under ramp loading, both by F95 and Plaxis.
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lectures, exercise Final mark consists 80% of mark of examination and 20% of mark of assignments. Matrix algebra, eigenvalues, eigenvectors and polar decomposition. Cartesian tensors and tensor calculus. Kinematics. Large deformation and rotation. Stress. Conservation laws of continuum mechanics. Non-negative internal dissipation. Basic constitutive equations of solids and uids. Conservation laws of saturated soil mechanics.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT4360 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Material models for soil and rock MSc-programme, semester 1.1 and 1.2 Dr.ir. R.B.J. Brinkgreve
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. R.B.J. Brinkgreve, room: 0.02, phone (015) 27 83327 / Ir. A. Hommels, room: 0.08, phone 83425 Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lectures Average of assignments and test. The course deals with backgrounds of dierent constitutive models to describe deformation behaviour of soils and rock (stressstrain relationships). The models are formulated on the basis of elasticity and plasticity theory. A part of the course is devoted to parameter determination and the use of constitutive models in the nite element method.
Experimental research in soil mechanics MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr.ir. H.G.B. Allersma
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lectures, exercise Based on the report Measuring and test techniques to analyse geotechnical problems experimentally; sensors, actuators, test control, deformation, stresses, physical modelling in geo-centrifuge. Basic Soil Mechanics for non-Civil Engineers MSc-programme, semester 1.1 and 1.2 Ir. J.P. Oostveen Ir. J.P. Oostveen, room: 0.09, phone (015) 27 85423 Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lecturers You can ask the lecturer for more information about this course. ECTS: 3
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Water Quality Management MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Drs. G. Bolier / Ir. M.J. Baptist Ir. M.J. Baptist, room: 4.96, phone (015) 27 89450 Lectures Result of the written exam.
ECTS: 4
Concepts and denitions in water quality management: the role of the hydrology and hydraulics, processes and strategies, denitions and dimensional analysis; mathematical descriptions: one- and two-dimensional transportmodels: completely mixed systems, plug ow, dispersion models, accidental-spill models, process equations. Cases of models. Management and restauration concepts: dilution, reduction and removal, restoration, control systems, cases.
Irrigation and drainage MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. M.W. Ertsen Ir. M.W. Ertsen, room: 4.71, phone (015) 27 87423 Exercise, lectures Average of exam and exercise marks is nal mark
ECTS: 4
The course will discuss the objectives and functions of water management systems for irrigation and drainage purposed. Analysing systems requirements in terms of technical engineering constraints, management possibilities and water users (wishes and options) is central. This includes the design and operation of regulation structures, dams, reservoirs, weirs and conveyance systems; balancing water supply and water requirements in time and space is a main focus of analysis too.
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Geo hydrology 1 MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr.ir. T.N. Olsthoorn / Dr.ir. C. Maas
ECTS: 4
Prof.dr.ir. T.N. Olsthoorn, room: 4.87, phone: (015) 27 87346 Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. J.M. de Jong, room: 4.79, phone: (015) 27 85080 Lectures, discussion, exercise, practical Geological fundamentals. Presence and behaviour of groundwater. Eects of density dierences, salinisation of groundwater. Transport by and in groundwater. Causes and eects of changes in hydraulic head, eects of groundwater recovery and/or (articial) inltration. Traveltimes. Quality aspects of groundwater and inltration water (processes and parameters). Control and exploitation of groundwater and legislation.
CT4431 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Hydrologic models MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr. T.H.M. Rientjes / Dr. E.J.M. Veling Dr. T.H.M. Rientjes, room: 4.92, phone (015) 27 84286
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. J.M. de Jong, room: 4.79, phone (015) 27 85080 Lectures The result from the oral exam Deterministic hydrological models for modelling groundwater transport and water quality and for modelling rainfall-runo relations at the catchment scale. After a general introduction, emphasis is on model set-up and building and on critical evaluations and analyses of model results as well as on model behaviour. Special attention is paid to limitations and applicability of models and the issue of model uncertainty.
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Hydrological measurements MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. W.M. Luxemburg Ir. W.M. Luxemburg, room: 4.90, phone (015) 27 85717
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. J.M. de Jong, room: 4.79, phone (015) 27 85080 Lectures, exercise Introduction about necessity, execution and usage of eld measurements. Processing of measured data, error detection and error propagation. Measuring methodologies to quantify elements of the hydrological cycle: precipitation, evaporation, soil moisture, streamow, waterlevels. Flood surveying. Overview of measuring instruments. Interpretation of areal distributed observations. Design of measuring networks. Surveying and leveling for hydrometric eld studies. A computer exercise with HYMOS, WLDelft package for storage, processing and screening of hydrological data is part of the course.
Integrated Water Management MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.ir. E. van Beek / Dr. E. Mostert
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. E.G. Rothfusz, room: 4.75, phone (015) 27 81646 Lectures, exercise, case study combination of oral examination (80%) and report water management exercise Basic principles and concepts to develop a coherent policy and management of the water system by the various authorities involved. The water system includes the physical, chemical and biological components of the water, water bottom and banks. Analysis and quantication of water use and uses, processes in the natural and articial water cycles, formulation of policies, strategies and scenarios and calculation of the socio-economic and environmental impacts of the considered policies and strategies.
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CT4460 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Polders and ood control MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. K.J. Breur / Ir. P.E.R.M. van Leeuwen
ECTS: 4
Ir. P.E.R.M. van Leeuwen, room: 4.72, phone (015) 27 84909 Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. E.G. Rothfusz, room: 4.75, phone (015) 27 81646 Lectures, exercise 1/3 exercise, 2/3 written exam The lecture Polders and Flood Control covers the theory and the design practices of lowland development, land reclamation and ood control, as applicable in deltaic areas like The Netherlands and elsewhere in the world. The lecture focusses especially on project preparation, reclamation of tidal lowlands, impoldering of shallow seas and lakes, creating The Netherlands, methods of ood control, design of ood and drainage channels, structures in drainage channels, design of ood diversion structures.
Drinking water treatment 1 MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.ir. J.C. van Dijk Ir. J.Q.J.C. Verberk, room: 4.61, phone (015) 27 81585
ECTS: 7
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lecture with multimediasupport, practical Exam: average of all questions Experiments: 80% reporting, 20% laboratory experiments Final mark: 4/7 exam, 3/7 experiments The course gives the technological backgrounds of treatment processes applied for production of drinking water. The treatment processes are demonstrated with laboratory experiments.
Summary
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Wastewater treatment 1 MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.ir. J.H.J.M. van der Graaf Dr.ir. J. de Koning, room: 4.59, phone (015) 27 85274
ECTS: 6
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures, practical Exam: average of all questions Experiments: 80% reporting, 20% laboratory experiments Final mark: 4/6 exam, 2/6 experiments Basic principles and backgrounds of wastewater treatment. General aspects. Quality and quantity of wastewater. Fysical treatment processes as gritremoval, screening and sedimentation. Biological processes, reactors and kinetics. Trickling lters. Activated sludge including oxygen balance, practical aspects and nal sedimentation. Sludge thickening, sludge digestion. Operation. Design aspects.
Summary
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Sewerage 1 MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.ir. F.H.L.R. Clemens / Ir. R.G. Veldkamp
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures. Introduction to basic principles including examples and an exercise. The nal exam-result is composed of 1/3 of the result of the exercise and 2/3 of the result of the oral examination. introduction in urban drainage types of urban drainage systems the eects of incidental spills of dilutes wastewater on surface waters quantity and quality aspects of domestic and industrial wastewater rain, measurement, single and multiple event analysis conversion from rainfall into runo system components and lay-out hydraulics and hydraulic features pumped systems structural design and construction operation and maintenance rehabilitation
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe / Prof.ir. F.M. Sanders / Drs. E. de Boer Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe, room: 4.20, phone (015) 27 83401 Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Based on score in nal exam Module A: Planning System analysis; demand analysis; scenarios; forecasting; capacity planning; feasibility studies; actor analysis; policy making Module B: Design Set up of projects; goals and targets; terms of reference; development of alternatives; physical planning aspects (alignment); relationships to regional planning Module C: Evaluation Application evaluation methods (cost/benet analysis); impact assessment (economic, environmental, social); risk analysis Module D: Implementation Asset management. Implementation planning; alternative nancing/contracting/exploitation options; monitoring methods.
Plan and project evaluation MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe, room: 4.20, phone (015) 27 83401
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Evaluation fundamentals and application to various types of plans and projects for civil engineering systems. Overview of evaluation methods: Cost-eectiveness, Benet/Cost, multi-criteria. Schematisation of evaluation problems: benet and cost pattern, discounting. Valuation of eects. Indirect eects. External eects. Indirect valuation. Valuation environmental components. Financial, economical, and social evaluation. Cost recovery. Optimisation of the composition of projects and plans. Applications: analysis of dierent themes in evaluation based on recent studies.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Subsurface space Technology MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.ir. J.W. Bosch / Ir. G. Arends
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. M.E. de Graaf-de Groot, room: 2.08, phone (015) 27 81256 Lectures, paper Multidisciplinary course for students CT, TA, WB, TB and BK. The multidisciplinary character plays a key role during the lectures. All aspects of underground space technology will be discussed (administrative/urbanistic up to engineering aspects). The course is exceptionally suitable to students who want to write a nal thesis that deals with an underground case.
Transportation and Spatial Modelling MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr.ir. P.H.L. Bovy / Dr. M.C.J. Bliemer P.C.H. Opstal, room: 5.52, phone (015) 27 85480 Lectures, exercise, practical Written exam (3/4) + exercise (1/4)
ECTS: 6
Objectives of modelling in transport and spatial planning. Model types. Theory of travel and locational behaviour. System description of planning area. Theory of choice models. Aggregate and disaggregate models. Mode choice, route choice and assignment modelling. Locational choice modelling. Parameter estimation and model calibration. Cases and exercises in model application.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
ECTS: 4
Prof.dr.-ing. I.A. Hansen / Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad / Drs. R.M.P. Goverde / Dr.ir. R. van Nes Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad, room: 4.05, phone (015) 27 84916 Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. B. Kerkhof, room: 5.53, phone (015) 27 81681 lecture exercise essay 1/3 essay, 1/3 written examination and 1/3 oral examination Part I: Part II: Part III: Part IV: Part V: Design of networks, lines, stations and timetable Operations control, signaling and safety Classication and characteristics of public transport systems Airport design and operation Deregulation and tendering of line services
Grading Summary
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. S.P. Hoogendoorn / Prof.dr. H.J. van Zuylen / Ir. T. Dijker Dr.ir. S.P. Hoogendoorn, room: 5.65, phone (015) 27 85475 Lectures, practical 2/3 written exam, 1/3 practical Fundamental trac ow characteristics. Trac ow variables. Bottleneck capacity analysis. Shockwave analysis. Macroscopic trac ow models. Derivation from microscopic principles. Trac ow stability. Numerical solution approaches. Microscopic trac ow characteristics. Driver behaviour. Levels of driving task. Car-following models. General gap-acceptance modelling and lane-changing. Microscopic simulation models. Microscopic models for pedestrian ows. Practicum: microscopic trac simulation. Macroscopic simulation. Joint design for an interface between a highway and a controlled urban mini-network.
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Dynamic trac management I: trac control MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.dr. H.J. van Zuylen / Ir. T.H.J. Muller
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures, exercise, practical, paper 2/3 examination and 1/3 exercise report The course teaches the design, optimization, simulation and evaluation of trac control on intersections, urban networks and ramps. The objectives that can be realized are discussed and the ways how on a tactical level trac control can be optimized to realise the goals. Trac control is developed for multimodal networks use is made of design and simulation programs.
Laboratory experiments on road building materials MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Ir. M.F.C. van de Ven Laboratory experiments
ECTS: 3
The nal mark is the average of the marks for the individual measuring reports
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CT4831 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Data collection and analysis MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe / Dr.ir. M.M. Minderhoud Dr.ir. R.J. Verhaeghe, room: 4.20, phone (015) 27 83401
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures 50% assignments + 50% open book exam Data collection and analysis in planning and research problems in the areas of transport and spatial planning. Introduction and methodology. Hands-on application. Identication of data collection and analysis. Relations between variables in observed data: linear and non-linear regression, logistical regression, cross-tables. Analysis of survey data. Time-series in planning and design. Spatial analysis. Uncertainty, sensitivity analysis, Monte-Carlo simulation, decision trees. Discrete choice relationships. Estimation of transport parameters. Assignments.
Road paving materials MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr.ir. A.A.A. Molenaar / Dr.ir. A.L.A. Fraaij Ir. L.J.M. Houben, room: CT-II, phone (015) 27 84917 Lectures
ECTS: 4
Stresses and deformations in pavement structures. Characterisation of various road building materials, such as clay, laterite, sand, stabilised soils, base materials, concrete, (modied) butimen and bituminous mixtures. Mechanical behaviour of these materials as a function of the external conditions (stress levels, loading time, temperature, moisture), the performance based design of mixtures, tests, specications, recycling and environmental aspects. Measures and materials for road maintenance.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ECTS: 6
Prof.dr.ir. A.A.A. Molenaar / Ir. L.J.M. Houben / Ir. M.F.C. van de Ven / Dr.ir. M. Huurman Ir. L.J.M. Houben, room: CT-II, phone (015) 27 84917 Lectures, exercise The nal mark is calculated from the mark for the exercise (75%) and for the oral exam (25%). Stresses and strains in exible pavements; structural design and performance of earth and gravel roads, asphalt pavements, concrete pavements and small element pavements (design criteria, distress types, input data, analytical design methods, software packages, probabilistics, measurements, performance models, pavement management and maintenance); special pavement structures. Structural design of railway structures MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.dr.ir. C. Esveld Secretariat of the section Road and Railway Engineering, Mrs. J. Barnhoorn, room: Stevin-I, k. 1.18, phone 015 2785066 / Dr.ir. V.L. Markine, room: CT1 1.08, phone (015) 27 83206 Exercise, lectures, instruction The nal mark is based on the mark of the exercises (20%) and of the oral examination (80%) Rail guidance principle. Track alignment. Static analysis of track structure. Dynamic phenomena. Temperature eects. Longitudinal and lateral stability of track. Rails. Switches and crossings. Inspection and detection methods. Track maintenance and renewal. Computer exercises: use of numerical models in railway engineering. ECTS: 4
ECTS: 11
ECTS: 42
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CT5100 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Repair and maintenance of construction materials MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Dr.ir. A.L.A. Fraaij / guest lecturers Dr.ir. A.L.A. Fraaij, room: 6.37, phone (015) 27 84974
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Materials Science and Sustainable Construction, Mrs. M. van der Veen, room: 6.35, phone (015) 27 87440 Lectures, discussion, case study, excursion Based on the results of the cases (75%), presentation and discussion with experts in het eld (25%) The maintenance and repair of materials in constructions. Analysis of the behaviour of materials in the construction as a function of the time. Illustration of the state of the art for several topics by experts in the eld.
Concrete - Science & Technology MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr.ir. K. van Breugel / Prof.dr.ir. J.C. Walraven / Dr.ir. C. van der Veen
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Structural Design and Concrete Structures, Mrs. J.M. van der Schaaf, room: 1.52 - ST-II, phone: (015) 27 83990 Lectures, computer self-test Calcrete Properties of dierent types of cement-based materials in the subsequent stages (mixing, transport, execution, service life, degradation phase) are explained on the basis of the microstructure of the material.
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CT5102 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Capita Selecta Materials Science MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Dr.ir. A.L.A. Fraaij / Dr. H. Pietersen
ECTS: 3
Ing. M.H.J. van Maasakkers, room: 6.48, phone (015) 27 84973 Secretariat of the section Materials Science and Sustainable Construction, Mrs. M. van der Veen, room: 6.35, phone (015) 27 87440 Lectures, case study, practical in the microlab of the Faculty Average of cases and presentation + discussion after the presentation This course is for students who want to get their MSc degree in Mechanics, Materials and Constructions and who want to learn more about some aspects concerning rehabilitation, maintenance and materials control. Topics are: composite materials, coatings and paints, renovation and maintenance of concretes, microscopical techniques in materials control such as petrographic analyses in concrete control and the RILEM method for Failure and Eect Mode Analyse. The course is especially suited for those students who want to work in the eld of consultancy in maintenance and building (construction/material application) problems. The course is meant for students who want to focus on consultancy in the building practice (engineering oces, consultancy oces, contractors).
ECTS: 3
Prof.dr.ir. K. van Breugel / Dr.ir. C.R. Braam / Ir. J.A. den Uijl Secretariat of the section SBE, units Structural Design and Concrete Structures, Mrs. J.M. van der Schaaf, room: 1.52 - ST-II, phone: (015) 27 83990 Lectures. Case study: Design exercise of cylindrical reservoir (0,5 ECTS) Concrete structures under seismic loads. Response, ductility, detailling Temperature eects in hardening and hardened concrete. Cracking under imposed deformation. Safety. Extreme temperatures. Silos, reservoirs, storage and protective structures. Rectangular and cylindrical structures for storage of raw materials, liquids and wastes. Design for tightness, detailling and execution.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
Concrete structures for sanitary applications MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.dr.ir. K. van Breugel / Dr.ir. E.A.B. Koenders
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Structural Design and Concrete Structures, Mrs. J.M. van der Schaaf, room: 1.52 - ST-II, phone: (015) 27 83990 Lectures, exercise Attack and durability of concrete structures for sanitary applications. Design, calculations, detailing and execution of concrete reservoirs and storage structures. Reinforced reservoirs Prestressed reservoirs Cracking of concrete and liquid tightness. Detailing and execution of reservoirs
CourseType Summary
CT5122 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Capita Selecta steel and aluminum structures MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. A.M. Gresnigt Ir. A.M. Gresnigt, room: 4.40, phone (015) 27 83382
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures Exam mark is nal mark Steel Properties and application of high strength steel, stainless steel, cast steel and cast iron. Welding (welding processes, weldability, weld quality, welding method qualication and welders qualication, non-destructive testing, tness for purpose). Fabrication and erection of steel structures. Learning from failures. Welding exercise (demonstration of dierent welding processes, students are encouraged to experience welding by themselves). Aluminium Aluminium alloys. Aluminium products. Examples of structures in aluminium. Design and calculation.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Finite element method for structures MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr. G.N. Wells Dr. G.N. Wells, room: 6.05, phone (015) 27 87922
ECTS: 4
Dr. G.N. Wells, room: 6.05, phone (015) 27 87922 / Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures,assignments 40% Final examination 40% Assignments 20% Mid-term examination Minimum of 6/10 required for all assignments
CT5124 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Timber structures 2 MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr.ir. J.W.G. van de Kuilen / Ir. J.G.M. Raadschelders
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. J.W.G. van de Kuilen, room: 4.47, phone (015) 27 82322 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures, exercise Oral exam grade is nal grade The course deals with advanced material properties of timber: fatigue, failure criteria, grading and strength distributions, the design of timber structures for road and waterworks, built-up beams, renovation techniques, re safety of timber buildings, reliability engineering.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
Steel bridges MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Dr. A. Romeijn Dr. A. Romeijn, room: 4.37, phone (015) 27 83705
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures, excursion, case study The student will learn how to design steel bridges and steel-concrete bridges. Also construction methods and erection methods will be presented. Two-thirds of the course is spent on lectures, while the remaining is dedicated to excursions and case studies. The main topics are: design of dierent types of steel bridges and steel-concrete bridges fabrication and erection of bridges eurocodes orthotropic steel bridge decks composite steel-concrete deck highway bridges railway bridges high strength cables noise from railway bridges
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ECTS: 3
Dr.ir. J.W.G. van de Kuilen / Dr. A. Romeijn / M.H. Kolstein / Ir. J.A. den Uijl Dr. A. Romeijn, room: 4.37, phone (015) 27 83705 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures, exercise The student will learn how to design fatigue loaded steel / aluminium / concrete / timber structures. Two-thirds of the course is spent on lectures, while the remaining is dedicated to exercises. The main topics are: fatigue actions: basic principles, determination of stresses and stress intensity factors, stress history fatigue resistance: basic principles, classied structural details, fatigue strength modications, resistance against crack propagation, resistance of joints with weld imperfections fatigue assessment: general principles, S-N curves, crack propagation calculation, service testing parameters inuencing the fatigue strength of steel / aluminium / concrete / timber connections/structures safety considerations synthetic fatigue curves
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
ECTS: 4
Dr.ir. C. van der Veen, room: 5.21, phone (015) 27 84577 Lectures, case study Students will learn how to choose between the dierent types of bridges, estimate the construction depth and the dierent methods of constructions. Starting point is to describe the structures of the most common types of bridge. Much attention will be paid to the historical development in prefabricated girders and concrete cross-sections cast in situ. The method of load distribution will be discussed in detail, as well as the design of expansion joints and the use of structural bearings. Special attention will be focused on bridges with long spans such as cable stayed bridges. Typical vibration problems are discussed. Finally, the use of high strength concrete and the eects on the design is explained. Two-thirds of the course consists of lectures, while the remaining one third is dedicated to case studies. These case studies deal with the various aspects that have to be acquired to complete this course. Students can choose to perform the case study individually or in pairs.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT5128 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Fibre-reinforced polymer (FRP) structures MSc-programme, semester 1.1 M.H. Kolstein M.H. Kolstein, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84005
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures Exam grade is nal grade structural applications fabrication processes materials and material properties design- and calculations methods connections design rules management and maintenance case studies
ECTS: 4
Prof.dr.ir. J.C. Walraven / Dr. A. Romeijn / Ir. A.Q.C. van der Horst Ir. W.J.M. Peperkamp, room: 5.03, phone 84576 / Dr. A. Romeijn, room: 4.37, phone (015) 27 83705 Lectures, case study Oral presentation and case study This course relates to the design and detailing process on structural engineering problems in coastal, river and underground environment. It mainly concerns the material and structural design of coastal, harbour and underground structures such as: container storage /terminal platforms, bridge piers, jetties, wharfs and tunnels. Important aspects due to environmental conditions aecting a structure are wind and waves, currents, earthquakes, variable loads and the response of a structure and its foundations to these factors.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
CT5131 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Fire safety design MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. L. Twilt Ir. L. Twilt
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures Exam mark General introduction to the re safety design of buildings. Emphasis on structural re safety and regulations (national & European). Basic principles of re safety design of buildings, consequences of re, various options for re safety design. Phenomenological description of the re process, schematisation and modelling of the re process, mechanisms of re propagation. Material behaviour (reaction-to-re) and structural behaviour (resistance-to-re) and the options to quantify this behaviour. Emphasis on concrete, steel and timber structures. Smoke issues: smoke production, smoke spread and smoke control. Active measures (automatic suppression, detection). National re regulations: Building Decree (Bouwbesluit), concept, assessment methods, principle of equivalence. European standardisation (Construction Product Directive, Eurocodes, Euroclasses). Recent developments regarding the re design of buildings (Fire Safety Engineering).
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT5141 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Theory of Elasticity MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr.ir. J. Blaauwendraad / Dr.ir. P.C.J. Hoogenboom
ECTS: 3
Dr.ir. P.C.J. Hoogenboom, room: 5.24, phone (015) 27 88081 Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures The exam grade is the nal grade for this course. Direct Methods Discussion of two fundamental strategies; displacement method and the force method. Application to the following structural systems; coupled shear walls; thick wall tub es; curved beams; solution of Boussinesq; Brazilian splitting test; exure of axisymmetric plates; elasticity theory in three dimensions; torsion properties of bars of any cross-section (analytical and numerical). Vlasovs theory for calculating torsion moment distributions and bi moment distributions. Energy Principles Derivation of the principles of virtual work and virtual complementary work; principles of minimum potential energy and minimum complementary energy; both laws of Castigliano; reciprocal theorem of Maxwell-Betti; approximation method of Ritz; fundamentals of the nite element method.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
CT5142 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Computational methods in non-linear mechanic MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. L.J. Sluys Prof.dr.ir. L.J. Sluys, room: 6.25, phone (015) 27 82728
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures Examination mark is nal mark. In the lecture series computational techniques for the description of nonlinear behaviour of materials and structures will be treated. Topics of the course are: mathematical preliminaries structure of nonlinear nite element programs solution techniques for nonlinear static problems solution techniques for nonlinear dynamic problems plasticity models for metals and soils fracture models visco-elastic and viscoplastic models for time-dependent problems computational analysis of failure and instabilities geometrically nonlinear analysis The series provides the student with the basic knowledge to adequately use standard nite element packages that are equipped with the tools for nonlinear mechanics.
CT5143 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 3
Dr.ir. P.C.J. Hoogenboom, room: 5.24, phone (015) 27 88081 Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics, Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures Exam grade is nal grade Many structures can be modelled as thin elastic shells. Examples are pressure vessels, ancient domes, LNG storage tanks, space trusses, industrial chimneys and BLOB architecture. The course provides understanding in the parameters that are important for design of these structures.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ECTS: 3
Prof.ir. A.C.W.M. Vrouwenvelder / Dr.ir. P.C.J. Hoogenboom Dr.ir. P.C.J. Hoogenboom, room: 5.24, phone (015) 27 88081 Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Tutorial, lectures Determination method of the nal mark: -On correctness of the answers to questions -Assignment: on proper and complete reporting Random vibrations MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.ir. A.C.W.M. Vrouwenvelder Secretariat of the section Structural Mechanics Mrs. G.T.M. Bol-de Kok, room: 5.33, phone (015) 27 83332 Lectures, tutorial Determination of the nal mark: Report of assignment (67%) plus oral exam (33%) Micromechanics and computational modelling of building materials MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. K. van Breugel / Dr.ir. E. Schlangen / Dr.ir. M.R. de Rooij Secretariat Microlab, Mrs. I. Batterham, room: 6.29 phone (015) 27 86382 Lectures tour in the Micromechanics Laboratory This course concentrates on chemical, physical, stereological and fracture mechanics aspects of building materials with emphasis on cement-based materials. Materials are looked at on the nano-, micro- and meso-level and materials properties are explained by referring to those fundamental levels. Modern developments in the eld of experimental research techniques and numerical modelling of materials are dealt with. This course is open for both Master students and PhD students. ECTS: 3 ECTS: 4
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
Building component and material specication MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Ir. H.R. de Boer
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures,design exercise Design exercise: 65%, modelling exercises: 35% documents in building construction development of a building component on basis of performance requirements specication of properties and behaviour testing procedures
High-rise buildings MSc-programme, semester 1.1 and 2.1 Prof.dipl.-ing. J.N.J.A. Vambersky
ECTS: 10
Ir. A. te Boveldt, room: 5.17 - CT-II, phone (015) 27 84982 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Teams are formed together with the students from the Faculty of Architecture with a task to design a big scale high-rise building. The teams consist of about ve students. Each student is assigned to represent a specic discipline (architect, structural engineer, project manager, building services engineer, etc.) with a specic task and responsibility in the team, covering architectural and functional design, structural design, building physics, nishes, building services, real estate development and construction and management. The civil engineering students are mostly assigned the function of the structural engineer. The time reserved for this workshop project is app. 8 weeks. The teams are coached and quided in the lines of the mentioned disciplines, by a number of lecturers from the faculties of Architecture and of Civil Engineering and engineers and architects from daily practice. Additional information : www.bk.tudelft.nl/onderwijs - masteropleiding - free choice - BKM2RP11 Workshop High Rise Buildings.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
Conservation of the structural heritage MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. G.G. Nieuwmeijer
ECTS: 3
Ir. G.G. Nieuwmeijer, Fac. BK, room 7.01, phone (015) 27 81012 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lectures, case study Maintenance of historical structures; analyse of problems; possibilities and proposals to repair; examples of restoration. Analyse of strength, stiness, stability and re safety of a case. Formulation and check of proposals to improve including restoration philosophy, maintenance and technical means and possibilities. Report.
CT5230 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Technical building services MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. A.C. van der Linden / Prof.ir. J.J.M. Cauberg
ECTS: 3
Ir. A.C. van der Linden Fac. TA, room 5.09, phone 06 - 22419606 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Seminar, lectures Final mark to be determined after oral discussion of the exercise An introduction to the technical building services to be found in buildings and their performance. In particular the interaction between services and the characteristics of the building from the point of building physics is examined. Main subjects are: quality of the inside environment mechanical ventilation systems; climate and air-conditioning systems, the inuence on physical (comfort) parameters, requirements as to spatial planning (size and location in the building, eect on supporting structures and nishing structures) articial lighting: lighting design, types of light ttings, etc. energy consumption of total building design, energy performance standard (Du.: energieprestatienormering, EPN)
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
CT5241 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Applied building physics MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.ir. J.J.M. Cauberg / Dr.ir. W.H. van der Spoel
ECTS: 3
Dr.ir. W.H. van der Spoel Fac. TA, room 5.08a, phone (015) 27 83386 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Building Engineering and Steel and Timber Structures, Mrs. J.H. Meijer, room: 1.51 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83174 Lecture with working assignments and practical exercises Evaluation of exercises and working assignments: nal review Preparation for research into building physics in projects: to be able to analyse problems in the area of building physics independently, to present them in models and to report on them. Lecture materials are identical for everybody, practical problems vary. Main subjects: Modelling and numerical solution of non-stationary heat transport and/or damp transport, passive solar energy, ventilation and air pollution, sound expansion Fire safety: re load, re spreading, compartmentalizing Wind inconvenience Examples of rules and regulations in building physics: daylight
90
F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ECTS: 4
Prof.ir. L.A.G. Wagemans / Ir. A. te Boveldt / Ir. R. Houtman / Ir. E.W.P. Sluis / Ir. J.L. Coenders Ir. A. te Boveldt, room: 5.17 - CT-II, phone (015) 27 84982 Secretariat of the section SBE, units Structural Design and Concrete Structures, Mrs. J.M. van der Schaaf, room: 1.52 - ST-II, phone (015) 27 83990 Lectures by various lecturers from dierent faculties: civil engineering and architecture and engineering rms Practice workshops for hand-on experience. Exercise in the design of a freeform structure written examination. 50% examination mark, 50 % workshops mark, each with a minimum of a 5.0 Introduction course in the eld of special structures, their architecture, structural behaviour, design process, special design knowledge, and special techniques, combined with practical use of design- and analysis tools for structural engineering.
Grading Summary
CT5300 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Dredging technology MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. G.L.M. van der Schrieck
ECTS: 4
Ir. G.L.M. van der Schrieck, room: 3.68, phone (015) 27 88592 Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Excursion, lectures Judgement from the oral examination with the use of a scoretabel Dredging technology with components digging, transport and disposal of dredged material and their scientic background. The possibilities of dredging during the realisation of large civil engineering projects.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Teamwork lecturing with the assistence of several guest lecturers. Fundamentals of multi-dimensional time-dependent mechanical behaviour of saturated soils, relevant for deformation and stability of civil engineering constructions and handling of pumping systems, draining systems, dredging and underground uid reservoirs.
Stratied ows MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Dr. J.D. Pietrzak Dr. J.D. Pietrzak, room: 2.97, phone (015) 27 85466
ECTS: 3
secretariaat van de sectie Vloeistofmechanica, Mevrouw O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures, exercise Flows inuenced or caused by density dierences. Basic equations The two-layer model: internal waves. Steady state ows Internal hydraulic jumps and gravity currents. Turbulence and mixing Classication of estuaries Coastal inlets and tidal basins MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.dr.ir. M.J.F. Stive / Prof.dr.ir. H.J. de Vriend / Dr.ir. Z.B. Wang Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures The course focuses on coastal inlets and tidal basins (estuaries, tidal rivers and lagoons), and aims to give insight in the phenomenological characteristics (geography, geology, morphology, sediment motion and hydrodynamics) and in the modelling of these characteristics (empirical, process-based and hierarchical model approaches). ECTS: 3
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures Method of determining marks: adding marks received for each question Bored and immersed tunneling MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.drs.ir. J.K. Vrijling / Prof.ir. A.F. van Tol / Ing. H.J. Everts / Dr.ir. K.J. Bakker Dr.ir. K.J. Bakker, room: 3.70, phone (015) 27 85075 Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures with illustrations (video, numerical examples). An excursion tunnelling projects, exercise in groups of four students to evaluate a tunnel project and in addition to that to make a design for a tunnel; location, track, construction and structural design. One mark, based on design exercise and oral exam Design and construction of tunnels for trac. Functional requirements, determination of boundary conditions, spatial and structional design and construction aspects of bored and immerse tunnel. ECTS: 4
Grading Summary
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
CT5306 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading CT5307 Schedule Lecturer Contact for students CourseType
Ports and waterways 2 MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.ir. H. Ligteringen / Ir. R. Groenveld Ir. R. Groenveld, room: 3.84, phone (015) 27 84740
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures, exercise Maximum 1 bonus point for the computer simulation exercise Coastal zone management MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Dr.ir. J. van de Graa / Ir. T.J. Zitman / Ir. H.J. Verhagen Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone: (015) 27 83348 Lectures, presentation of case studies, computer exercises and simulation game. Because Integrated Coastal Zone Management is mainly an attitude and less a skill, it has to be trained in a realistic setting. A eldtrip to Zeeuws Vlaanderen and Belgium is part of the course. Based on oral evaluation Various aspects relevant for the planning of the coastal zone. Natural system (biotic and abiotic); user functions with socio-economic relations. System analysis and policy analysis. Application in a practical setting (case study) with simulation game. ECTS: 3
Grading Summary
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S
CT5308 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Breakwater and closure dams MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Ir. H.J. Verhagen Ir. H.J. Verhagen, room: 3.88, phone (015) 27 85067
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Exercise, lectures One mark, based on design exercise or on oral exam Design and construction of breakwaters and closure dams in estuaries and rivers. Functional requirements, determination of boundary conditions, spatial and constructional design and construction aspects of breakwaters and dams consisting of rock, sand and caissons.
CT5309 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Coastal morphology and coastal protection MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Dr.ir. J. van de Graa Dr.ir. J. van de Graa, room: 3.77, phone (015) 27 84846
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures with illustrations (video, numerical examples). Self-tuition. One mark based on oral examination Sediment transport by waves and currents; bottom shear stress; dune erosion; erosion of coasts; sedimentation of channels; coast line and morphological computations; coastal protection measures.
95
M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
CT5310 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Probabilistic design in hydraulic engineering MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.drs.ir. J.K. Vrijling / Dr.ir. P.H.A.J.M. van Gelder
ECTS: 3
Dr.ir. P.H.A.J.M. van Gelder, room: 3.87, phone (015) 27 86544 Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures One mark, based on oral exam Probabilistic design approaches of hydraulic structures. Goal is the theoretical background of the reliability theorie, strongly applied to hydraulic structures, such as sea- and river dikes, breakwaters, storm surge barriers, dunes, oshore structures, etc.
River Dynamics MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. H.J. de Vriend / Dr.ir. Z.B. Wang / Ir. H. Havinga Dr.ir. Z.B. Wang, room: 3.70, phone (015) 27 85075 Lectures, exercise, discussion Mark of the oral exam is the nal mark
ECTS: 4
Morphological processes in alluvial lowland rivers. Response to human interference and events. Models and scaling. Rhythmic phenomenon in bottoms and alignment. Equilibrium bed level in bends. Application of mathematical models in practical situations.
CT5312 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 3
Dr.ir. W.S.J. Uijttewaal, room: 0.08, phone (015) 27 81371 Secretariat of the section Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Mrs. O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures Exam-grade Stochastic description of turbulence, experimental techniques, balance equations for mass, momentum and energy, Reynolds equations, closure problems, turbulent ows in practice, modelling turbulence, turbulent diusion and dispersion.
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Hydraulic structures Prof.drs.ir. J.K. Vrijling / Ir. J.G. de Gijt / Ir. W.F. Molenaar
ECTS: 3
BSc-programme, period 1.2 / MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Ir. W.F. Molenaar, room: 3.75, phone 89447 / Ir. J.G. de Gijt, room: 3.73, phone (015) 27 83345 Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures and 2 design exercises. Structures for cargo transfer in ports Structures for the controlled discharge of water Typical projectsDesign of an exploration island in the Beaufortsea (arctic). Design of the storm surge barrier in St. Petersburg.
Flood defences MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.drs.ir. J.K. Vrijling / Ir. J. Weijers
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Hydraulic Engineering (incl. Oshore Engineering) unit Hydraulic Engineering, Mrs. C.L. van Woggelum, room: 3.71, phone (015) 27 83348 Lectures, exercise, excursion The design of ood defences in the natural and the socio-cultural environment Technical design of dikes Improvement of existing dikes Construction Detailed design of toe protection, revetment etc. Integrated solutions (River cities, room for Rivers) Exercise
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CT5315 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Computational hydraulics MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.dr.ir. G.S. Stelling Dr.ir. M. Zijlema, room: 2.94, phone (015) 27 83255
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Mrs. O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures, exercise, practical Report grade Backgrounds of three-dimensional hydrostatic modelling. The course will be given once a week including practical. During the rst practical, the ow model Delft3D-FLOW will be introduced in a tutorial manner. This model will be used in the following practicals. The content of the subsequent lectures and practicals are: specifying the initial and (open) boundary conditions, applying the Alternating Direction Implict (ADI) technique for ecient computations, calculation of stratied ows and a sensitivity analysis for a case study.
CT5316 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 3
Dr.ir. L.H. Holthuijsen, room: 2.88, phone (015) 27 84803 Secretariat of the section Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Mrs. O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures Oral exam Observing and measuring wind waves, qualitative and quantitative description of wind waves, spectral characterisation Growth curves, qualitative description of processes of wave growth and dissipation; spectral wave prediction models Statistical description of wind waves, response spectra
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CT5317 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Physical Oceanography MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Dr. J.D. Pietrzak Dr. J.D. Pietrzak, room: 2.97, phone (015) 27 85466
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Mrs. O. Kievits, room: 2.91, phone (015) 27 81953 Lectures, exercise Exam grade, Assignment Properties of sea water, equations of motion with Coriolis Force, wind driven circulation, thermohaline eects, waves, tides. Fieldwork hydraulic engineering MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. H.J. Verhagen Ir. H.J. Verhagen, room: 3.88, phone (015) 27 85067 Fieldwork The mark is based on the participation during the eldwork, the quality of the measurement report and the quality of the nal report. Fieldwork on location in the Netherlands or abroad. Preparation (30 hours). Execution of measurements at a coast, a river or at a coastal structure (one week). Elaboration of data in a report (50 hours). Option for a morphologic or a construction oriented eldwork. ECTS: 4
Summary
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Foundation and construction MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.ir. A.F. van Tol / guest lecturers Ing. H.J. Everts, room: 0.10, phone (015) 27 85478
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lectures, instruction, case study The main topics of the course deal with the interaction between soil and structure in tunneling, foundations and deep excavations. The content of the lectures will be practised in a realistic case concerning the design of a building pit and the prediction of the eects on neighbouring structures. It is possible to combine this course with the course submerged tunnels (CT5305). In that case the number of ECTS will be 8. Soil and soil-moving constructions MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.ir. A.F. van Tol / Ing. H.J. Everts / Ir. J.P. Oostveen Ing. H.J. Everts, room: 0.10, phone 85478 / Ir. J.P. Oostveen, room: 0.09, phone (015) 27 85423 Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lectures, exercise Theory and practical information will be instructed during lectures and will be put into practice by means of a realistic case. Groups consisting of about 4 students have to make a design of a retaining structure and a soil structure. The design has to be presented in a technical report. ECTS: 4
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ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. L. Coelet, room: 0.13, phone (015) 27 81880 Lectures, exercise, practical, instruction Both analytical and numerical methods for the analyses of vibrations and wave propagation in saturated porous media are considered. Starting from the elasto-statics of saturated porous media, both the formulation and analytical and numerical solutions of dynamic phenomena are described. Various practical engineering cases of soil dynamics are considered.
CT5420 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Public hygiene and epidemiology MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr. P. Bol Dr.ir. J. de Koning, room: 4.59, phone (015) 27 85274
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures, discussion The result of the oral examination is the nal result. Framework of public hygiene and epidemiology; human pathology related to water and sanitation: infections, prevention and therapy: 'social medicine': health and society in the Netherlands and in developing countries; health and environment: environmental epidemiology and ecotoxicology, protective measures and legislation and rules. Insight is given how the contribution of civil engineers to the present excellent state of health was and is enormous. Moreover, their options for improvement of health in developing countries are discussed. Water is central: the medical dangers connected with it, but also the benets of good water supply and sanitation. Much attention is paid to water related infections like gastro-enteritis, malaria, bilharzia, legionellosis, etc. As well the basics of epidemiology, social medicine, vaccinations and travel and health are taught.
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Geo hydrology 2 MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr.ir. C. Maas / Prof.dr.ir. T.N. Olsthoorn / Drs. G. Bolier
ECTS: 4
Prof.dr.ir. T.N. Olsthoorn, room: 4.87, phone (015) 27 87346 Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. J.M. de Jong, room: 4.79, phone (015) 27 85080 In the oral lectures the most important topics of the lecture notes are discussed. Questions can be answered. The course is partly supported by computer, in order to train the student in the practical application of geo-hydrological parameters. A eld excursion is compulsory. Data collection, storage, analysis and management. Geophysical exploration techniques. Drilling systems and borehole logging. Determination of geohydrological parameters (aquifer and well tests) and groundwater quality parameters. Design, dimensions, construction and maintenance of inltration and recovery systems. Introduction to groundwater models. Case study. Field trip.
Summary
CT5450 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Hydrology of catchments, rivers and deltas MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.dr.ir. H.H.G. Savenije Ir. W.M. Luxemburg, room: 4.90, phone (015) 27 85717
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. J.M. de Jong, room: 4.79, phone (015) 27 85080 Lectures. Studying articles (readers). Short eldwork From oral exam Hydrology and water resources, rainfall-runo relations at dierent time scales, analysis of rainfall, analysis of water resources, water balances at dierent scales. The occurrence and analysis of oods, ood modelling, ood propagation, reservoir routing, channel routing. Hydrology of coastal areas, occurrence and propagation of tides and surges, salt intrusion, land reclamation, eects of interventions in deltas and coastal areas. Field exercise.
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Ecology in water management MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Drs. G. Bolier Drs. G. Bolier, room: 4.95, phone (015) 27 83391
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. J.M. de Jong, room: 4.79, phone (015) 27 85080 Lectures Review of important aspects of the ecology, as there are ecosystems, ecotoxicology, ecological-assessment, wetlands, man-made lakes, bio-invaders and their relations with civil engineering. ECTS: 4
MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. W.M. Luxemburg / Drs. G. Bolier Ir. W.M. Luxemburg, room: 4.90, phone (015) 27 85717 In a condensed eldwork period (9 days) experience will be gained with the theory of the courses CT3010 (Hydrology), CT4420 (Geohydrology I), CT4440 (Hydrological measurements), CT4400 (Water quality management), CT5450 (Hydrology of catchments, rivers and deltas), CT5460 (Ecology in water management). Discussions about the measurements used and the interpretation of the results obtained will be stimulated. Determined by participating sta Fieldwork course in catchments in the Luxembourg Ardennes aiming at measurements and analyses of the elements of the hydrological cycle, catchment characteristics, river characteristics and ecology (water quality and water quantity): Areal survey (GPS), meteorological observations, river discharge measurements, river sediments, ecosystem observations, geohydrological (hydraulic conductivity, inltration) and geophysical measurements, urban drainage, chemical analyses (oxygen, eutrophication) use of natural tracers and gravitation in hydrology. Presentation and reporting of measurements and research results.
Grading Summary
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CT5480 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 3
Ir. K.J. Breur, room: 4.72, phone (015) 27 84909 / Ir. M.W. Ertsen, room: 4.71, phone (015) 27 87423 Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. E.G. Rothfusz, room: 4.75, phone (015) 27 81646 Lectures, excursion Exam mark is nal mark The course discusses several soil proles; recognizing dierent soils, including a eld trip, is a major topic. Operational water management MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Dr.ir. A.J.M. Nelen / P.J. van Overloop / W. Schuurmans / Dr. R.R.P. van Nooyen Dr. R.R.P. van Nooyen, room: 4.83, phone (015) 27 86503 Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. E.G. Rothfusz, room: 4.75, phone (015) 27 81646 Lectures with in-class exercises and homework assignments Assignments are graded as complete or incomplete. All assignments must be completed before applying for the exam. The exam grade is the nal grade. Operational objectives of control for water systems and their realization. ECTS: 4
Summary
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Water laws and organisation MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Dr. E. Mostert Dr. E. Mostert, room: 4.82, phone (015) 27 87800
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. E.G. Rothfusz, room: 4.75, phone (015) 27 81646 Lectures, exercise Based on how well the student has reached the educational goals, as shown, among others, by the self-study of a topic or issue selected by the student him- or herself. Water management in urban areas MSc-programme, semester 2.1 and 2.2 Dr.ir. F.H.M. van de Ven Dr.ir. F.H.M. van de Ven, room: 4.78, phone (015) 27 84673 Secretariat of the section Water Resources, Mrs. E.G. Rothfusz, room: 4.75, phone (015) 27 81646 Lectures, excursion Grade at oral exam. Master course on design and planning of the urban water management system. Water uxes and relevant processes in water and soil. Stormwater, surface water and groundwater drainage design (quantity and quality) in interrelation with subsidence and based on functional demands and standards. Stormwater inltration and building site preparation. Water wise spatial planning and urbanism. Water management policy development. ECTS: 4
CT5510 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
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CT5520 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Drinking water treatment 2 MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.ir. J.C. van Dijk / Ir. J.Q.J.C. Verberk / Ir. B. Heijman Ir. J.Q.J.C. Verberk, room: 4.61, phone (015) 27 81585
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures, exercise Average of the questions The course gives tools for the design of drinking water treatment processes. Subjects: theory treatment processes (micro- en ultra ltration, nanoltration and reverse osmosis, ion exchange) design of treatment train design aspects (hydraulics; lay-out/constructive design, operational aspects)
Wastewater treatment 2 MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.ir. J.H.J.M. van der Graaf Dr.ir. J. de Koning, room: 4.59, phone (015) 27 85274
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures, practical Exam: average of all questions Experiments: 80% reporting, 20% laboratory experiments Final mark: 3/4 exam, 1/4 experiments Special topics in the area of wastewater treatment.
Summary
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ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering, Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures. Introduction to basic principles including examples Final grade is grade for oral exam Hydrodynamic modelling; stench and corrosion; durable urban drainage; waste load models; intermittently used system components; rehabilitation and renovation of sewer systems, operation and maintenance, measuring and model calibration, organisation of and nancing sewer system operation.
Pumping stations and transport pipelines MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. J.H.G. Vreeburg
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Sanitary Engineering Mrs. M. Hubert, room: 4.55, phone (015) 27 83347 Lectures, discussion, exercise, computer supported studying (grade exercise + grade oral examination)/2 Water transport through pipes, pressure losses, (pressure) network design and building, pump selection, pumping stations, power supply, quantitative reliability, operation and maintenance. Civil engineering in developing countries BSc- and MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. M.W. Ertsen Ir. M.W. Ertsen, room: 4.71, phone (015) 27 87423 Discussion, lectures, exercise Based on working on exercises on project decision making and planning, the specic context of working abroad in general and in developing countries in particular is illustrated, with regard to socio-cultural aspects, planning and nancing of projects, roles of (consulting) engineers and contractors, local materials, techniques and knowledge and environmental issues. ECTS: 4
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Soil erosion and sedimentation in Civil Engineering MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Ir. H.R. Vermeulen / Prof.dr. J.D. Nieuwenhuis Ir. H.R. Vermeulen, room: 4.97, phone (015) 27 81903 Lectures, exercise Examination mark is nal mark
ECTS: 3
An introduction of types of erosion (water, wind) and sedimentation, their extent and nuisance to infrastructure and agricultural land is followed by an extensive discussion of causes, both natural and man induced. Description of erosion processes and quantitative modelling form a substantial part of the course. Assessment of sensitivity of the land surface for erosion, erosion hazards such as landslides and gullies and the quantication of amounts of eroded material and its transportation are addressed. The interaction of infrastructure and erosion/sedimentation is elaborated upon. Preventive and mitigating design measures conclude the course, which is accompanied by worked examples and a set of theoretical and computational assignments to the participants. These individual assignments form the basis of the oral examination.
Environmental impact assessment MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. P. van Eck / guest lecturers Ir. P. van Eck, room: 4.25, phone (015) 27 84813
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures, exercise, seminar Average of mark for examination (provided this is at least a 5.0!) and for essay
Environmental impact assessment (condensed version)
ECTS: 3
MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. P. van Eck Ir. P. van Eck, room: 4.25, phone (015) 27 84813 Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures, seminar, exercise
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Grading CT5730 Schedule Lecturer Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Mark for essay Spatial and transport economics MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Ir. P.M. Schrijnen / Drs. J.C van Ham Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Seminar, exercise 1/2 transport economics and 1/2 regional economics Interaction between spatial patterns and economic development. Sources of economic growth. Relations between infrastructure and economic and spatial developments. Regional-economic policies, national and international. Infrastructure planning as an economic instrument. Economic trade o in transport. Road pricing and congestion charging. Choice between use of own means of transport and use of professional transport, regarding freight and passengers. Competition between dierent modes of transport. Individual and social trade-os in transport decision making. Future developments. Trenchless technologies MSc-programme, semester 2.1 quest lecturers / Ir. G. Arends Secretariat of the section Geo-engineering, Mrs. M.E. de Graaf-de Groot, room: 2.08, phone (015) 27 81256 Lectures, paper Multidisciplinary course for Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering and Applied Earth Sciences. The course covers the use of trenchless technologies (drilling, tunneling, and renovation techniques). These techniques are widely and more and more used by installation and renovation of tunnel-, pipe- and cable systems for the small infrastructure (oil, gas, water, sewerage). The course oers basic theoretical and practical knowledge of the techniques and used materials. Legal administrative aspects and innovation will form an integral part of the course. ECTS: 3 ECTS: 4
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Planning: policy, methods and institutions MSc-programme, semester 2.1 Prof.ir. F.M. Sanders / Ir. P. van Eck
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures, seminar, case study, assignments Average of marks for the assignment and the exam National physical planning: changes in land use and their social and economic backgrounds, trends and actual issues, concepts and approaches, international dimension Land use / environmental / water management / infrastructure plans at national and regional level: planning objects / value / procedures, methods to make them
ECTS: 3
MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.dr.ir. P.H.L. Bovy / Dr.ir. R. van Nes Dr.ir. R. van Nes, room: 5.64, phone (015) 27 84033 Lectures, tutorial, exercise Modelling for multimodal travel analysis; advanced travel choice models and network assignment approaches; network design models, computational experience with modelling analysis; transport scenario analysis exercise; writing exercise report, writing critical essay on a scientic article on the subject.
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CT5803 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Rail trac management and delay propagation MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.dr.-ing. I.A. Hansen Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad, room: 4.05, phone (015) 27 84916
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. B. Kerkhof, room: 5.53, phone (015) 27 81681 Lectures(Oral) presentation 1/3 presentation, 2/3 examination Performance criteria of railway services; statistical analysis and modelling of train delays; probability distributions of train delays; propagation of delays in stations and networks; dynamic rail trac management.
Dynamic Trac Management II: Intelligent Transport Services MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr. H.J. van Zuylen
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures, case study, excursion The course presents how Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) can be used to improve the utilization of existing infrastructure and services. The monitoring and control of trac is discussed and the use of trac models to predict the impact of ITS.
CT5810 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
Trac Safety MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Ir. F. Wegman Ir. P.B.L. Wiggenraad, room: 4.05, phone (015) 27 84916
ECTS: 3
Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. B. Kerkhof, room: 5.53, phone (015) 27 81681 Seminar, paper, lectures Mean of the three marks for presentation, essay, and oral examination Principles of sustainable road networks. Behavioural aspects of safety in road design. Safety audit of design options. Quantitative analysis of trac safety. Impacts of safety measures. Safety plans.
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CT5820 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
ECTS: 3
Drs. E. de Boer / Prof.dr. K.A. Brookhuis / Prof.dr. H.J. van Zuylen / Dr.ir. J.F.M. Molenbroek Drs. E. de Boer, room: 4.24, phone (015) 27 84672 Secretariat of the section Transport & Planning, Mrs. Y. de Haan, room: 4.29, phone (015) 27 84915 Lectures Examination mark is nal mark Introduction into a number of human sciences and their applicability in the transport domain demonstrated in a number of practical applications Road construction MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. A.A.A. Molenaar / Ing. F.E.O. Keizer Ir. L.J.M. Houben, room: CT-II, phone (015) 27 84917 Secretariat of the section Road and Railway Engineering, Mrs. J. Barnhoorn, room: 1.18 - ST-I, phone (015) 27 85066 Fieldwork, lectures, exercise Mark for exercise (75%) plus mark for discussion (25%) Capita selecta railway and road structures MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. C. Esveld / Prof.dr.ir. A.A.A. Molenaar Secretariat of the section Road and Railway Engineering, Mrs. J. Barnhoorn, room: 1.18 - ST-I, phone (015) 27 85066 Lectures Mark for the essay This Capita Selecta course deals with recent developments within the eld of road and railway engineering. The course is partly given by guest lecturers and supported by eld trips, if applicable. ECTS: 4 ECTS: 3
CT5850 Schedule Lecturer Appointments Contact for students CourseType Grading CT5871 Schedule Lecturer Contact for students CourseType Grading Summary
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Functional design in Civil Engineering MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Ir. T.H.W. Horstmeier
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 Lectures, excursion, case study assignment Assesment of assignment, paper and oral presentation Theory of problem denition and problem solving for civil engineers. The accent is more on the problem denition phase. From the denition phase with the help of models towards value concepts and ideal solutions. From ideal concept to alternative solutions and the methods to create the best solutions. Tools to stimulate creativity in the design process.
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 lecture with computer support case studies simulation assignment Assessment of assignment, paper and oral presentation System Dynamics deals with dynamic non-linear feedback systems on a high level of aggregation in order to develop hypotheses and conceptual models for complex (civil engineering) systems. Simulation is used to test the concepts.
Grading Summary
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ECTS: 6
MSc-programme, semester 1.1 (or anything during the academic year by the approval of the course leader) Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti / Dr.ir. E. Dado Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti, room: 3.28, phone (015) 27 84893 Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 Exercise, tutorial The nal mark of the course will be an average mark of the process, the written reports of the exercise, the computer program and the public presentation of the product. The goal of this project is to allow a group of (preferably two) students to design and implement a system (ICT-tool) for mainly a civil engineering problem. This applied informatics exercise is also open to all TU Delft students of other disciplines. The goal of the exercise is to familiarise the students with practical aspects of system development, enabling them to employ ICT enabled tools whenever required for the purpose of their MSc Graduation thesis or during their professional work.
Summary
ECTS: 3
MSc-programme, semester 1.1, 1.2, 2.1 and 2.2 Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 Tutorial, case study, practical The goal of this course is to oer students the possibility of studying, building and using of information systems or database management systems or knowledge-based systems in the eld of civil engineering. The course is a combination of selfstudy, tutorials and exercise. The student is required to master the background knowledge for this course, depending on the subject chosen. The subject can also be chosen in conjunction with the graduation project. This is a tutorial course, tailored for an individual student or for a small group of 2-3 students.
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ECTS: 3
MSc-programme, semester 1.1, 1.2, 2.1 and 2.2 Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 Tutorial, practical, case study The goal of this course is to oer students the possibility of getting acquainted with advanced system modelling and model integration techniques, focused on the eld of civil engineering. The course is a combination of selfstudy, tutorials and exercise. The student is required to master the background knowledge for this course, depending on the subject chosen. The subject can also be chosen in conjunction with the graduation project. This is a tutorial course, tailored for an individual student or for a small group of 2-3 students.
Special subjects: graphic data analysis MSc-programme, semester 1.1 and 2.1 Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti / Dr.ir. E. Dado Dr.ir. M.R. Beheshti, room: 3.28, phone (015) 27 84893
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 Discussion, tutorial, selfstudy, research The nal mark of the course will be an average of the written report of the exercises and the oral examination.
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Forms of collaboration in civil engineering MSc-programme, semester 1.1 Prof.dr.ir. H.A.J. de Ridder / Ir. ing. J.P. Noppen Ir. T.H.W. Horstmeier, room: 3.48, phone (015) 27 84904
ECTS: 4
Secretariat of the section Design and Construction Processes, Mrs. O. van Paassen, room: 3.40, phone (015) 27 86636 Lectures Parties in the building industry can choose between various forms of collaboration and contract models. The dierent forms of collaborations are derived from the economic concepts such as value, price and cost. The course has a theoretical character but its contents is illustrated by means of practical examples by guest lecturers. The following forms of collaboration are dealt with: traditional contract, building team, general contracting and the families of Design & Construct. Discussed will be the contract-content with tasks, obligations, authorities, responsibilities, liabilities, systems of reimbursement and risk division. The following models of contract are discussed: design & construct, partnering, alliances, public private partnership, risk management, risk sharing and contracts that deal with the organization during building.
Oceanography and waves MSc programme, semester 1.1 and 1.2 Dr. J.D. Pietrzak, dr. A. Reniers, dr.ir. L.H. Holthuijsen
ECTS: 6
secretariat of OE, Mrs. J. Baan, room 2.86 , phone: (015) 27 84758 Lectures Oral quiz for rst part, written exams for CT4320 part an CT5316 Summary Physical oceanography and its related meteorology, nautical data, mathematical description of ocean waves (part of CT4320), generation of waves by wind (CT5316)
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Oshore Soil Mechanics MSc-programme, semester 1.2 Prof.dr.ir. F. Molenkamp / guest lectures Ir. J.P. Oostveen, room: 0.09, phone (015) 27 85423 Lectures, exercise
ECTS: 3
A grade is determined on the basis of a written examination. The exercises must be nished before this can take place. Successful participants can design oshore foundations at a superior knowledge level. This course makes this possible by extending ones basic knowledge of soil mechanics to include a number of typical oshore applications. Topics include: Axially and laterally loaded piles: linear and nonlinear behavior and computations, Shallow spread footings for large structures: linear and nonlinear behavior and computations, Inuences resulting from cyclic pore pressure in the sea bed. Field (at sea) and lab studies.
ECTS: 3
Mr. F.A.M. Hobma / Mr. E.T. Schutte-Postma / Mr.dr. W. Wijting / Mr. K.A.P.C. Wees Mr. K.A.P.C. Wees, room: Jaalaan 5, room C3.020, phone (015) 27 87269 secretariaat van de sectie Recht en Techniek, Jaalaan 5, room B4.120, phone (015) 27 84798 Lectures The lectures are taught in Dutch.The goal of this course is to provide an overview of relevant legal aspects regarding dierent types of transport, as well as the realization and operation of the transport infrastructure. This includes national and international law on topics as the legal implementation of transport infrastructure development, trac-regulations, regulation of transport services, contractual and statutory liability. Final aim is to obtain understanding of relevant legal issues concerning the various aspects of transport and transport infrastructure use.
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M S c - S T U DY G U I D E 2005/2006
Geology for Civil Engineers MSc-programme, semester 2.1 P.M. Maurenbrecher Lectures, exercise, practical
ECTS: 3
The Institution of Civil Engineers (UK) the oldest of all engineering institutions states as the objective of civil engineering To harness the forces of Nature for the benet of mankind. Geology studies the history of the creation of earth primarily by observation of the rock on the earths surface from which is deduced a historical record of the nature of the forces which formed the earth we know today. It is thus not surprising that the father of geology in the UK, William Smith, is a civil engineer. The course is an introduction to this fascinating discipline and is set up to benet the civil engineer to help him read geology maps (the rst were made by William Smith) and to read rocks.
Philosophy, Technology Assessment and Ethics for CT
ECTS: 4
MSc-programme, semester 2.2 Prof.dr.ir. P. Kroes Lectures Central to this course are abilities and knowledge of relevant backgrounds for recognizing, analysing and reasoning in a solution-oriented way about moral and societal problems that arise in the professional practice of engineers.
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F O R M O R E I N F O R M AT I O N : W W W. C I T G .T U D E L F T. N L / D O S