Architectural engineering, also known as building engineering, is the application of engineering principles and technology to building design and construction. Definitions of an architectural engineer may refer to:
- An engineer in the structural, mechanical, electrical, construction or other engineering fields of building design and construction.
- A licensed engineering professional in parts of the United States.
- In informal contexts, and formally in some places, a professional synonymous with or similar to an architect.
Engineering for building
Structural engineering
Structural engineering involves
the analysis and design of physical objects (buildings, bridges, equipment
supports, towers and walls). Those concentrating on buildings are responsible
for the structural performance of a large part of the built environment and
are, sometimes, informally referred to as "building engineers".
Structural engineers require expertise in strength
of materials and in the seismic design of structures covered by earthquake
engineering.
Architectural Engineers sometimes practice structural as one aspect of their
designs; the structural discipline when practiced as a specialty works closely
with architects and other engineering specialists.
Mechanical, electrical, and plumbing (MEP)
Mechanical
engineering and electrical
engineering engineers
are specialists, commonly referred to as "MEP"
(mechanical, electrical, and plumbing)
when engaged in the building design fields. Also known as "building
services engineering"
in the United
Kingdom, Canada,
and Australia. Mechanical engineers often design and
oversee the heating, ventilation and air conditioning
(HVAC), plumbing, and rain gutter systems. Plumbing designers often
include design specifications for simple active
fire protection systems,
but for more complicated projects, fire
protection engineers are
often separately retained. Electrical engineers are responsible for the
building's power
distribution, telecommunication, fire alarm, signalization, lightning
protection and control systems, as well as lighting
systems.
The architectural engineer (PE) in the United States
In many jurisdictions of the
United States, the architectural engineer is a licensed engineering professional. Usually a graduate of an architectural
engineering university program preparing students to perform whole-building
design in competition with architect-engineer teams; or for practice in one of
structural, mechanical or electrical fields of building design, but with an
appreciation of integrated architectural requirements.Formal architectural engineering education, following the engineering model of earlier disciplines, developed in the late 19th century, and became widespread in the United States by the mid-20th century. With the establishment of a specific "architectural engineering" NCEES Professional Engineering registration examination in the 1990s, and first offering in April 2003, architectural engineering became recognized as a distinct engineering discipline in the United States. Architectural engineers are not entitled to practice architecture unless they are also licensed as architects.
The architect as architectural engineer
In some countries architecture, as a profession providing architectural services, is sometimes referred to as "architectural engineering". In others, such as in Japan, the terms "architecture" and "building engineering" are used synonymously. The practice of architecture includes the planning, designing and overseeing the building's construction.
In some languages, such as Korean and Arabic, "architect" is literally translated as "architectural engineer". In some countries, an "architectural engineer" (such as the ingegnere edile in Italy) is entitled to practice architecture and is often referred to as an architect. These individuals are often also structural engineers. In other countries, such as Germany, Austria, Iran, and most of the Arabic countries, architecture graduates receive an engineering degree (Dipl.-Ing. – Diplom-Ingenieur).
In Brazil, architects and engineers used to share the same accreditation process (CONFEA – Federal Council of Engineering, Architecture and Agronomy). Now the Brazilian architects and urbanists have their own accreditation process (CAU – Architecture and Urbanism Council). Besides traditional architecture design training, Brazilian architecture courses also offer complementary training in engineering disciplines such as structural, electrical, hydraulic and mechanical engineering. After graduation, architects can be fully responsible for design and construction in these areas (except in electric wiring, where the architect autonomy is limited to systems up to 30kVA), applied to buildings, urban environment, built cultural heritage, landscape planning, interiorscape planning and regional planning.
In Greece licensed architectural engineers are graduates from architecture faculties that belong to the Polytechnic University, obtaining an "Engineering Diploma". They graduate after 5 years of studies and are fully entitled architects once they become members of the Technical Chamber of Greece (Τεχνικό Επιμελητήριο Ελλάδος). The Engineering Diploma equals a Master's Degree in ECTS units (300) according to the Bologna Accords.
Education
The architectural, structural, mechanical and electrical engineering branches each have well established educational requirements that are usually fulfilled by completion of a university program.
An air handling unit is used for the heating and cooling of air in a central location. Bringing together knowledge of acoustic engineering and HVAC is one example of the multi-disciplined nature of architectural engineering
Architectural engineering as a single integrated field of
study
What differentiates architectural engineering as a separate and single, integrated field of study, compared to other engineering disciplines, is its multi-disciplinary engineering approach. Through training in and appreciation of architecture, the field seeks integration of building systems within its overall building design. Architectural engineering includes the design of building systems including heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC), plumbing, fire protection, electrical, lighting, architectural acoustics, and structural systems. In some university programs, students are required to concentrate on one of the systems; in others, they can receive a generalist architectural or building engineering degree.
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