Eurocodes are a set of
harmonized technical rules developed by the European Committee for
Standardisation for the structural design of construction works in the European
Union.
The purposes of the Eurocodes are:
- a means to prove compliance with the requirements for mechanical strength and stability and safety in case of fire established by European Union law.
- a basis for construction and engineering contract specifications.
- a framework for creating harmonized technical specifications for building products (CE mark).
By March 2010 the Eurocodes are
mandatory for the specification of European public works and are intended to
become the de facto standard for the private sector. The Eurocodes therefore
replace the existing national building
codes published by national standard bodies (e.g. BS 5950),
although many countries had a period of co-existence. Additionally, each
country is expected to issue a National Annex to the Eurocodes which will need
referencing for a particular country (e.g. The UK National Annex). At present
take up of Eurocodes is slow on private sector projects and existing national
codes are still widely used by engineers.
List
The Eurocodes are published as a
separate European Standards, each having a number of parts. By 2002, ten
sections have been developed and published:
- EN 1990: Basis of structural design
- EN 1991: (Eurocode 1) Actions on structures
- EN 1992: (Eurocode 2) Design of concrete structures
- EN 1993: (Eurocode 3) Design of steel structures
- EN 1994: (Eurocode 4) Design of composite steel and concrete structures
- EN 1995: (Eurocode 5) Design of timber structures
- EN 1996: (Eurocode 6) Design of masonry structures
- EN 1997: (Eurocode 7) Geotechnical design
- EN 1998: (Eurocode 8) Design of structures for earthquake resistance
- EN 1999: (Eurocode 9) Design of aluminium structures
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