Industrial engineering applied to construction
Introduction
Construction engineering is a professional discipline that deals with the planning, construction and management of infrastructure such as roads, tunnels, bridges, airports, railways, facilities, buildings, dams, public services and other projects.
Civil engineering is a related field that deals more with the aspects most associated with the design and calculation of projects. Construction engineers learn some of the design aspects similar to civil engineers, but they delve into the site management aspects of the project and the strategy itself to be used to carry out the project (for example: construction sequence; auxiliary structures; risk analysis while the structure is half completed; considerations on scaffolding structures and their strength, slab and wall formwork supports; movement and lifting of large elements of the work).[1]
Educationally, civil engineering students focus primarily on design work that is more analytical, guiding them toward a career as design professionals. Basically, this requires them to take numerous engineering, calculus and design courses as part of earning an accredited 4-6 year degree depending on the country and university. The education of construction engineers focuses primarily on construction procedures, methods, costs, schedules, and personnel management. Their main concern is to deliver a project on time within budget and with the desired quality.
The difference between a construction engineer and a civil engineer is that construction engineering students take basic design courses and construction management courses.
Terminology
Origin of the term
The term "engineering" is borrowed from French, which in turn goes back to Latin (lat. ingenium) - mind, skill, ingenuity.
In history, initially, starting in the 19th century, military engineers were called engineers (see Bauingenieurwesen (civil engineering in German). This was due to the increasing specialization of military and mining engineering companies, which were later transformed into the Corps of Military Engineers. In Russia, under Peter I, a mining company was created in 1702, in 1704 - a pontoon team and in 1712 the engineer regiment military.[2].
The concept of "civil engineer" appeared in the century in Holland in relation to bridge and road builders[2] and distinguished them from military engineers. From this combination arose the term "civil engineering (construction)", currently common in many languages around the world. It is understood as a professional engineering discipline that deals with the design, construction and operation of construction projects. Then came (mostly in English) a host of similar terms related to other industries: nuclear engineering, genetic engineering, reengineering, stellar engineering, etc.