GIS in Civil Engineering
There are few fields that have been untouched by modern software applications, and civil engineering is no exception. The field of civil engineering has always relied on incorporating multiple different pieces of information, from land surveys to maps showing various urban features. One of the roles of the civil engineer is to bring together various pieces of information that are relevant to a problem, so that an effective solution can be found. One example might be the design of a new subway line, which would require highly-detailed mapping of the underground environment. In the past, a civil engineer would need to consult a number of different maps -- showing underground geology, gas lines, power lines, water pipes, sewer pipes, basements, etc., in order to assist with the project. This would have been a complex task, and the information might be in a number of different places. The civil engineer would then need to overlay the different maps manually, a complex process that has a not-insignificant risk of error. The advent of modern geographic information systems (GIS) has made this task much easier, and such systems have become the norm in the profession.
What is missing in many cases, however, is education with respect to GIS at the educational level. Students in civil engineering programs may nor may not be exposed to GIS. If they are, they might only be exposed to older programs, or in a cursory way. This paper examines the role of GIS education in civil engineering courses, and in particular the literature regarding the integration of such material into civil engineering education, and the value that such material would have to the profession.
Discussion
The 1990s were really the dawn of the use of GIS in civil engineering. New applications, increased computing power and the arrival of the Internet all contributed to an environment where more information was available in digital form, and civil engineers began to incorporate GIS applications into their work as the result of this. As early as 1998, there were calls for the integration of GIS into civil engineering education (Easa, Li & Shi, 1998). These authors argued at the time that computers had advanced enough in terms of their usefulness to the field that they should be used in education. To do so would allow civil engineering schools to graduate students more capable of making an immediate contribution to the field. At the time, GIS education in schools was nascent. Some schools were beginning to offer courses, but the authors were arguing that the role of GIS was going to be increasingly important so that education in GIS should be an integral component of different programs, more than was the case at most schools at the time.
One of the interesting dimensions in the late 1990s was the idea that CAD and GIS could be used together Where the GIS data would provide the civil engineer with an overview of multiple different maps that could be layered, working with CAD as well allowed for the layered maps to be used to assist with the design (Bodamer, 1999). This was something that civil engineers had been doing manually until the 90s, but by the late 90s it was possible to integrate CAD and GIS. Bodamer (1999) noted that there were several advantages to doing this -- more sophisticated designs, better analyses, and it would be easier to overcome scheduling and design challenges. A combination of software that would do all this would be standard in the profession and of course there was the embedded assumption that such programs would only become more sophisticated, and thus more useful, over time. Bodamer (1999) specifically predicted that the compartmentalization of data so common in civil engineering was soon to be eliminated, thus making the case for the inclusion of GIS in civil engineering education, as clearly it would soon be standard in the industry and all new graduates would benefit from having an education on GIS.
Over the 2000s, GIS was increasingly incorporated into the curriculum at civil engineering schools. The students began to focus on the best ways to integrate these course into the programs. One study looked at the effectiveness of running tutorials to help students to better understand the concepts. The principle is that running this tutorial would help students get a baseline level of knowledge about GIS, learn it at their own pace, and feel more confident in their abilities. Feedback from students is important to developing...
Ibraheem, A., Hassan, H. & Al-Husain, M. (2012). Integrating ACAD with GIS for civil engineering applications. Journal of Software Engineering and Applications. Vol. 5 (2012) 138-146. This paper examines the integration of AutoCAD with geographic information systems. The author provides an overview of GIS as a set of intelligent maps, and the authors are examining the possibility of using AutoCAD to design these. There are significant differences between GIS and CAD,
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