History & Heritage
Look around and you'll see the achievements of civil engineers everywhere. How did they come to be? What are the greatest examples of these? Who made them possible? Explore civil engineering's deep and rich history and heritage.
Since 1969, ASCE, the National Park Service, and the Library of Congress have been members of an agreement to preserve and document outstanding works of engineering, industry, and technological processes through what is called the Historic American Engineering Record.
The work will replace the bridge’s sway cables, hangers, and suspension cables.
Washington, D.C., to untangle a dangerous intersection.
Michael O’Connor's research into a photograph from the ASCE 1888 Convention sheds new light on the Society's history.
The decision by the international cultural organization raises larger questions about how to balance new development with historic preservation.
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The state’s historic tax credit is expected to promote more affordable housing and improve the resilience of historic structures in general within the state.
How the events of Sept. 11, 2001, unfolded.
The Pentagon was a design marvel that has stood firm through a turbulent century.
The Pennsylvania Turnpike was designated an ASCE landmark in 1988.
Reuben Hull's Civil Engineering Almanac travels back to the day civil engineer Avery Brundage begins his term on the IOC.