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Transportation engineering encompasses the planning, design, construction, operation, and upkeep of major transportation infrastructure, including highways, airports, railroads, ports, pipelines, and public transit. Civil engineers are responsible for creating, constructing, and overseeing the systems that facilitate the movement of people and goods.
At the University of Virginia, undergraduate transportation engineering courses cover geometric and pavement design, road user and vehicle traits, traffic analysis, and urban transportation planning. Computer techniques are integrated and utilized across various transportation scenarios. Supporting coursework includes probability, statistics, and systems engineering, offering a solid foundation in the methods for analyzing and designing transportation systems.
Transportation engineering is divided into two primary areas: technology and planning. Technology plays a key role in comprehending system functionality, forecasting performance and expenses, and exploring options through infrastructure investments and operational adjustments. Planning approaches are essential for long-term strategies and immediate system challenges, like energy scarcity and pollution. Future prospects in transportation engineering look very promising, with graduates finding roles in government bodies, private firms, railroads, shipping companies, or consulting firms. The University of Virginia's program is adaptable, equipping students for diverse career paths. Civil Engineering is the most extensive engineering field, applying science and technology to the planning, design, analysis, construction, operation, and maintenance of infrastructure and the natural world. Civil engineers are the builders of contemporary society and environmental stewards. The civil engineering curriculum highlights the intricate connections between infrastructure, societal systems, and the environment. We educate civil engineers to sustainably and fairly design, manage, and build infrastructure, innovate with advanced materials, and leverage digital and virtual tools. Civil infrastructure is varied, comprising subsystems like stormwater and drinking water networks, waste management, neighborhoods, highways, railways, skyscrapers, and bridges. We foster the ability to foresee how alterations in one subsystem can impact others and, ultimately, the environment, energy systems, communities, and quality of life.