Calling all Canadian civil engineering graduates and practitioners, if you are a Canadian citizen or permanent resident interested in structural timber engineering, we are now offering a UNBC Master of Engineering Award for you. https://t.co/aPxjDd8K1q
Calling all Canadian civil engineering graduates and practitioners, if you are a Canadian citizen or permanent resident interested in structural timber engineering, we are now offering a UNBC Master of Engineering Award for you. https://t.co/aPxjDd8K1q
The latest #THEunirankings are out, and UNBC has placed among the top 600 universities in the world for the Social Sciences!
The ranking uses the same methodology as the World University Rankings, but with less weight given to citations & more to research & teaching. #ThisIsUNBC
In the face of climate change, the push for building with mass timber has never been more significant. Read all about why our infrastructure should invest in tall timber buildings. https://t.co/lDh5UW4g7N
What a great experience #TEDxUNBC! Thank you all great speakers for enlightening us with your ideas and a special thanks to Dr. Guido Wimmers, for sharing his perspective regarding other methods of construction more energy efficient and environmental friendly.
Waugh Thistleton installs modular three-storey maze in V&A's Sackler Courtyard https://t.co/nFHaV58mRG via @dezeen Serious innovation: hardwood (Tulipwood) CLT - very strong, thin panels that also are light in weight with demountable connections.
“These heavy timber buildings are not the wood structures of our forefathers but a new breed that predominantly uses young wood harvested from premature trees that are milled and laminated together using either adhesives, nails, or hardwood dowels.” https://t.co/UOBUFCC8Tu