Msc Infrastructure

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Msc Infrastructure

  • Objectives The MSc in Infrastructure aims to provide you with the technical knowledge and skills to develop the analytical, decision-making and critical powers required to solve Infrastructure problems, along with transferable skills to enable a leading career in Infrastructure provision, maintenance and management. This course is a specialized aspect of the MSc in Civil Engineering and includes a minimum of 100 credits in the area of infrastructure (buildings, bridges, roads, railways, etc.), management, and engineering analysis and design. The remaining 80 credits can be selected from Infrastructure-related subjects and other civil engineering subjects.
  • Academic title Msc Infrastructure
  • Course description Key facts

    -We have recently invested over £3.0 million into upgrading our facilities.
    -The quality of teaching in the School of Civil Engineering is rated ‘excellent’ by HEFCE and we received a rating of 5A in the most recent Research Assessment Exercise.
    -The Times Good University Guide ranked the School seventh in the UK 2007 League Table.
    -Two prestigious international league tables published for 2006/07 put Nottingham in the Top 10 of the best in Britain, in the Top 100 worldwide and Top 25 in Europe.
    -The School has extensive links with industrial sponsors and other organisations, locally, nationally and internationally
    -Our research is supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), UK industrial and commercial companies, UK government departments, charities and the European Union.

    Course Content
    The compulsory modules taken on this course are designed to give you a strong foundation in the skills and methodology necessary to successfully complete your research project over the summer period. These core modules are:

    -Research Preparation (autumn semester)
    -Research Project Organisation and Design (spring semester)

    All the compulsory modules (totalling 100 credits) must be taken in the area of infrastructure. This means that your research project must be related to this field rather than another aspect of Civil Engineering that you may study on the course.

    Typical modules on offer on this course currently include:

    -Construction Planning and Risk
    -Advanced Pavement Materials
    -Applied Construction Project Management
    -Traffic Engineering
    -Steel Structures
    -Railway Engineering

    Other optional modules currently offered include: 

    Autumn

    -Coastal and River Engineering
    -Construction Planning and Risk
    -Advanced Pavement Materials
    -Rail Transportation
    -Applied Computational Fluid Dynamics
    -Concrete Structures
    -Finite Element Analysis in Structural Mechanics
    -A maximum of one of the following level 3 modules: Steel Structures; Pavement Engineering; Geotechnical Engineering; or Geospatial Engineering 1.

    Spring

    -Construction Management Processes
    -Soil Mechanics
    -Concrete Technology
    -Applied Construction Project Management
    -Geology for Civil Engineers
    -Plates and Shells
    -Geospatial Engineering 2 (must have taken Geospatial Engineering 1 during the autumn semester)
    -Traffic Engineering
    -A maximum of one of the following level 3 modules: Environmental Geotechnology
    -Railway Engineering; or Sustainable Construction

    Please note that all module details are subject to change.

    Over the summer period, you will undertake a 60-credit research project on a subject of your choice relating to Infrastructure.

    The research project is a chance to carry out a major piece of independent research under the supervision of a suitable member of academic staff.

    Course Structure

    The MSc in Infrastructure is a full-time course, which you would take over 1 year commencing at the start of the autumn semester.

    The course is taught through a series of lectures, tutorials, projects and student-centred learning.

    You will be required to take 180 credits’ worth of modules, divided into three periods (Semester 1 in the autumn, Semester 2 in the spring and the summer period).

    60 credits’ worth of modules are studied in each of the periods. Semester 1 and Semester 2 each include 20 credits that are compulsory and 40 credits that can be chosen from a list of available modules.

    The summer period consists of one 60-credit compulsory module, the MSc Research Project.
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