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In April and May, Civil Engineering published online a “Special Coverage: COVID-19” series of articles that focused on how civil engineers quickly responded to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Three of those articles dealt with how designers approached the call from cities and their health-care providers to rapidly expand the number of hospital beds available for patients. Luckily, fewer of those extra beds were required than initially feared, but the experience offered many lessons on how to create or repurpose structures swiftly to meet the immediate needs of communities in crisis. This feature excerpts those articles.
In April and May, Civil Engineering published online a “Special Coverage: COVID-19” series of articles that focused on how civil engineers quickly responded to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Three of those articles dealt with how designers approached the call from cities and their health-care providers to rapidly expand the number of hospital beds available for patients. Luckily, fewer of those extra beds were required than initially feared, but the experience offered many lessons on how to create or repurpose structures swiftly to meet the immediate needs of communities in crisis. This feature excerpts those articles.
Swift Support
Witcher, T.R. (Autor:in)
Civil Engineering Magazine Archive ; 90 ; 76-79
01.01.2021
42020-01-01 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
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Swift rolling of roof sheeting
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