Want a civil engineering job? Three career decisions you have to make

rameshchandrapatel

Active Member
If you are on a civil engineering or structural engineering degree course, you have an abundance of career choices available to you. If you don’t think civil engineering is for you, you are able to apply for a range of general engineering graduate schemes, join a closely related profession such as transport planning or go into such professions as investment banking and accountancy and financial management.

When you are applying for civil or structural engineering jobs, you are likely to apply for a role or graduate scheme in a particular specialism or industry (see below for an outline of the main specialisms). Larger employers usually hire graduates into a specialist division or business, while smaller organisations often focus on one or two specialisms in total. Whichever sector you choose, however, the nature of the job will differ depending on the type of employer you work for. We outline some of the decisions you’ll have to make – and hopefully make them easier for you.

Decision one: working on designs or on site?

Most civil and structural engineers work for either a consultancy or a contractor.
  • Consultants are involved with a project from the outset and work closely with the client, often managing the project on their behalf. Civil and structural engineers at consultancies are responsible for designing structures. Once building begins they help to resolve any design-related difficulties but, apart from the occasional visit to the site, are largely office-based.
  • Contractors, meanwhile, actually build the project once the designs are finalised. They may contract out some work to specialist subcontractors, but they are responsible for the construction process and based on site. Civil and structural engineers at contractors manage teams and oversee the implementation of designs.
Starting out at a consultancy, you might assist with designs or gather data under the supervision of a team leader. Working for a contractor, you would start out by managing a small section of the project or ‘package’ on site. Recruiters will expect you to know the difference between consultancies and contractors and have considered reasons for applying to their type of organisation.

There are also some graduate jobs with very specialist contractors. For example, in coastal and marine, there are companies specialising in dredging and reclamation, off-shore installations and specialist shipping.
In some industry sectors, including water and rail, you can work for client organisations (such as Network Rail, a water supply company or a local authority). Depending on the organisation, you might be in a design-based, maintenance-based or project management role.

Decision two: which industry?

The main industries or specialisms you could work in are:
  • Airports: Typical projects involve modifying existing airports, including the runways and taxiways (‘airside infrastructure’), maintenance and cargo facilities (‘airside support services’), and terminal buildings.
  • Bridges: Engineers need a strong understanding of structural engineering and the ability to work closely with highways, geotechnical, railway and environmental engineers. In addition to contractors and consultants, specialist structural organisations are involved in the superstructure design. Geotechnical engineers advise on the substructure and foundations. Specialist subcontractors and suppliers focus on areas such as bearings or post-tensioning. Typical clients include the Highways Agency, Network Rail and local authorities.
  • Buildings: Sustainability is often a key consideration. Civil engineers work with building services engineers and other specialists to ensure buildings are designed with climate change in mind and to meet ever-evolving regulations.
  • Coastal and marine: Projects focus on protecting coastal communities against rising sea levels and erosion using sea defences – both hard defences, constructed from concrete, for example, and soft defences, which involve man-made or reconstructed beaches. Engineers may also be involved in building and maintaining ports, offshore wind farms and structures to harness tidal energy.
  • Energy and power: Engineers design and build the infrastructure needed to create energy. Graduates could work on projects such as the designs for an offshore wind facility, the maintenance of an oil platform or the decommissioning of an old nuclear power plant.
  • Environmental: Engineers can become environmental consultants, a role in which they will ascertain and then reduce the impacts of a proposed project on the environment. They can specialise in specific areas, such as flood risk.
  • Geotechnical: In this specialist area, engineers are responsible for the foundations of structures. They assess field data about the ground, soil, rock and boreholes, and find ways to make sure that foundations or slopes are safe and stable. They could specialise in completing site investigations, designing foundations or overseeing the on-site construction work. Specialist postgraduate study is often advantageous.
  • Highways: This job involves overseeing temporary works and permanent works and finding ways to ease traffic congestion, lessen environmental impact and improve road safety.
  • Offshore: This sector is concerned with the safe and profitable development of hydrocarbon resources. Engineers undertake the design and installation of oil production platforms, sub-sea structures, pipelines, permanent and temporary anchorages, and assessments of seabed stability. This can involve conceptual and feasibility studies, site assessments, design of foundations and structures, installation supervision and operational management. Projects can be in isolated locations.
  • Rail: Engineers use their technical knowledge to design, build and maintain the railway system’s infrastructure, including tracks, earthworks and drainage, and telecoms and power. Cost is a particular consideration for engineers in this sector.
  • Tunnelling: This area chiefly calls on specialist structural and geotechnical knowledge but can also involve many elements of underground engineering – rock tunnels, shafts, caverns and stations, for example, may come under the remit of a tunnelling engineer. Engineers also take decisions on a project’s viability in terms of safety, location and cost, and ensure it has a limited impact on the environment and any buildings nearby.
  • Water and public health: The ultimate objective of these projects is to provide clean drinking water and treat wastewater. Engineers might be involved in implementing sustainable water drainage systems, creating energy-efficient treatment plants or improving infrastructure to prevent urban flooding.
But it’s worth noting that the number of graduate jobs in each field varies each year. As engineering employers only hire into areas where they have a pipeline of projects in place, you may well find more vacancies in areas that are less dependent upon economic growth. These include infrastructure (bridges, highways, rail and so on), the energy sectors, water and public health. However, it’s worth investigating how individual employers are performing in different specialisms; even parts of the industry that are suffering overall may have a handful of firms that are growing and need engineers.

Decision three: which modules?

Your chosen degree module or final year thesis can boost your chances of getting hired into a particular engineering specialisation. While civil engineering employers are generally willing to hire across engineering disciplines, they may only recruit graduates with specific degree modules to fill certain specialised roles.

Even though this situation may not be a make-or-break one in the long run, it’s worth giving some thought to if you are still studying. For instance, if you’re sure that you want to go into bridge engineering in the future, then you’ll want to pick up modules in areas such as structural or geotechnical engineering.

Taking the right modules isn’t just about equipping yourself with the necessary technical knowledge, though. From an employer’s standpoint, your choice of modules also showcases how interested you really are in the field you’re applying for.