Eugene Figg

Eugene C. Figg (August 4, 1936 – March 20, 2002) was an American structural engineer who made numerous contributions to the field of structural engineering, especially in the design of the cable-stayed bridge and the use of the segmental concrete construction method.[1][2]

Life

Figg was born August 4, 1936 in Charleston, South Carolina. He received a civil engineering degree as a structural engineer from The Citadel in Charleston in 1958.[3][4]

During his career, he brought the use of the segmental method for spanning large gaps to the United States with the assistance of his Paris-based partner, Jean M. Muller.[5] His affiliation with Muller, begun at Figg and Muller Engineers (founded in 1978),[6][7] allowed him to gain valuable insight into the application of pre-cast segmental bridge construction methods to the domestic market. When they coupled this construction method with cable-stayed supports, Mueller and Figg effectively increased the use of concrete in longer span bridge proposals.[8]

He formed his own engineering firm, the Figg Engineering Group, still operating and based in Tallahassee.[4] Figg also founded the American Segmental Bridge Institute in 1989, and served four years as a trustee at the National Building Museum.

Awards

In 2000, Figg was honored with the John A. Roebling Medal for his outstanding lifetime achievement in bridge engineering.[9]

Famous bridges

gollark: Personally, I prefer the general thing of "having types" to "basically being strings".
gollark: Your complaints mostly seem to be that the rules for quoting or not quoting are not obvious to non-programmers, but I figure that service files are mostly written by people with some technical skill.
gollark: > tomlyes.
gollark: Although it would be nice if it could forward logs of stdout/err off to something.
gollark: You probably could have the basic "service manager" stuff done by a simple program which just reads TOML files from a directory, builds dependency graphs, and starts things, and that would be okay too.

See also

References

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.