James Armstrong (engineer)

James Armstrong OBE,[1] FREng,[2] FIStructE, FICE, FGS, MASCE was a British structural engineer born in 1947 in Cumbria and died in 2010.[3][4][5]

James Armstrong
Born1926
Kirkandrews-on-Esk, Cumbria, England
Died2010
NationalityBritish
EducationUniversity of Glasgow
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
DisciplineStructural engineer
InstitutionsInstitution of Structural Engineers
Institution of Civil Engineers
Practice nameBDP

Early life and education

Armstrong was born in Cumbria in 1926 and read Civil engineering at the University of Glasgow.

Career

After graduating in 1946 Armstrong undertook engineering training in Scotland in design and site supervision. He became head of foundations and special structures at Soil Mechanics Ltd (liquidated 2019).[6]) In the early 1960s he joined Harris & Sutherland (part of Jacobs Group since 2004) working on a prestressed concrete buoyant foundation for a sugar store in Guiana and the parabolic roof structure of the Commonwealth Institute in London.[3] In 1963 he moved to BDP where he remained until he retired in 1989. He was head of civil and structural engineering and responsible for the Falklands airport, the Channel Tunnel terminal at Folkestone and gave expert evidence to Parliamentary Select Committees.[3]

Armstrong was chairman of the buildings committee of the Harris Manchester College, Oxford where he was an Honorary Fellow.[5] As a member of the Education Committee of the Royal Academy of Engineering he played a key role in setting up the Visiting Professors Group.[7][4] Armstrong was President of the Institution of Structural Engineers in 2009.

Awards and honours

  • OBE New Year Honours 1996 for services to engineering and education[1]
  • Visiting Professor Queen’s University Belfast, Kingston Polytechnic & the University of Leeds, Cooper Union College, New York[3]
  • Hon DEng Kingston University[8]

Selected publications

  • Design Matters: The Organisation and Principles of Engineering Design 2008[9]
gollark: It can also do 3-dimensional diagonals.
gollark: You can use the "rotate view" button, or just watch for that.
gollark: It's probably doing 3D stacky things.
gollark: That would be hard and also worse to use.
gollark: What? Why?

References

  1. "London Gazette 1995".
  2. "List of Fellows".
  3. "The President's Address 2009" (PDF).
  4. "The President 1989-90" (PDF).
  5. "Obituary" (PDF).
  6. "The Gazette 2019".
  7. "Royal Academy of Engineering Visiting Professors".
  8. "Redressing the balance in higher education" (PDF).
  9. Armstrong, James (2008). Design Matters: The Organisation and Principles of Engineering Design. Springer Science and Business Media. ISBN 978-1-84628-391-8.
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