In the second of our birthday / lockdown triple bill…
I have a conversation with Beth Williams, who is a ‘Structural Engineer + Certified PassivHaus Designer. Passionate about diversity in construction, timber engineering and efficient, humble design’
BETH WILLIAMS
MEng (Hons), CEng MICE
Beth graduated from the University of Sheffield in 2011 having studied Structural Engineering and Architecture.
Beth has worked in architectural and engineering practices in Sheffield, Gloucestershire and now Bristol, working on projects ranging from domestic extensions to new build sports halls and high security NHS facilities. Now a Chartered Engineer, Beth specialises in timber engineering and low-energy construction.
Beth is a Certified PassivHaus Designer and Local Group Leader for the AECB, and is passionate about making low-energy building available to all.
(Bio from https://buildcollective.co.uk/about-us)
In this episode we discuss:
- What does a Structural Engineer actually do?
- What effect on sustainability a structural engineer can have
- The lack of education that structural engineers get in sustainability issues
- Getting the best out of your structural engineer
- Builders Vs Structural engineers
- Timber in engineering
- Diversity in construction
- Her own retrofit project
Massive thanks to Beth for making the time to talk to me, it was great (and I now feel like I understand the structural engineers’ perspective much better!
Episode 14 links
- https://twitter.com/BethWilliamsSE
- https://buildcollective.co.uk/
- https://www.aecb.net/
- Royal Academy of Engineering – Diversity toolkit
- Royal Academy of Engineering – Diversity reports
- https://passivehouse-database.org
- https://www.aecb.net/low-energy-buildings-database/
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Hi, I’m wondering if there are any engineers looking at roads and transport from an ecological point of view – anyone know?