Civil engineers design and supervise the construction
of roads, buildings, airports, tunnels, dams, bridges and water supply and sewage
systems. Civil engineering, one of the oldest engineering disciplines, encompasses
many specialties. The major specialties within civil engineering are structural,
water resources, environmental, construction, transportation and geotechnical
engineering.
Many civil engineers hold supervisory or administrative
positions, from supervisor of a construction site to city engineer. Others work
in design, construction, research and teaching.
Civil engineers usually work near major industrial
and commercial centers, often at construction sites. Some projects are situated
in remote areas or in foreign countries. In some jobs, civil engineers move
from place to place to work on different projects.
Job outlook
Employment of civil engineers is expected to increase
about as fast as the average for all occupations through 2010. Spurred by general
population growth and an expanding economy, more civil engineers will be needed
to design and construct higher capacity transportation, water supply, pollution
control systems, and large buildings and building complexes. They will be needed
to repair or replace existing roads, bridges and other public structures. There
may be additional opportunities within non-civil engineering firms, such as
management consulting or computer services firms. In addition to job growth,
openings will result from the need to replace civil engineers that transfer
to other occupations or leave the labor force.
Because construction and related industries-including
those providing design services-employ many civil engineers, employment opportunities
will vary by geographic area and may decrease during economic slowdowns, when
construction often is curtailed.
Earnings
Civil engineers held about 232,000 jobs in 2000.
Firms providing engineering consulting services, primarily developing designs
for new construction projects, employed a little over half the civil engineers.
Almost one-third of the jobs worked in federal, state and local government agencies.
The construction and manufacturing industries accounted for most of the remaining
employment. About 12,000 civil engineers were self-employed, many as consultants.
Median annual earnings of civil engineers were $55,740
in 2000. Median annual earnings in the industries employing the largest numbers
of civil engineers in 2000 were:
Federal government $63,530
Heavy construction, except highway 62,010
Local government 56,830
State government 54,630
Engineering and architectural services 54,550
According to a 2001 salary survey by the National
Association of Colleges and Employers, bachelor's degree candidates in civil
engineering received starting offers averaging $40,616 a year, master's degree
candidates received an average offer of $44,080, and Ph.D. candidates were offered
$62,280 as an initial salary.