Disaster Response
From site assessments to recovery work, civil engineers play a crucial role in disaster response, ensuring that communities build back safer and more resilient.
Ways to help / technical tools

The civil engineering world awoke Tuesday morning to the terrible news of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse in Baltimore.

Remotely operated small unoccupied aircraft systems can capture a host of details about a flood, including water level, velocity, and flow discharge, researchers have found.

In episode 152 of ASCE Plot Points, Craig Davis explains the eight elements of infrastructure system resilience and how practitioners can begin to employ this framework in their projects.

A new study examines how individuals’ perceived hazard risk awareness shapes their confidence in government agencies and nonprofit organizations.

About 160,000 buildings were damaged or destroyed in the recent earthquakes.



Join ASCE for the professional support and growth that you won't find anywhere else
ASCE gives you the best professional and technical resources.

We must advocate for the adoption and enforcement of best practices.

For Menzer Pehlivan, the echoes of the 1999 earthquake that shaped her life ring loudly this week.

Ray Bert reviews Michel Bruneau’s “The Blessings of Disaster.”

In episode 132 of ASCE Plot Points, Michel Bruneau discusses his new book, the “Three Little Pigs” fable, and why we must find blessings in disasters.

Civil engineers face many potentially dangerous situations, from working at height to being around moving vehicles. Keeping them safe is a critical job.