Publication library
EHA Magazine, volume 3, edition 2
This edition looks at the Towrang Bridge and Culverts, Avalon Airshow, the Lithgow Small Arms Factory and Museum, and a Melbourne Docklands cargo crane.
Acknowledgement of Country: a guide for the engineering profession
This guide has been developed to support the engineering profession in respectfully acknowledging country and Indigenous communities in a meaningful way. It encourages all to share the remarkable story of Indigenous engineering – both the very long lineage of Indigenous knowledge and engineering, along with the contribution of contemporary Indigenous engineers.
Contingency guideline
This guide provides a reference document for different practical approaches and guidance for determining, allocating and managing the most appropriate contingency (time and cost allowances) at different stages of the project and program lifecycle. It excludes escalation and its interaction with other uncertainties.
EHA Magazine, volume 3, edition 1
This edition explores the launch of EA Newcastle Divisions’ Oral History Collection, the Völklingen Ironworks in Germany, a foghorn in the Shetlands, the Steam Pumping Engine at Lake Boga, and more.
AMS-POL-02 Accreditation principles - COVID-19
EHA Magazine, volume 2, edition 9
This edition looks at Victoria’s Living Heritage Grants Program, the recovery of Edison Street Tubes in Brisbane, the Millewa “A” Pumping Station, and Western Australia’s Pilbara Heavy Haul Railways.
AMS-MAN-20 Accreditation criteria user guide for VET
AMS-MAN-21 Procedures manual for VET programs
EHA Magazine, volume 2, edition 8
This edition covers the public water supply in Sale, Brewarrina fish traps on the Barwon-Darling Rivers, the significance of windmills, Geelong’s Barwon Sewer Aqueduct, the Sarrans Hydro-Electric Dam in France, and more.
EHA Magazine, volume 2, edition 7
This edition explores engineering and industrial heritage in the US, the Railway Bridge over Eddy Avenue in Sydney and provides reflections on engineering in Vietnam.
AMS-STD-10 Accreditation standard for higher education
Guidelines for the Engineering Heritage Australia national engineering oral history program
The National Engineering Oral History Program aims to record for posterity in their own voice, the experiences, achievements and observations of significant engineers, provide resources to Division heritage units that may not otherwise be able to afford to undertake oral history, and establish an engineering oral history data base for researchers, biographers, historians, journalists and social scientists.
EHA Magazine, volume 2, edition 6
This edition includes the regeneration of Woolloomooloo Finger Wharf, a wartime journey — Stuart Highway Heritage Guide, the Point Nepean Quarantine Station, and mining for oil at Lakes Entrance.
Guide to engineering heritage recognition program
This guide details the Engineering Heritage Australia's Engineering Heritage Recognition Program.
The purpose of the program is to encourage conservation of Australian engineering heritage and to raise community awareness of engineering and the benefits it provides.
Professional performance: a user’s guide
This is an introduction to the application by Professional Engineers of the Performance Protocol, developed and implemented as part of the PPIR (Professional Performance Innovation and Risk) Program by the Warren Centre for Advanced Engineering.
EHA Magazine, volume 2, edition 5
This edition takes a look at the Murtoa Stick Shed, an American’s View of Australian engineering heritage, the case of two missing engineers, and the Woolloomooloo Finger Wharf.
Guidelines for responding to the effects of climate change in coastal and ocean engineering
This document updates previous climate change guidelines prepared by the National Committee on Coastal and Ocean Engineering and is designed to complement the coastal engineering guidelines for ecologically sustainable development and the climate change adaptation guidelines in coastal management and planning.
Coastal engineering guidelines for working with the Australian coast in an ecologically sustainable way
These guidelines have been developed by the National Committee on Coastal and Ocean Engineering. Following on from Guidelines for Responding to the Effects of Climate Change in Coastal and Ocean Engineering this publication aims at broader considerations regarding engineering in the coastal zone
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