Skip to main content

Engineering Our World

MOREY MILBRADT/GETTY IMAGES

Have you traveled on a road? Have you sipped water from a fountain? You can thank a civil engineer. Engineers design and create things. Civil engineers create on systems that help our towns and cities run. They work on things we can see, like roads. They also work on things we don’t see, like underground pipes. TIME for Kids spoke with three civil engineers. Read on to find out how they help our communities.

On the Move

COURTESY YUNG KOPROWSKI

Roads don’t appear by magic. Neither do sidewalks or bike lanes. These things are carefully designed. Engineers are the people behind planning them.

YUNG KOPROWSKI is a transportation transportation DOUCETPH/GETTY IMAGES a way of moving people or things from one place to another (noun) We traveled through the city using public transportation, such as the bus and subway. engineer. She works in the Phoenix, Arizona, area. She creates new ways for people to get around. She fixes old transportation systems, too. “We make it safer and easier for people to travel to the places where they live, work, and play,” Koprowski says.

Transportation engineers have a lot to think about. They think about road signs, markings, and more. Problem-solving is a big part of the job. Math and science skills are important, too. Koprowski has advice for future engineers. “Don’t stop trying,” she says.

Trailblazer

COURTESY JAY BRANNON

Meet JAY BRANNON. She is an environmental engineer. She oversees the building of public water systems. This means she works on pipes that move water underground. Brannon works with designers, geologists, architects, and others.

Brannon is based in Portland, Oregon. She led an important project there. She helped rebuild a water pipe under a hiking trail. The pipe carries stormwater underground. This keeps the water from washing away the trail.

Brannon is a woman of color. In engineering, this comes with many challenges. “There are not many of us, so it can be frustrating,” she says. But Brannon hopes to inspire more people of color to go into engineering. She is working on a textbook about the topic. “Representation representation DENNIS MACDONALD/ GETTY IMAGES a person or group that stands for a bigger group (noun) Each state's representation in the government is based on the number of people who live in that state. is really important,” she says.

Master Builder

CHRIS CORSMEIER/LADWP

As a kid, RUWANKA PURASINGHE knew about engineering. “But I wasn’t sure I wanted to do 
that with the rest of my life,” he says. Then he traveled to Rome, Italy. He saw an ancient aqueduct system there. An aqueduct is a structure that carries water. The one he saw is still being used today. The experience had an impact impact TIM HALL/GETTY IMAGES the force created when one thing hits another thing (noun) The book's impact on Susan was that it inspired her to become a writer. on Purasinghe. “It really opened my eyes,” he says.

Now Purasinghe is a geotechnical engineer. He works in Los Angeles, California. He solves problems with the water supply. He uses pipes and water tanks to do so. This work is extra important when the city has a drought drought DEB PERRY/GETTY IMAGES a long period of time when there is no rain (noun) During the drought, many of the flowers in our garden died. .

“Engineers have been solving problems for thousands of years,” Purasinghe says. “I enjoy thinking of ways to help future generations.”