About the author  ⁄ David Horos, P.E., S.E., LEED® AP

David Horos is a Principal in the Structural Engineering Studio at SOM and President of the NCSEA Board of Directors.

“The time has come for all good men to come to the aid of their country.”

This famous quote resides somewhere in my brain, and as I start my tenure as NCSEA President, it recently resurfaced. Not that it is applicable word for word. And in the current geopolitical environment, this phrase has much more serious connotations. But maybe substitute “profession” or “environment” for “country” and exchange “people” for “men.”  With those edits, this phrase seems to suit my mindset well.

Read More →
When I was a kid in the 70s, there was a children’s TV show called Zoom. I wouldn’t say I liked it too much, and it didn’t last too long. It was reintroduced in the 90s and, again, didn’t stick. For understandable reasons, I suppose, this past year has had me thinking about that show and how little I suspected the word zoom would reenter my life in such a big way. A series of new software to install, learn, and make sure they are compatible with my hardware. The need to run many programs (Zoom, Hangout, Teams, Webex, Goto, Bluejeans, Connect) interchangeably depending on hosts. And a series of terms introduced into our vocabulary (zoom fatigue, zoom etiquette, virtual background, etc.). And now common phrases, “Can you see my screen,” “Can you make me the cohost,” and “Can you turn on your cameras so we can see you?” The current question in my mind is, where will this lead us moving forward?
Read More →
The Timber Tower Research Project by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, LLP (SOM) was publically released in June of 2013, and is available for download at SOM’s website. The goal of the research project was to develop a structural system for tall buildings that uses mass timber as the main structural material and minimizes the embodied carbon footprint of the building.
Read More →
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP was an Outstanding Award Winner for the Lee Hall III project in the 2013 NCSEA Annual Excellence in Structural Engineering awards program (Category – New Buildings $10M to $30M).

The integration of form and structure is implicit in the earliest known definition of architecture – Vitruvius’ ideal of “firmness, commodity, and delight.” The design of Clemson University’s newest addition to their School of Architecture, Lee Hall III, is a case study in the contemporary application of this ageless idea in a space that aspires to instruct its design-oriented occupants every day.

Read More →
STRUCTURE magazine