14 November 2007, 5:00pm
PowerCivil is a comprehensive design solution offering engineers and designers a flexible 2D and 3D tool for all types of land development, site modeling, local road design and improvement projects, including junction design and remodeling. Just some of the projects PowerCivil can be used for are:
* Local road improvements - junctions and roundabouts
* Car parks, “pedestrianisation”, traffic calming or cycle lanes
* Residential, retail or brown field site development
* Commercial building, plant, and manufacturing sites
* Urban complexes, parks and golf courses
* Airports and rail terminals
* Dams, mines, and landfills
PowerCivil includes; full survey capability, digital terrain model creation, surface analysis, dynamic site modeling, road design and rehabilitation, drainage design and analysis, volume and quantity creation, plus plan preparation.
No CAD required!
Running stand-alone, including native support of DGN and DWG file formats, with high quality CAD tools built-in, intelligent, associative modeling allows you to handle virtually any type of civil engineering feature in an object-oriented context. PowerCivil also allows the creation 2D and 3D Adobe PDF's, and includes Google Earth integration for fast, simple communication and sharing of design information with your clients and customers.
Follow the URL below to register:
http://mailings.bentley.com/c.html
?rtr=on&s=7hw,vq1i,12fs,jomm,ixvb,3z0o,oal
Check the list of venues to find the closest to your office, where we will be demonstrating PowerCivil during January and February 2008.
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Each month we select a hot topic and a leading figure in the industry to write about it.What message are we sending to senior level decision makers about the importance and value of Spatial Data Infrastructure - SDI - if we keep misrepresenting what SDI is or is all about?
In previous editorials in this magazine I have touched on various SDI issues, especially now that the pan-European SDI has achieved a legally mandated status within the European Union's 27 Member States. Yet I fear that the Geographic Information community - or communities, for there are many - continue to… More…
Roger Longhorn