Civil Engineering
City University London has been teaching students the skills required by aspiring chartered civil engineers for more than 50 years. Our graduates are sought by the leading UK consultants and contractors and most choose to enter the civil engineering profession.
Civil engineers design, construct, manage and improve our environment. They develop our infrastructure and have a profound effect on the way we live through consideration of function, aesthetics, economics and sustainability.
For full details of our undergraduate courses click on the links below:
- BEng Civil Engineering
- MEng Civil Engineering
- BEng Civil Engineering with Surveying
- MEng Civil Engineering with Surveying
- BEng/MEng Civil Engineering with Architecture
For details of our civil engineering courses at postgraduate level, click on the relevant box on the right hand side.
Rewarding Academic Excellence
Supporting you in your studies, City University London is offering Scholarships of up to £3,000 per year to UK and EU undergraduate students achieving AAB or above at A-level. Find out more here.
Why Study at City?
- All courses are accredited by the Joint Board of Moderators, which includes the Institution of Civil Engineers and the Institution of Structural Engineers.
- Design projects are integral parts of the course and are supported by practising engineers. Practising engineers also provide specialist lectures on a wide range of topics at all stages of the course.
- The Civil Engineering with Architecture course allows students who want to train as chartered civil engineers to develop skills that will enable them to contribute more to the conceptual and creative aspects of design.
- Launched in 2002, our Open Door to Industry scheme is unique and available only to City University civil engineering undergraduates.It is a web based system primarily used to match small groups of students (4 or less per group) to opportunities for site and office visits.
- Laboratory experiments are used throughout the courses to consolidate and illustrate the material taught in lectures.There is a large laboratory devoted entirely to undergraduate experiments.