ETABS
Awarded the “Top Seismic Product of the 20th Century” by ATC
& ENR
On
April 17, 2006 at a black-tie gala in San Francisco, CA, the Applied Technology
Council (ATC) and Engineering News Record (ENR) honored Computers and
Structures’ ETABS software as one of the “Top Seismic Products
of the 20th Century.” Selected by an independent ATC-commissioned
jury, the awards were presented in conjunction with the “100th Anniversary
Earthquake Conference Commemorating the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake.”
ETABS
was the first program to take into account the unique properties inherent
in a mathematical model of a building, allowing a computer representation
to be constructed in the same fashion as a real building: floor by floor,
story by story. ETABS uses terminology familiar to the building designer
such as columns, beams, braces and walls rather than nodes and finite
elements.
In
announcing the selection, the award jury had this to say about ETABS:
“Developed by Professor Ed Wilson of the University of California,
Berkeley in 1973, and subsequently enhanced and marketed by Computers
and Structures, Inc., the ETABS computer program was the first widely
adopted structural software to offer seismic analysis capabilities of
three-dimensional buildings. The SAP and TABS series of programs paved
the way for a multitude of computer programs for linear and nonlinear
analysis of structures that have revolutionized the seismic design and
assessment of structures.”
ETABS
was the only software product to receive this accolade.
In
accepting the award, CSI President Ashraf Habibullah said: “It is
truly an honor to receive such a prestigious award. For more than 30 years
we have been working hard to make ETABS and our other products the most
useful and productive analysis and design software on the market for structural
engineers, and having this work acknowledged by such a respected panel
makes us extremely proud. Although all of us at CSI take great pleasure
in receiving this honor, we promise not to rest on our laurels, as we
expect to receive this award once again for the 21st century!"
http://www.atcouncil.org
http://www.enr.com
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