

The National Research Council of the Philippines (NRCP) organized a tour of Manila Water's Lakbayan Center at Balara, Quezon City last Jan. 28, 2011. It was an educational tour wherein lectures and video presentations about Manila Water, Path of Pat Tubig (The Mascot of Manila Water), Waste Water Treatment and Manila Water's Ondoy Activities were presented. Indeed, the lectures were enlightening. After the lectures - you will crave for Manila Water's tap water which you will realize is clean and refreshing.



For the protection of public life and property, the design of structures and the preparation of structural plans for their construction have to be controlled and regulated. In the Philippines, the National Structural Code of the Philippines (NSCP) is adapted as the referral code for structural design. The NSCP prescribes the minimum requirements in terms of strength, serviceability and ductility of buildings and other structures.
SEP) was incorporated by 32 charter members in September 1961 with Ambrosio Flores as the founding president. Among the past ASEP presidents were Abelardo Carillo, Angel Lazaro Jr., Lauro Cruz, Cesar Caliwara, Octavio Kalalo, Ernesto Tabujara, Primo Alacantara and Ernesto de Castro. Aside from the NSCP, ASEP also published the Steel Handbook, Earthquake Design Manual, Proceedings of the ASEP International Conventions and other Conferences such as the Asia Conference on Earthquake Engineering (ACEE). After the 1990 Luzon Earthquake, ASEP also initiated the Disaster Quick Reaction Survey Teams for rapid documentation and assessment of structural and geotechnical damage to buildings, bridges and other structures after a disaster. ASEP collaborated with the Philippine Institute of Civil Engineers (PICE) in the Disaster Quick Reaction Program (DQRP). In July 28, 2006, the National Disaster Coordination Council (NDCC) of the Philippine Government recognized the efforts of ASEP and PICE through the Gawad Kalasag Award. I presented a simple memento - a ceramic coaster - which they can display or use while they drink coffee while working as a civil engineer. Congratulations and hoping for a bright future.

Safety is a human concern – this concern must be taken more decisively by school and hospital communities given that they are in the business of caring for the young and in preserving lives. It is a concern that must be taken seriously and strive continually to achieve at all times especially during emergencies. A school or hospital and the highly vulnerable occupants – the children and the sick - are best protected by ensuring that the physical environment – the buildings, surroundings and facilities are safe, and secured by implementing regular maintenance of physical facilities and by preparing a systematic and well-documented safety and disaster preparedness plan.
Safety Check: Are the basic conditions and necessities in place in your school or hospital to provide for the health, security and safety of the occupants? Take a walk around your school campus or health facility and observe the items listed in the checklist. After this brief safety check, ask yourself the following questions: Is my school or hospital safe? What policies and actions should be done to improve the safety conditions in my school or hospital?
A Sample Checklist on Basic Safety Requirements
If your answer to any of the questions is NO, then you must be concerned with the safety of your school or hospital. Providing the basic safety features in schools and hospitals is actually not enough to protect people and property especially in a hazard-prone environment. Hazards such as earthquakes, floods, fires, typhoons, landslides, etc. pose greater risks to schools or hospitals if interventions are not done to limit and/or mitigate the vulnerability to these hazards.
You can make schools and hospitals safer esepcially before a disaster strikes by acting now. The first step is visit the website of the One Million Safe Schools and Hospitals Campaign at http://www.safe-schools-hospitals.net/ and make a pledge.. You can pledge in any of the following roles:
Make a pledge, Save a Life!
The life that you may save maybe your loved ones or yours.
* Reference: 1 Million Safe Schools and Hospitals ADVOCACY Guide by UNISDR 2010
Thirteen entries from DLSU competed in the Popsicle Stick Bridge Building Contest hosted by The Civil Engineering Society (CES). Unfortunately, no entry made it in the winning bridges. The DLSU bridges were also good and well-made. Bridge no. 18 actually garnered the largest load of 111 kg with a displacement of about 25.5 mm, but it was too heavy at 1138 g making a score of only 3.82. DLSU ranked 8th in the design category (Bridge No. 23) and ranked 10th in the strength category (Bridge No. 19).

There is only one winner in the design category which was the entry from the Technological Institute of the Philippines - Manila. The other entries which ranked 2nd and third came from PLM and TIP-Manila, respectively.


The Civil Engineering Society of De La Salle University-Manila is again inviting civil engineering students from Philippine CE schools to join the Bridge Building Contest. The challenge is to create a popsicle truss bridge which will span a given distance subject to the bridge specifications or limitations in weight, heigth, width and length. The rules can be viewed in the slide show embedded here. There are also tips on how to make your bridge win the strength competition. The deadline and testing of the bridges is on Feb . 13, 2010. You may read related blog posts here such as the testing of the bridges, truss analysis and winning bridges in the last competition. Happy Bridge Building. For more details, join the yahoo group: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bridgebuilding10.
