Category
page 1Structural steel
railway track
rail infrastructure
rail
linear bearing and guide elements used in rail transport

rivet
right|thumb|220px|Solid rivets
right|thumb|upright=1.6|Sophisticated riveted joint on a railway bridge
thumb|upright=1.6|Riveting team working on the cockpit shell of a C-47 transport at the plant of [[North American Aviation. The woman on the left operates an air hammer, while the man on the right holds a bucking bar.]]
thumb|upright=1|Women rivet heaters, with their tongs and catching buckets, Puget Sound Navy Yard, May 1919
weathering steel
steel alloy forming a rust-look finish when exposed to weather
structural steel
steel formed for use in construction
I-beam
thumb|An I-beam used to support the first floor of a house
An I-beam is any of various structural members with an - (serif capital letter 'I') or H-shaped cross-section. Technical terms for similar items include H-beam, I-profile, universal column (UC), w-beam (for wide flange), universal beam (UB), rolled steel joist (RSJ), and double-T (especially in Polish, Bulgarian, Spanish, Italian, and German). I-beams are typically made of structural steel and serve a wide variety of construction uses.
steel frame construction
building technique in which a skeleton frame of vertical steel columns is constructed in a rectangular grid; made the skyscraper possible
steel design
area of structural engineering used to design steel structures
structural robustness
ability of a structure to withstand physical strain
box girder bridge
type of bridge

hollow structural section
type of metal profile
structural channel
type of beam
gusset plate
Engineering plate
John Eisenmann
American architect
Dorman Long
steel producer, engineering consultancy and equipment manufacturer from Middlesbrough, England
CELSA
multinational steel company based in Castellbisbal,Spain
A36 steel
standard steel alloy