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Blog Five Unusual Career Paths for Engineers
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  • Author Author: jlucas
  • Date Created: 22 Aug 2016 5:03 PM Date Created
  • Views 836 views
  • Likes 2 likes
  • Comments 2 comments
  • business of engineering
  • eejournal
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Five Unusual Career Paths for Engineers

jlucas
jlucas
22 Aug 2016

image

 

What comes to mind when you think of a 'typical' engineering job? There are many directions a qualified engineer might take, from civil and mechanical engineering to research and development in a wide variety of fields.

 

In addition to the more common career paths an engineer might take, there are a host of more obscure roles that they could also step into - whether by accident or by design. So if you're longing to take your career into a fresh direction, perhaps one of these roles could provide the inspiration you've been looking for...

 

Arctic Engineer

 

Arctic engineers typically work in the private sector or with government agencies planning and regulating development activity – including addressing the challenges of design, construction and operations – in the coldest regions of the world. Projects undertaken by arctic engineers have included developing ice-resistant roads and structures, future-proofing various infrastructures against the effects of climate change and constructing artificial islands.

 

Beer Engineer

It might sound like a novelty T-shirt slogan, but Beer Engineer is a real and very important job. Generally hailing from chemical engineering backgrounds, beer engineers are usually hired by large breweries to work on processes such as separation and biochemical reactions, all in aid of creating the perfect alcoholic beverage. Their expertise has taken the centuries-old practice of brewing from a trial-and-error methodology to a precise scientific process.

 

Oil and Gas Diver

 

A common engineering role in Middle Eastern countries and other oil-rich regions of the world, oil and gas divers spend weeks on gas rigs and are responsible for installing welding, underground pipe and other necessary materials for the safe and efficient harvesting of fossil fuel resources. 

 

Roller Coaster Engineer

 

Possibly every teenage boy's dream job, a roller coaster engineer is responsible for the often complex responsibility of designing, building and repairing theme park rides. With high-octane roller coasters becoming faster and more sophisticated all the time, this is a role that requires equal parts skill and imagination, ensuring that the balance between excitement and consumer safety is always perfectly calibrated. 

Skate park Engineer

 

Another opportunity to indulge your inner adolescent - professional skate parks require the perfect blend of angles, slopes and surface area to allow skaters and bikers to achieve the perfect run. Many of the world's leading skate parks and courses have been painstakingly designed and are constantly monitored by dedicated engineers.  

What's the strangest or most interesting engineering project you've ever worked on? What unusual routes would you like to take your career down if you could do it all again? As ever, let us know in the comments section below...

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Top Comments

  • dougw
    dougw over 9 years ago +1
    I think I mentioned this before, but I once helped design and build a giant hula hoop for an award-winning pavilion at a world exposition. The hoop motion was (partly) controlled by exercise bikes. My…
  • dougw
    dougw over 9 years ago

    I think I mentioned this before, but I once helped design and build a giant hula hoop for an award-winning pavilion at a world exposition.

    The hoop motion was (partly) controlled by exercise bikes. My responsibility was the hybrid (analog-digital) control system. Needless to say, safety was a massively important design criterion - with a pretty big, sharp, heavy ring zipping around at pretty high speed, but the underlying technologies are the interesting aspects and they are not in any textbook.

    image

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  • DAB
    DAB over 9 years ago

    I don't know as I have had so many interesting projects over the years.

     

    Engineers usually get to play with a lot of ideas and components as the industry is constantly changing.

     

    They used to pay me to go to San Diego, California every two months just to sit and listen to project progress.

     

    On another project I got to go to the Middle East to install some gear and do some training.

     

    You just never know what each project can lead to.

     

    DAB

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