The 58 parts of the Eurocodes are published under 10 area headings. The first two areas - basis and actions - are common to all designs, six are material-specific and the other two cover geotechnical and seismic aspects.
EN 1990 Eurocode O: Basis of structural design EN1991 Eurocode 1: Actions on structures
EN1992 Eurocode 2: Design of concrete structures EN1993 Eurocode 3: Design of Steel structures
EN1994 Eurocode 4: Design of composite Steel and concrete structures EN1995 Eurocode 5: Design of timber structures EN1996 Eurocode 6: Design of masonry structures EN1997 Eurocode 7: Geotechnical design
EN1998 Eurocode 8: Design of structures for earthquake resistance EN1999 Eurocode 9: Design of aluminium structures
By March 2010 the Eurocodes will be mandatory for European public works and likely to become the de-facto standard for the private sector - both in Europę and world-wide. They will also provide the framework for standards used in assessing structural products for their essential CE markina.
Members, affiliates, and partner standardisation bodies of the ECS.
European Committee for Standardization
The European Committee for Standardization or Comite Europeen de Normalisation (CEN), is a non-profit organisation whose mission is to foster the European economy in global trading, the welfare of European citizens and the environment by providing an efficient infrastructure to interested parties for the development, maintenance and distribution of coherent sets of standards and specifications. The CEN was founded in 1961.
Wprowadzenie do WM II2014 17