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  1. Claude Allen Porter Turner (July 4, 1869 – January 10, 1955) was an American structural engineer who designed a number of buildings and bridges, particularly in the midwestern U.S. states of Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.

  2. Overview. C. A. P. Turner. (1869—1955) Quick Reference. ( b Lincoln, RI, 1869; d 1955), engineer and writer. Turner completed a civil engineering degree at Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA, in 1890, and for the next 12 years he worked for ... From: Turner, C. A. P. in The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art » Subjects: Art & Architecture.

  3. contribution to building construction. In construction: The invention of reinforced concrete. …Minneapolis, Minnesota, the American engineer C.A.P. Turner employed concrete floor slabs without beams (called flat slabs or flat plates) that used diagonal and orthogonal patterns of reinforcing bars.

  4. www.asce.org › about-civil-engineering › history-andMarshall Building | ASCE

    Designed by Claude A. P. Turner, a pioneer of reinforced concrete construction, the Marshall Building was constructed originally in 1906 as a five-story building. In 1911 the sixth floor of the building was added as per Turner's original design.

  5. In 1909, C.A.P. Turner developed a system using four-way flat-plate slabs and mushroom columns that made possible very thin floors. Around the columns, the slab was reinforced with capitals in the shape of an inverted cone. The absence of beams and joists allowed simpler mechanical and electrical installation, and thinner slabs used less concret...

  6. Claude Allen Porter Turner (July 4, 1869 – January 10, 1955) was an American structural engineer who designed a number of buildings and bridges, particularly in the midwestern U.S. states of Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. Turner would eventually receive 30 patents related to reinforced concrete. He died in Columbus, Ohio in 1955.

  7. Claude A.P. Turner was born in Lincoln, Rhode Island on July 4, 1869. He graduated in 1890 from the school of engineering at Lehigh University, (Bethlehem, Pennsylvania).

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