Clyde Engineering Building Explained

Clyde Engineering Building
Building Type:Educational
Location:Provo, Utah
Coordinates:40.2467°N -111.6478°W
Completion Date:1974

The Clyde Engineering Building is one of the engineering buildings on the Brigham Young University (BYU) campus. It houses the Civil and Environmental Engineering, Chemical Engineering, and Electrical Engineering departments. The building is named after Wilford W. Clyde, a Springville, Utah construction business owner and generous donor to BYU.[1]

The structure contains a large study lounge and many classrooms. Over 40% of the floor space is dedicated to laboratory instruction and research. The structure contains an auditorium, several computer labs, a structures lab with large I-beams and a crane, a soil mechanics lab, environmental lab, transportation lab, a solid-state clean room, and various faculty and graduate student offices.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: BYU Campus Building Information. Brigham Young University. 25 April 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131021173312/http://map.byu.edu/buildings.xml. 21 October 2013. dead.