0: Structural safety, service- ability and durability | |||||||||||||||
1: Actions on structures | |||||||||||||||
Material-specific design and detailing: | |||||||||||||||
7: Geotechnics | 8: Earthquake | ||||||||||||||
The Eurocodes are the ten European standards (EN; harmonised technical rules) specifying how structural design should be conducted within the European Union (EU). These were developed by the European Committee for Standardization upon the request of the European Commission.[1]
The purpose of the Eurocodes is to provide:[1]
By March 2010, the Eurocodes are mandatory for the specification of European public works and are intended to become the de facto standard for the private sector. The Eurocodes therefore replace the existing national building codes published by national standard bodies (e.g. BS 5950), although many countries had a period of co-existence.[3] Additionally, each country is expected to issue a National Annex to the Eurocodes which will need referencing for a particular country (e.g. The UK National Annex). At present, take-up of Eurocodes is slow on private sector projects and existing national codes are still widely used by engineers.
The motto of the Eurocodes is "Building the future".[4] The second generation of the Eurocodes (2G Eurocodes) is being prepared.[5][6]