Registration open for 19th ASCE UESI/BAMI-I Utility Investigation School
(UI) — The Buried Asset Management Institute – International (BAMI-I) & the ASCE’S Utility Engineering and Surveying Institute (UESI) have teamed to conduct the 19th ASCE UESI / BAMI-I UIS School in 2023.
This short course will give practitioners the knowledge and tools to provide competent utility investigations in accordance with accepted national standards (ASCE 38) and to defend against claims through this knowledge and its documentation.
In addition to the classroom lectures, practical sessions will be held where participants will be offered hands-on experience with the GPR, PCL, and etc. This 5-day school will be taught by the foremost experts in the geophysics and subsurface utility engineering field.
This 5-day school is specifically tailored for engineers, surveyors, and project managers who are responsible for producing comprehensive deliverables encompassing results and visual representations of utility investigations. It is also intended for consulting engineers, utility company personnel, state Department of Transportation (DOT) employees, local highway agency members, regulatory agency staff, local government representatives, as well as design engineers working on infrastructure projects characterized by substantial anticipated utility congestion.
The event will be held October 16-20 in Baltimore, Maryland. The registration fee for the 5-day course is $1,995, but early registration ends September 8 and is discounted to $1,895. An additional $100 discount is offered for three or more attendees from the same company.
For registration or more information, email Saleh Behbahani, sbehbaha@purdue.edu or Leonard Ingram, leonard@engconco.com, or call (334) 872-1012.
Related News
From Archive

- 290-mile gas pipeline expansion proposed across Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina
- $227 million Garnet Valley water project advances, set to create 73,000 jobs in Nevada
- Construction underway for $1.4 billion, 60-mile water pipeline in Chicago
- HDD industry faces challenges as cities push back on fiber drilling disruptions
- Worker dies after trench collapse at sewer project site in Norwich, Conn.
- Gehl and Mustang offer world’s largest skid loader
- Growing Pains and Gains
- Authorities investigating trench collapse that killed worker in Ashburn, Va.
- Pasadena, Calif., undergrounding project could take 500 years to finish
- $227 million Garnet Valley water project advances, set to create 73,000 jobs in Nevada
Comments