As rail systems—passenger, freight, urban, and high-speed—expand in the U.S., engineers, technicians, contractors, and transportation professionals need to understand core railway engineering principles. Railways are complex, multidisciplinary networks involving civil, mechanical, electrical, and systems engineering. Many new or transitioning professionals face challenges with rail infrastructure, rolling stock, electrification, signaling, safety, and asset management.
EUCI’s Railway Engineering Fundamentals is an introductory course that offers a systems-level look at planning, designing, building, operating, and maintaining railways. Key topics include:
- Track Geometry and Engineering
- Stations and Terminals
- Structural and civil considerations
- Electrification and power distribution
- Signaling and train control
- Yards and Maintenance Facilities
- Reliability-based maintenance strategies
The program highlights subsystem interactions for safe, efficient operations, addressing design requirements, their rationale, and U.S. and international standards (FRA, FTA, AREMA, IEEE, EN). It uses case studies and practical examples to bridge theory and practice.
By course end, participants gain foundational knowledge in railway engineering, preparing them for diverse roles in U.S. and international rail projects.