Andrew Whittaker (engineer)


Andrew Stuart Whittaker is an American structural engineer who is currently a SUNY Distinguished Professor in the Department of Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York.

Education

Whittaker earned a bachelor's of science in civil engineering from the University of Melbourne, Australia in 1977. He received an M.S. in civil engineering in 1985, and his Ph.D in civil engineering in 1988, both from the University of California, Berkeley..

Professional career

Whittaker is a licensed civil and structural engineer in California. He worked for the international consultancy Aurecon from 1978 to 1984 in Australia and Singapore, and for Forell/Elsesser Engineers in San Francisco, California from 1989 to 1992. He has consulted in the fields of earthquake and blast engineering since 1992.

Professional service

Whittaker has been engaged in the development of codes, standards and guidelines in the United States since the late 1980s, including the National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program Recommended Provisions, the American Society of Civil Engineers/Structural Engineering Institute Standards 4, 7, 41, 43 and 59, and American Concrete Institute Code 349. He is a member of the ASCE Blue Ribbon Panel for the update of the ASCE Manual of Practice for Structural Design for Physical Security. He chairs the ASCE Nuclear Standards Committee, which oversees the development of ASCE/SEI Standards 1, 4 and 43.
Whittaker has served on the Board of Directors for the Structural Engineers Association of Northern California from 1996 to 1998, for the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute from 2008 to 2010, and for the Word Seismic Safety Initiative from 2008 to 2010. He served on the External Advisory Board for the Southern California Earthquake Center from 2010 to 2017. Whittaker was Vice President and President of the Consortium of Universities for Research in Earthquake Engineering

Research career

Whittaker has developed applied research products for use in the seismic and blast/impact analysis and design of buildings, bridges, and infrastructure, including nuclear power plants. His research products are referenced in ASCE/SEI Standards 4, 7, 41, and 43, the 2010 AASHTO Guide Specification for Seismic Isolation Design, and FEMA 273, 27, and P-58.
Whittaker was a contributor to the development of the first generation of tools for performance-based earthquake engineering, first published as FEMA 273 and FEMA 274, and later as ASCE 41, and led the Structural Performance Products team that developed the second generation of tools for performance-based earthquake engineering, published as FEMA-P-58 Volumes 1, 2 and 3. He directed ATC project 34 that studied seismic response modification factors and other critical code issues and ATC Project 82 that developed guidance on the selection and scaling of earthquake ground motions for response-history analysis.
Whittaker developed the technical basis for maximum-direction ground motions for ASCE/SEI 7-10, and for the implementation of seismic isolation in safety-related nuclear structures that is codified in Chapter 12 of ASCE/SEI 4-16, will be codified in Chapter 9 of ASCE/SEI 43-19, and is documented in three NUREG/CRs published by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Honors and awards

Whittaker has held the rank of State University of New York Distinguished Professor, the highest academic rank in the SUNY system, since 2018. He received the American Society of Civil Engineers Walter P. Moore Award in 2017, the ASCE Stephen D. Bechtel Energy Award in 2017, and was elected to Fellow of the American Concrete Institute in 2012, Fellow of the American Society of Civil Engineers in 2016, and Fellow of the Structural Engineering Institute of ASCE in 2016. Whittaker was named as a Professor of Earthquake Engineering at the International Joint Laboratory for Earthquake Engineering Research at Tongji University in China in 2018, and the United Kingdom’s Institution of Civil Engineers Mallet-Milne lecturer in 2019.
In 2002, Whittaker, together with his SUNY colleague Michael Constantinou and Thornton-Tomasetti, received the American Council of Engineering Companies and the New York Association of Consulting Engineering Companies Diamond Award.

Selected papers