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It depends on my clients. For some, I'm presenting the state of the art. For others, I'm dragging them decades into the future. For the other others, they are making me learn and it is a good feeling.
Sounds fun, mind sharing your field?
I think I'd rather guess. Civil engineer? I'm really thinking bridge builder but I don't think that's an actual career field.
A lot of professions are involved in bridge building but specifically architects come to my mind. Anyway, building bridges sounds so fucking interesting, like these things are huge, can hold literally tonnes, forever change the life of people around them, and they can be seen from far away.
I'm a structural engineer; I design the structural elements of the bridge. Civil engineers design the geometry of the bridge and the road/sidewalk/track it serves. Geotechnical engineers verify that the soil can withstand the design loads and help with foundation design. If water is involved, hydraulic engineers deal with the openings on water.
We try to keep architects as far away from the design as possible.