Benjamin W. Schafer

Director, Willard and Lillian Hackerman Professor of Civil and Systems Engineering


Benjamin W. Schafer, the Willard and Lillian Hackerman Professor of Civil and Systems Engineering at Johns Hopkins and founding director of the Ralph S. O’Connor Sustainable Energy Institute, is a structural engineer known for his research in structural stability and the mechanics and design of thin-walled structures. Schafer is a professor in the Department of Civil and Systems Engineering and holds a secondary appointment in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering.

Schafer has served in a variety of leadership roles at the university and in technical communities, including chair of JHU’s Department of Civil Engineering, chair of the Structural Stability Research Council, president of the Cold-Formed Steel Engineers Institute, and North American Editor of the journal, Thin-walled Structures. He also is the current and founding director of the Cold-Formed Steel Research Consortium, which partners with industry and other universities to solve critical research challenges related to the application of thin-walled cold-formed steel in the construction industry.

Enabling engineers to reliably design resilient civil structures that require minimal material is the focus of Schafer’s research. Such structures require careful consideration of stability, and efforts in this area, largely for steel structures, is where his work has had the most impact. Schafer developed the Direct Strength Method of design, which is an internationally approved method for predicting the strength of cold-formed steel building components, led the first full-scale seismic tests on a cold-formed steel framed building, and has participated in the development of novel solutions for steel wind turbine towers. His research has received funding from a variety of federal agencies, industry associations, and companies.

The translation of his research to codes and standards that can be utilized by engineers to improve the reliability and efficiency of structures is central to Schafer’s work. Currently, he serves as Chair of the American Society of Civil Engineers standards committee for stainless cold-formed steel members and Vice-Chair of the American Institute of Steel Construction standards committee for stainless structural steel members. In addition, he is a member of the standards committees for the American Iron and Steel Institute and the American Institute of Steel Construction, which collectively create a suite of standards that address all aspects of steel structures and are adopted by the nation’s building codes. Schafer also participates in translation as a Consulting Principal for the engineering firm Simpson, Gumpertz & Heger, Inc.

Schafer has been awarded the Normal Medal, Shortridge Hardesty Award, Huber Research Prize, and Collingwood Prize from the American Society of Civil Engineers for his research and service in structural engineering and the Robert S. Pond and Dunn Family awards for his teaching and service. Schafer received his BSE in civil engineering from the University of Iowa in 1993 and MS and Ph.D. degrees in structural engineering from Cornell University in 1994 and 1997, respectively.

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Press

Totally Tubular: NSF Grant Fuels Advances in Wind Energy

From Highways to High-rises, Engineering Analysis May Drive New Uses for Automotive Steel, JHU Hub

Benjamin Schafer Elected as Fellow of the Structural Engineering Institute

Climate Change, Superstorms, and Civil Engineering, JHU Hub