SORU: aşağıdaki parçaya göre cevaplayınız
It is clear from the passage that, when engineers design a building, they —.
To engineers, design typically has less to do with
aesthetics and appearance and more to do with
fabrication and performance. Engineers tend to focus
on the structure behind the façade. They worry about
how the building will be built, how it will stand,
whether it will sway too much in the wind, whether it
will survive an earthquake, whether it will crack or
leak. Engineers designing the structural frame of
hotel buildings take into account the strength and
stiffness of ballroom floors, where large crowds will
gather and rhythmic dancing will occur. Engineers
are expected to think about how a building will be
heated and cooled, how air will circulate among its
spaces, how energy efficient it will be. In the ideal
world, the design efforts of architects and engineers
complement each other, resulting in a building that is
both a joy to look at and a pleasure to use. But all too
often in practice, things do not work out like that, and
the users of the building pay the price. In most
buildings, the work of the architect masks, cloaks
and hides the work of the engineer. Engineering
criticism is almost unheard of in public discussions of
building design, although it does sometimes come to
the fore when buildings fall down, as in the case of
the collapse of the World Trade Center towers.