The John A. Blume Distinguished Lecture is honored to present Dr. Jeremiah Isenberg of Weidlinger Assoc. His lecture will discuss the role of technology in protecting civil infrastructure—bridges, tunnels and buildings—against terrorist attack as being to support large scale, highly visible projects with economical designs and retrofits and to help infrastructure owners justify their choices to a public concerned about both its safety and a seemingly heavy tax burden. Technology offers a means for rational defense against irrational acts. Derived from cold war approaches to blast protection that include large scale testing, the protection of civil infrastructure has its American origins in the 1983 bombings of the US Marine barracks and US Embassy in Beirut. The consequent development of Department of State guidelines for US foreign posts was followed by General Services Administration guidelines for domestic buildings in the aftermath of the bombing of the World Trade Center and Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1993 and 1995. The events of September 11, 2001 convinced a sector of the nation's infrastructure owners to consider security in their capital budgets. In implementing these programs, infrastructure owners have begun to draw upon lessons learned earlier by the earthquake engineering community. These include the importance of detailing; the idea of creativity within orthodox standards reached on the basis of consensus; and performance-based design criteria within a framework of formal probabilistic risk assessment.