I graduated from a Canadian university, and am currently working in the US and have neither a P.Eng. (Canada) nor a P.E. (US). In Canada, if you graduated from a Can. University, since the professional association makes sure the courses are up to par, you just have to write an ethics/law exam, particular to the province you're going to work in, and have 4 years of experience under a P.Eng. and keep a work journal to document those 4 years. Other work experience can be used, but I'm not sure how that works. In your case where you graduated from Scotland, there may be some sort of technical exam, similar to the 8 hour one I wrote here in the US, but don't quote me on that.
Here are a couple of books you'll need:
-Handbook of Steel Construction -- Eighth Edition (June 2004) available at
-CONCRETE DESIGN HANDBOOK available at
and the best job search site is
And depending on what type of work you want to get into, a couple of big companies are PCL (
Peter-Kiewit (
mostly construction related, but now that I think about it, probably not a good option because they've been known to make you relocate in a days notice), Giffels (
Cheers