2017 Summer Transportation Camp

July 10-14, 2017

8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. daily

Audience: 2017-2018

9th grade boys and girls

Explore engineering in this week-long event dedicated to introducing 9th grade high school students to the transportation industry. 20 selected participants will experience hands on activities while working with the professional researchers and faculty of the University of Utah. Participants will have the opportunity to experience on campus amenities, field trips, guest lectures and explore career opportunities while focusing on science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fundamentals.

The camp will be located at the University of Utah, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Please see the links below for more information and to apply today.

 

> Camp Information
  • This is a non-residential five-day event
  • Participants will receive a full scholarship that will cover the entire cost of attending the camp including all lab fees and transportation to and from offsite locations
  • Lunch and transportation will be provided during camp hours

 

> Camp Components
  • Field trips to off-site transportation-related locations
  • Transportation industry guest speakers
  • Hands-on activities that encourage team work
  • STEM focus activities to encourage math and science development
  • Usage of on campus amenities to provide a college experience
  • Engage in recreational and social activities

 

> Application

 

*Space is limited, applicants are encouraged to apply by May 29th and will be notified of acceptance by June 5th. Applications will be reviewed by the camp committee.

To participate you must be an incoming 2017-2018 freshman at a Utah high school.

2017 Camp Flyer

For more questions please contact ashley.arpero@utah.edu

Olympiad CvEEN 2017 Team

A team from the CvEEN Department organized the Towers Event during the 2017 Science Olympiad on Saturday April 15th. The competition attracted more than 30 two-student teams from Utah High Schools and Junior High Schools. The towers were tested under gravity load by pouring sand into a bucket hanging from the top of the tower. The teams were ranked based on the ratio of the load the tower could resist to the tower’s self-weight.

[Photo] From left to right Massoud Hosseinali, Dr. Luis Ibarra, Matt Wang, Swastik Pokhrel, Avinash Rajesh Rishi, Jeff Roberts, and Dr. Gaby Ou.

2017 ASCE Conference

Early April, the University of Utah Student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers proudly hosted the annual Rocky Mountain Regional Student Conference. Faculty advisor, Dr. Christine Pomeroy and student conference chair, Jenny Calderon, organized a planning team of six exceptional University of Utah students to help plan every aspect of the event, including fundraising, organization, venue rental, catering, coordination, communication, and many other aspects, large and small. The planning team students were Treven Edwards (steel bridge chair), James Holt (concrete canoe chair), Heather Christensen (fundraising / sustainability coordinator), Gemma Clark (Awards Banquet Coordinator), Korey Walsh (fundraising), and Caity Neilsen (events coordinator).

The ASCE conference brought together fourteen region schools in Utah, Colorado, South Dakota, Wyoming, and New Mexico. Nearly 400 of the most creative and dedicated students from our region came out to compete in engineering competitions throughout the weekend, culminating in an awards banquet to honor their successes.

The opening reception was held at the incomparable Rice Eccles Stadium Tower Scholarship room. This beautiful space overlooks the entire city and campus. During the reception students competed in a mystery design competition challenging each school to build the tallest pasta tower that could support a mock green roof (sponge) when fully saturated.
The crowning event was the steel bridge build. This competition challenges student teams with a real world problem and requires them to design and build a scaled down bridge that meets the design specifications. Each team must build a bridge which strikes a balance between cost, strength, weight, and aesthetic appeal. These are evaluated by an aesthetic evaluation, the number of members on the build team, efficiency and time required to build, and deflection measured when supporting predetermined gravity and lateral point loads.
Concrete canoe races were held at Utah Lake’s Lindon Marina. There students used their concrete canoes to compete in a variety of sprints and endurance races. That evening the winning teams in each category were honored at the awards banquet, held at the Loveland Living Planet Aquarium. In addition to the many award categories, the scores from all events were tallied and the overall conference award went to next year’s host school, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.

Design engineers are challenged every day to balance form, function, efficiency, sustainability, and cost. The planning team considered sustainability an important aspect to draw attention to and incorporated it in as many ways as possible. The team worked tirelessly to secure the funding necessary to incorporate this focus into the conference. These efforts ensured recycled paper for all printed materials, biodegradable name badge holders, recycling bins at every event, an organized service project at Red Butte Garden, and even a mystery design competition with a nod to sustainability and green infrastructure.

Undergraduate Students Win Water Environment Association of Utah Student Design Competition

Team members Dani Zebelean, Jenny Calderon, Heather Christensen and Collin Miller.

Each team was given a problem that required students to design a Water Reclamation Facility as well as a secondary distribution and sanitary sewer collection pipeline to service a new community that is expected to develop at the base of the Oquirrh Mountain Range in Magna, Utah. Their design aimed to promote a paradigm shift from “wastewater” treatment to reclamation, conservation, and reuse.

To do this, the team designed a system that produced a Type I Reclaimed Water effluent that can be used for landscape and agricultural irrigation. Additionally, the Water Reclamation Facility was designed to produce Class A Biosolids to be used as fertilizer for agricultural land application. On top of all that, the final treatment facility utilized the reuse of high-quality methane gas produced by the solids handling process as an alternate energy source to help reduce operational costs and energy consumption at the plant. 

Their design was also unique in that the secondary water storage method consisted of cascading reservoirs within a an aesthetically pleasing community park to be built within the new development area. This aspect of the design aimed to alter the traditional societal perspective on “wastewater” treatment process to make a more accepted and transparent connection between the community and water reclamation efforts.

By winning this competition the students are awarded a fully-funded trip to the Annual WEFTEC Water Quality Conference of 2017 in Chicago to compete at the National WEFTEC Student Design Competition in September of this year.

Faculty Receives Award from Utah Department of Transportation

Dr. Pedro Romero, faculty in Civil Engineering, was presented with the Utah Department of Transportation Trailblazer Award during the 2017 UDOT research meeting. The award was given in recognition for his contributions towards ‘excellence in transportation research’. For many years, Dr. Romero has been working with the department of transportation to improve the longevity of Utah’s roads through better material specifications and testing procedures. Maintenance and construction of the transportation infrastructure are a significant part of UDOT’s budget, thus improvements in the material specification to extend the life of the roads can result in millions of dollars saved every year.

Eno Future Leaders Conference

Graduate student Anusha Musunuru has been selected by the Board of Regents of the Eno Center for Transportation to participate in the 25th annual Eno Future Leaders Development Conference in Washington, DC, June 4-8, 2017. Anusha will be among 20 other of the nation’s top graduate students in transportation to get a first-hand look at how national transportation policies are developed.

Civil Student Selected as UROP Scholar for 2017

Gemma Clark has been selected as one of four Dee Foundation UROP Scholars for 2017, for her project entitled “Rainwater Rooftop Runoff Examinations using DNA Extraction and qPCR” with faculty mentor Jennifer Weidhaas. Through this program, the Dee Foundation recognizes outstanding undergraduate researchers who are contributing to furthering the growth and well-being of the people of Northern Utah. 
 

UTAH’S NEED FOR ENGINEERS

Utah’s growth in the technology sector continues to skyrocket, and engineering colleges around the state are doing everything they can to meet the high demand for engineers.

In the first six months of 2016, Utah had the greatest percentage increase of technology-related jobs in the U.S. with a growth of 7.7 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the number of tech-sector jobs in Utah grew from about 46,000 to 70,000 from 2005 to 2015, according to the Economic Development Corporation of Utah (see graphic above).

Meanwhile on the front end, the number of students seeking engineering degrees has grown even more rapidly. At the University of Utah, for example, the number of first-year students enrolled in the College of Engineering has grown 178 percent in the last 10 years, according to the College.

“In some areas of the state it’s just massive growth,” Val Hale, executive director of the Utah Governor’s Office of Economic Development, said about the growing number of technology companies in Utah. “There’s no doubt that technology is playing a key role in our economy moving forward.”

As a result, 81 Utah companies led by the Utah Technology Council have endorsed Utah Rep. Val Peterson’s, R-Orem, $5-million Request for Appropriation to aid the state’s engineering and computer science programs in dealing with escalating student demand. These additional ongoing funds would add capacity to the statewide system and expand the workforce needed by high-tech companies. Since 2014, the number of engineering and computer science degrees awarded by the statewide system have increased by 29 percent thanks to prior state investments.

“Fortunately, the number of qualified Utah students who want to study engineering and computer science is growing as fast as the demand for graduates. In 2005, 7 percent of the U’s freshman class wanted to go into the College of Engineering — this year, it was 19 percent,” said Richard B. Brown, dean of the U’s College of Engineering. “We need to grow the capacity so that we can educate them for these exciting, creative jobs of the 21st century.”

Being able to tap into a bigger pool of qualified graduating engineers from the state would certainly help Starr Fowler. The senior vice president for human resources at Provo-based smart-home services company, Vivint, said they are desperately looking for new engineers to accommodate their massive growth.

“We are growing a lot,” she said. “We have double-digit revenue growth year over year.”

Currently, Vivint has some 35 job openings for software and hardware engineers — not to replace employees who are leaving, but to fill new slots for the company’s expansion. Fowler said they are looking for qualified people ranging from software developers to mechanical engineers who help design their home security and smart-home devices. She also said Vivint is not the only company along the Salt Lake Valley with an appetite for more engineers.

“It’s huge,” she said of the expanding technology sector from Ogden to Provo, known as “Silicon Slopes.” “All you have to do is drive down I-15 to the Point of the Mountain and the other side and just see. Every other week there’s a new building up or a new sign with a new company. The growth is substantial.”

And Utah is not starving for just software developers, GOED’s Hale said. An expanding manufacturing sector, including in areas such as composite materials, has created a need for mechanical, electrical and chemical engineers among others.

“Manufacturing continues to grow in our state, and it’s very engineering-dependent,” he said. “We’ve experienced significant growth, and manufacturing is involved in almost all of our clusters from life sciences to aerospace. They all rely heavily on manufacturing, which relies heavily on engineering.”

Hale added that Utah continues to be an attractive target for business startups thanks to the valley’s proximity to outdoor recreation, the state’s quality of life and low cost of living. Consequently, that has made these companies more competitive when it comes to filling their workforce, and median salaries for technology jobs have risen. The average salary for a software engineer in Utah, for example, is more than $95,000, according to Glassdoor.com.

“When a lot of the companies reach maturity and are purchased, they stay here, like Omniture. Those jobs stay here instead of migrating elsewhere, and that creates an ecosystem that thrives,” Hale said. “It’s a good place for businesses to come and take root and grow.”

Student Receives Award from the Utah Asphalt Paving Association

Abu Sufian Mohammad Asib, a Ph.D. candidate in Transportation under the supervision of Dr. Romero, received an award from the Utah Asphalt Paving Association. The award was presented during their annual meeting for his work in creating a more ‘sustainable road surface through the development of new performance based specifications’. His work was highlighted at the meeting as the ‘next generation in asphalt pavements’ by Reed Ryan, executive director of the Utah Asphalt Pavement Association. Prior to coming to the University of Utah for his Ph.D., Asib worked for the Department of Public Works in his native Bangladesh.

ITE Student Chapter wins Data Collection Fund

The Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) student chapter recently won the 2017 Utah ITE data collection fund. The project will collect data for parking utilization and trip generation at a grocery store located in a mixed-use transit oriented development “Whole Foods Market”, at Trolley Square, which is considered to be a trendy high-end center in close proximity to downtown Salt Lake City, Utah. This is Utah ITE’s inaugural program of student chapter data collection competition, patterned after the successful Western District program that began in 2004. UofU ITE student chapter is awarded $1,000 to complete the project.