Arizona State University Unveils New ‘Dorm Built for Engineers’

Tempe, Ariz. – Engineering undergraduates moving into a new Arizona State University residence hall this week will find themselves immersed in a collaborative, technology-laden living and learning community built specifically for engineers.

The Fulton Schools Residential Community at Tooker House is a 1,600-person, co-ed residential community for undergraduate students in ASU’s Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering. The “dorm built for engineers” features on-site digital classrooms, state-of-the-art makerspaces complete with 3D printers, laser cutters, and design tools needed for a broad range of engineering courses and projects.

“Innovation has a new home address at Tooker House,” says Kyle Squires, dean of the Fulton Schools of Engineering. “This mixed-use living and learning facility sets a new standard in engineering education and reflects the breadth and depth of the student experience at the largest engineering school in the nation.”

Situated in a prominent location on the ground floor of the building, the maker lab allows students to work on class projects and explore ideas steps away from their living suites – essentially in their living room. The lab features sliding glass walls that encourage activities to spill outdoors, where exhibition pedestals enable students to present their work and invite discussion and feedback.

The seven-story, co-ed community was built by American Campus Communities on ASU’s Tempe Campus. The residence hall features a 525-seat dining facility, Bluetooth-enabled laundry rooms that notify you when your clothes are dry, advanced green building technology and enough high speed internet bandwidth to accommodate multiple devices per resident.

Elton Forlemu, an ASU civil engineering sophomore serving as a community advisor in Tooker House this fall, says “the work and study spaces are inspiring.”

Last year Forlemu lived off campus and spent hours studying and working in engineering classroom buildings, then traveling about 20 miles home to Glendale. He now envisions himself having late-night discussions in Tooker study spaces and then heading to the makerspace or computer lab to collaborate on a project “before it leaves your head.”

Archtectural firm Solomon Cordwell Buenz’s design approach to Tooker House began with traditional desert architecture concepts as a starting point for creating a sustainable building that both feels appropriate to its context and can endure harsh desert conditions. The community features a complementary color palette of desert tones, using colors and materials that will resist fading and degradation under extreme UV exposure conditions.

The building’s most striking feature, hundreds of vertical perforated louvers on the south façade, each positioned according to a sophisticated algorithm, ensures daytime sunlight control unique to each window’s location. Highly efficient glazing with significant shading capacity allow transparency and daylight without detriment to thermal performance and comfort. Metal window canopies and vertical metal louvers additionally shade windows from direct sunlight while preserving views.

“Last year, I watched the building process from skeleton to finished project,” says Forlemu, who aspires to build hospitals and large business complexes. “As an engineer, it was fascinating. What gets me is the infrastructure – there is such great use of space here.”

Tooker House also will play a prominent role as ASU expands its smart campus capabilities, incorporating sensing and energy efficiency analytics and other Inernet of Things (IoT) technologies not only into the building’s operation, but also into the engineering program’s curriculum.

The new residence hall is named for Diane and Gary Tooker. Diane Tooker is an alumnus of ASU’s Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College (BAE ’61) and a business owner and former elementary school teacher. Gary Tooker is an alumnus of the Fulton Schools of Engineering (BSE ’62) and a former CEO of Motorola. Together, the couple has made contributions to ASU through the ASU Foundation for more than 30 years, including support for the university’s teaching and engineering programs and the endowed Diane and Gary Tooker Chair for Effective Education in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. Gary Tooker’s contributions to fostering Arizona’s tech sector were recognized with a lifetime achievement award presented at the 2012 Governor’s Celebration of Innovation.

Tooker House is owned and developed by American Campus Communities under the company’s ACE program, a public-private partnership that provides on-campus housing to universities without using their funds or tax-payer dollars. (www.americancampus.com).

About the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

The Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, with more than 20,000 enrolled students, is the largest engineering school in the country, offering 39 graduate and 24 undergraduate degree programs.

About ASU Enterprise Partners and the ASU Foundation

ASU Enterprise Partners is a private nonprofit organization based in Tempe, AZ and made up of distinct entities, including the ASU Foundation, that raise, create and invest resources for the benefit of Arizona State University while advocating for and advancing ASU’s mission and brand (giveto.asu.edu).

About Arizona State University
Arizona State University has developed a new model for the American Research University, creating an institution that is committed to access, excellence and impact. ASU measures itself by those it includes, not by those it excludes. As the prototype for a New American University, ASU pursues research that contributes to the public good, and ASU assumes major responsibility for the economic, social and cultural vitality of the communities that surround it.

 About American Campus Communities

American Campus Communities, Inc. is the largest owner, manager and developer of high-quality student housing communities in the United States. The company is a fully integrated, self-managed and self-administered equity real estate investment trust (REIT) with expertise in the design, finance, development, construction management and operational management of student housing properties. As of June 30, 2017, American Campus Communities owned 160 student housing properties containing approximately 99,000 beds. Including its owned and third-party managed properties, ACC’s total managed portfolio consisted of 197 properties with approximately 128,700 beds. Visit www.americancampus.com.

Spotlight On: Kayden Industries

We are proud to spotlight NASTT’s No-Dig Show Silver Sponsor,  Kayden Industries.

Kayden Industries was founded in 1995 with one goal in mind – let’s build centrifuges that actually work. Since then Kayden Industries has grown from a small three person operation in Calgary, Canada to an international operation with proven reliability. As a leading innovator in the liquid-solid separation industry, Kayden produces one of the largest, toughest, and most efficient horizontal decanting centrifuges available.

Currently, Kayden Industries relies on over 150 centrifuges operating in the harshest environments around the world, from the sub-zero temperatures of the Canadian Arctic to the desert of Australia’s oilfield, clients put their trust in Kayden Industries.

Kayden Industries is truly committed to continual innovation and the optimization of the solids control industry, and looks forward to serving clients around the globe.

UMASS Students Visit HDD Liberty Utilities Job Site in Massachusetts

Recently, 12 students from NASTT’s Student Chapter at UMASS Lowell attended a Horizontal Directional Drilling (HDD) site visit on location with Liberty Utilities in Somerset, Massachusetts. The students observed an HDD river crossing project. A safety briefing was held and all the necessary PPE was donned prior to the students entering the job site.

Everyone in attendance thoroughly enjoyed the visit and found it to be very educational on the HDD process and how trenchless technology is used in utility work.

Many thanks to Liberty Utilities for hosting the students and helping to educate the future of trenchless!

Hello, My Name is Virginia Tech

vatech-logoWe are proud to spotlight one of NASTT’s Student Chapters, Virginia Tech!

At the beginning of the Spring 2016 semester, an interest meeting was held to get new students involved in the organization. Several key agenda items will be discussed including: What is Trenchless Technology? What are the benefits to going Trenchless? What is NASTT? How can you get involved as a student? What are the benefits of joining the organization?

Interest and feedback was gathered on upcoming activities. Some educational videos were shown to better help the students understand the role trenchless technologies play in our society.

The NASTT Student Chapter took part in both the Virginia Tech Via Department of Civil Engineering and the Myers-Lawson School of Construction Career Fairs this fall. They take place twice each year and are an excellent opportunity to promote the benefits of NASTT membership among the student population. They set up exhibition booths where they spoke to students about what NASTT is and how becoming an active member can benefit their future careers.

The 15th annual Water Asset Management Conference this past December at the Virginia Tech Research Center in Arlington, VA. All student members have attended this conference and had invaluable experience with personal interactions with the industry professionals.

The VA Tech Student Chapter is planning to send five members to the 2017 No-Dig Show in Washington, D.C. this spring.

Great job VA Tech! The North American Society for Trenchless Technology’s Student Chapters, working to build the future of trenchless!

Hello, My Name is Rutgers

NASTT’s Student Chapter at Rutgers University has been very active this year and we’re excited to share with you what they’ve been up to!rutgers-ne-remsco

The students hosted a lecture with Richard Palmer of Northeast Remsco Corporation. This lecture introduced the members to the different techniques of trenchless technology. Mr. Palmer focused on microtunneling and the discussion consisted of project situations that Mr. Palmer and Northeast Remsco encountered.

The students also hosted a lecture with John Torrielli of Pim Corporation. Mr. rutgers-pim-corpTorrielli discussed the pipe lining, polymer linings, and spray linings that are used to protect the pipe. The discussion focused on rehabilitation techniques, and the design properties of the linings used by Pim Corporation.

The final lecture was with Entech and consisted of examples of different kinds of construction projects where trenchless techniques were implemented.

The students participated in a very cool event and Chapter Members John Roche and Osbel Dorvil presented the importance of using ground penetrating radar to locate objects below the surface at a “Shark Tank”-inspired event hosted by Verizon.rutgers-entech

The Chapter hosted an incoming student open house where Fariba Shamonti, Osbel Dorvil and John Roche introduced NASTT to upcoming freshmen at the open house day. What better time to share the idea of trenchless technology?

In October, the Chapter participated Rutgers Plank Day by attempting to break the Guinness World Record for the most people holding the plank exercise position for 1-minute!rutgers-shark-tank

Kyle Boehme, Osbel Dorvil, John Roche, Cory McKenzie, and Adithya Thiruvalluvan held presentations for freshmen engineers to engage them and introduce them to NASTT at the Barr Residential Hall Info Session in October.

The Chapter held a site visit in Springfield, NJ at a PSE&G site and observed a pipe inverting machine, which aids in
reeling in the excess pipe. This was used for a Cast-In-Place-Pipe lining job which Rutgers NASTT members were lucky to attend with NASTT member and instructor, George Ragula.

The members of Rutgers NASTT Chapter observed a local water main rehabilitation and new installation project and learned how 3M Scotchkote is applied to pipes after tuberculation is removed during a site visit to New Jersey American Water & J. Fletcher Creamer in Millburn, NJ.rutgers-1

Great work Rutgers! NASTT is proud to call these fine students members!

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