In this series of posts throughout the semester, we will feature an engineering discipline at Purdue. A current student will briefly discuss what this discipline focuses on, their favorite parts of it, and any projects they have worked on or cool opportunities they have had in this area of focus.
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Performing quality inspections, a pip rack,
during my first summer internship with
Bechtel Corporation in Baytown, TX
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Downtown Chicago has
always been my favorite place to visit. The dizzying views from the ground
mesmerized my four-year-old self as I wondered how humans could build such
marvelous structures! Seventeen years later, the process of constructing the
manmade landscapes of the world still fascinates me as I continue my
undergraduate journey majoring in Construction Engineering & Management
(CEM) at Purdue University.
Here at Purdue, we have a
unique program that all engineering students start in called, the First-Year Engineering (FYE) program. Students in FYE learn about each of our sixteen
different disciplines of engineering. Sixteen different disciplines?! I was
mainly interested in Civil Engineering, but I didn’t know there were so many
other options when I first came to Purdue! I was excited to learn about each of
them during my freshman year in FYE. Each week we learned about a different
type of engineering and by the end of the semester I had it narrowed down to two:
Civil Engineering and Construction Engineering. The two may seem similar on the
surface, but it really came down to one question: Where can I see myself
working when I graduate?
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My friend Amber and I on a
construction
site tour of the new Active Learning
Center at Purdue.
|
What exactly is the
difference between the two? I’ll try to give the short version. A Civil
Engineer does the actual design for a structure, such as a skyscraper, before
or even during the construction phase. This career path usually leads to a job
where the engineer is in an office interacting with other engineers to complete
design work. A Construction Engineer typically works outside on the
construction site to manage how that skyscraper will be transformed from paper into
reality. There are many challenges during the construction phase that the
Construction Engineer will need to solve! For example, how can we install a
giant water heater into a building if it doesn’t fit through the door?
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Overlooking Paris, France from the top of the Eiffel Tower and studying the city layout |
I ended up choosing
Construction Engineering and Management because first of all, I loved that type
of problem solving. Second of all, going back to the question of “Where can I
see myself working when I graduate?” and I personally couldn’t see myself
working in one office all day. I thrive in active environments, which is the
reason why I love my major and the opportunities I have after graduation! The
Construction Engineering and Management department requires three summer
internships in the construction industry and helps students find these
internships through connections with alumni. I’ve had two summer internships
with Bechtel Corporation, one of the largest general contractors in the world,
and am getting ready for my third after this school year! These summer
internships are the perfect opportunity to “test-drive” my major and find what
I am passionate about. I am even more excited about school after experiencing
how my classes apply to the real world. Hopefully I will be landing a full-time
position with Bechtel when I graduate and work on different projects they have
around the world!
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Taking tourist-y pictures in the rain in London on the 21st Century European Transportation study abroad trip |
I have already had the
opportunity to travel with not only Bechtel for my internships, which were in Baytown,
Texas and Richland, Washington, but I have had the opportunity to
internationally travel with the Purdue Engineering program. I have already been
to five different countries within the past two years! Last May, I went on a
study abroad trip through the Civil Engineering department to the UK, France
and Germany to learn about 21st Century European transportation. On
this trip we experienced the culture, learned about transportation modes in
Europe, and saw all the tourist landmarks. I also went to Ecuador for a project
I am working on in Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS). Our
project is designing and constructing an Education Center in an indigenous
community in Ecuador, so we had the opportunity to communicate with our
stakeholders face-to-face and experience the culture! All of these experiences
have fueled my passion for education and make me even more excited for what the
future holds!
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Doing yoga on a mountainside outside of Lumbisi, Ecuador |
-Annie Gassner
Junior in Construction Engineering and Management with a minor in Environmental and Ecological Engineering
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