When did you fall in love with engineering? I was always tinkering with things at home as a kid trying to figure out they worked, but I didn’t fall in love with engineering until my third year in college when I started taking my major courses.
When did you fall in love with engineering? I decided on mechanical engineering between my junior and senior years of high school, but I fell in love with it during my junior year of college, when I had my first class in building energy systems.
When did you fall in love with engineering? Math and science were always interesting to me at a young age. Over the years, my curiosity around "the why and the how" naturally resulted in me pursing my electrical and computer engineering degrees at Georgia Tech in Atlanta.
When did you fall in love with engineering? I have always enjoyed math and figuring out how things fit together. In high school, my guidance counselor recommended trying some technical drawing courses instead of the accounting I was looking at, and I am forever grateful for that recommendation.
When did you fall in love with engineering? I've always had an interest in science and math, even as a young girl. I wanted to know how things worked and wanted to fix things when they were broken. I've also always been up to the challenge of solving problems. In the end, that is really what engineering is – finding solutions to problems.
When did you fall in love with engineering? From an early age, I loved thinking creatively, which carried into my early career in engineering. I would get recommendations from senior engineers about the way something’s “always done,” but I would want to break the mold and try different things
When did you fall in love with engineering? I have loved engineering since I was a kid building with Legos, but it really started to build during high school. I attended Benilde-St.
While the advent of membrane-based rooftop air conditioners, VRF, energy storage, and a number of other technologies appear to be testing the limits of energy efficiency, the International Energy Agency (IEA) believes the industry is miles from touching its proverbial glass ceiling.
Keeping fleet, machinery, and other assets working efficiently is a common challenge among equipment manufacturers; engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) companies; and power and process plant owners and operators.
ValleyPoint Church, a just-completed new-build project, was conceptualized as a place of worship, learning, and gathering for the Glen Mills, Pennsylvania, community.