AEI Student Competition | 350 Mission Street | San Francisco, California
Kieran Carlisle | Mechanical

ABET Accreditation Survey [PDF]

In completing the National ASCE Charles Pankow Foundation Student Competition, I have both thoroughly enjoyed my experience while gaining a greater understanding and respect for BIM/IDP. While enhancing my knowledge of mechanical system design, the integrated process improved my communication and analysis skills. 

Setting concrete initial goals created a collaborative work environment, with all building disciplines working with a unified mindset. In retrospect however, increased communication between building disciplines would have alleviated small integrative difficulties and redundancy. Having experienced these slight troubles, I am now further prepared to face them in a professional setting.

In the end, this competition has presented me with the insights and ability to start my professional architectural engineering career.

 

Progress
 
04-27-2014 | CPEP Complete
04-21-2014 | Reflections Posted
04-21-2014 | Building Abstract
03-28-2014 | Final Presentation
02-17-2014 | Competition Report
02-10-2014 | 100% Report
01-27-2014 | 95% Report
12-14-2013 | Draft Report
12-11-2013 | Presentation 4
12-09-2013 | Lutron Presentation
11-12-2013 | Draft Report
10-09-2013 | Presentation 3
09-18-2013 | Presentation 2
09-04-2013 | Presentation 1
09-02-2013 | CPEP Launched

Note: While great efforts have been taken to provide accurate and complete information on the pages of CPEP, please be aware that the information contained herewith is considered a work‐inprogress for this thesis project. Modifications and changes related to the original building designs and construction methodologies for this senior thesis project are solely the interpretation of AEVITAS. Changes and discrepancies in no way imply that the original design contained errors or was flawed. Differing assumptions, code references, requirements, and methodologies have been incorporated into this thesis project; therefore, investigation results may vary from the original design.

The Capstone Project Electronic Portfolio (CPEP) is a web-based project and information center. It contains material produced for a year‐long Senior Thesis class. Its purpose, in addition to providing central storage of individual assignments, is to foster communication and collaboration between student, faculty consultant, course instructors, and industry consultants. This website is dedicated to the research and analysis conducted via guidelines provided by the Department of Architectural Engineering. For an explanation of this capstone design course and its requirements click here.

This page was last updated on April 27, 2014 by the AEVITAS design team and is hosted by the Penn State AE Department ©2013