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S

prawled out in chairs

in Grand Canyon

University’s newly

expanded Lopes Lab, a

group of students jotted

ideas on a floor-to-

ceiling whiteboard with

red and blue markers as

they brainstormed intently.

Across the lab, Brock Nelson, a senior

Entrepreneurial Studies major, peered table-

level at his skateboard as he carefully fitted it

with Legos, pipe cleaners and clay. His goal, he

said, is to build a model for a skateboard lock.

“If he attaches the (wheel assembly) truck and

the board together, they can’t be taken apart,”

said Ben Encinas, engineering lab coordinator.

Though at different stages of the creative

process, Nelson and the brainstorming bunch

were taking steps toward a similar goal:

making products that solve problems and can

be engineered on campus.

With the much anticipated opening of GCU’s

new engineering wing, models like Nelson’s can

be transformed into larger-scale prototypes in

engineering machine shops and labs.

After years of planning and construction,

the College of Science, Engineering and

Technology is prepared to officially unveil the

engineering wing of Building 1, adding an

important piece to the academic environment

of the campus. The east-west

section of the enormous

L-shaped building will welcome

students in January for the start

of spring semester.

“We are championing a very

intensive, hands-on experience

with new shops and labs that

correspond to our teaching

technique,” said CSET Associate

Dean Dr. Michael Sheller, the

head of GCU’s two-year-old

engineering program.

He is also on the team of

faculty, staff, industry, architect

and laboratory consultants who

helped develop and nurture

the new engineering building from concept to

reality.

The four-story, 170,000-square-foot

structure is a giant, not only in sheer size

but also in the cutting-edge nature of the

sophisticated shops and labs in which

engineering majors and others can apply their

learning and create products as massive and

complex as they can imagine.

The engineering building is integral to

GCU’s goal to rise as an Arizona mecca for

science, technology, engineering and math

(STEM), a University whose top-notch faculty

prepare highly trained students to help fill a

void in STEM jobs and attract more top-tier

businesses to the state.

“It will be exciting to see the labs and

the machine shops come alive,” CSET Dean

Mark Wooden said. “It’s also exciting that our

engineering students are at the phase that they

are taking lab courses.”

Thriving Lopes Lab

Formerly part of the Colangelo College of

Business (CCOB), the Lopes Lab has been

integrated into the engineering department

while maintaining its entrepreneurial core. It’s

a place where students collaborate, tinker with

ideas and create concept models.

1 8 • GCU MAGAZ I NE

Sharp

and

cutting

edge

New engineering building gives students

the tools to build on their ideas

B Y L A U R I E M E R R I L L

The new 170,000-square-

foot engineering building,

scheduled to be fully open

in January, is an important

step in GCU's continuing

push in STEM education.