UB ASCE steel bridge team leaves a legacy

UB steel bridge team members posing with trophies using bull sign at nationals.

UB ASCE's steel bridge team at the awards ceremony following the national competition. Photo: New Leaf Studio

By Peter Murphy

Published June 11, 2019 This content is archived.

The UB American Sociaty of Civil Engineering (ASCE) student club's steel bridge team earned fourth place overall at the National Student Steel Bridge Competition, and received second place honors for construction speed.

Team ties best finish in chapter history

Print
“I knew we had the potential, but how we competed and placed was only half the battle. The success we had would be erased if we couldn't mentor a group of younger members to continue the success. ”
Nicholas Belmonte, Steel Bridge Co-Project Manager
UB ASCE

UB’s steel bridge team traveled to Southern Illinois University earlier this month to compete in the national competition for the second consecutive year. The team earned 12th place overall in 2018, and felt positive heading into this competition, according to UB ASCE vice president Zachary Vacek.

“After regionals, we looked at the different scores from all the regions, and based on how everyone performed, we were fifth overall,” Vacek says. UB ASCE earned first place in the Upstate New York Regional Competition in March.

Over 40 student clubs from the United States and Puerto Rico competed in six different categories: construction speed, lightness, aesthetics, stiffness, economy and efficiency. UB’s team has the second fastest time for construction speed, and finished inside of the top 10 for four out of the five remaining categories.

The team was working on modifications to the bridge up until the day of the competition, according to steel bridge co-project manager Nicholas Belmonte.

“After reviewing the results from regionals, we motivated the team to kick it into high gear and try to make improvements before nationals,” Belmonte says, “we spent long days and nights working in the lab. The build team practiced several nights in the hotel parking lots, and we dropped our build time by over a minute.”

Eighteen students traveled with the steel bridge team to nationals, and half of them were seniors. Vacek and Belmonte have both been members of UB ASCE for four years. UB ASCE president Conor Blake, another senior who has been with the club for multiple years, recognized the significance of the team’s make up.

“It’s very rewarding for us, as seniors, to see years of hard work pay off,” Blake says, “the other half who made the trip are new members. It’s great for them to see the level of competition and get ideas for future years and look to continue the legacy.”

The new members valued their experience traveling to nationals, according to Vacek. “It really is a huge turning point. They come back from nationals with a greater understanding of the level of competitiveness, and are prepared to be future leaders of this team,” Vacek says, “It’s so great as a senior to see some of the members on their first nationals trip just mesmerized and motivated by this competition.”

Leaving a Legacy

2019 marks the third time in the UB steel bridge team’s history where the group finished inside of the top five (4th place in 2015 and 5h place in 2016). This was, at least part of the motivation, according to Blake. “We always heard about the 2015 bridge team. I’m hoping our story will get passed down and fuel the future teams to try and beat it.”

Th 2018-2019 steel bridge team’s legacy and the legacy of 2018-2019 ASCE student club goes beyond the stellar finish at nationals, according to steel bridge team co-project manager Jeremy DesJardens. “It is incredible how we placed at nationals. This is going to inspire our new recruits from the 2019 competition to become more involved and hopefully get new members involved,” Desjardens says, “I have met some of my best friends because of my involvement with the steel bridge team, and I hope that tradition of developing bonds continues.”

When Belmonte and Desjardins got together with the team in August and set goals for the upcoming year, they recognized the advantage they had over some other teams. UB ASCE’s steel bridge team had almost 10 returning senior members.

“I knew we had the potential, but how we competed and placed was only half the battle,” Belmonte says, “the success we had would be erased if we couldn’t mentor a group of younger members to continue the success for the coming years. When I addressed the team and stated our goals, I told everyone that we have the potential to ‘leave a legacy.’”

Belmonte’s discussion on the team’s legacy illustrates a larger initiative by UB ASCE leadership over the past two years, encouraging junior and senior members to mentor some of the younger members and get them more involved than in previous years. “I wanted to leave a legacy with this team and upcoming teams by setting the precedent of not only success but mentorship,” Belmonte says, “not only did we place fourth, but we worked hard and mentored a group of younger students to lead the team for years to come. We taught them the same skills and pride that UB steel bridge carries.