Professor, Students Design and Build Childrenā€™s Center for Katrina-Ravaged Gulfport

Date

µē³µĪŽĀė, IL ā€” April 13, 2006 ā€”

In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT) Assistant Professor of Architecture Frank Flury organized a group of students to contribute to the relief effort.

ā€œThe students were excited for the opportunity to do something to help the people of Gulfport,ā€ said Flury.

The group has partnered with the Lynn Meadows Discovery Center to design and build a 1000 square foot building in Gulfport, Miss., which will accommodate childrenā€™s groups for summer camps, lectures, language classes and other activities. Flury and graduate student Emer Oā€™Donovan visited Gulfport in January to meet with the centerā€™s staff and develop the plan for the project. The structure will be built in sections on the IIT campus, shipped and then assembled on site in May by the 14-member team.

ā€œOur goal was to find a way to use our skills to help one of the affected communities get back on their feet,ā€ said graduate student Emer Oā€™Donovan.

To accommodate the large number of volunteersā€”who were willing to help but unable to make an extended trip to the Gulf coastā€”and to avoid stressing an already strained local infrastructure, the IIT team concluded that the majority of the design and construction work would need to be done in µē³µĪŽĀė. Prefabrication and limited assembly became the driving issues of the design process, and after several weeks, the team had drawn up plans for a component-based structure that can be transported via truck and assembled on site in seven days. Prefabrication of the wall panels has already begun in µē³µĪŽĀė, and the group plans to assemble the building in Mayā€”just in time for the first summer camps in June.

Founded in 1890, IIT is a Ph.D.-granting technological university awarding degrees in the sciences, mathematics and engineering, as well as architecture, psychology, design, business and law. IITā€™s interprofessional, technology-focused curriculum prepares the universityā€™s 6,200 students for leadership roles in an increasingly complex and culturally diverse global workplace.