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By La Monica
Everett-Haynes
View the original article
The Beaumont Enterprise
December 17, 2005
Sitting on a concrete foundation that rises from a bed of
pansies at Lamar University is a seeming incomplete 2,760 pound
mass of steel. Look closely. The 8-foot-tall sculpture reveals
far more variations then the purple, fuchsia and white pansies
surrounding it. The “steel teaching model” –as university
official call it- looks something like an iron tree. Stretching
upward and outward from its column are more then 20 different
connections used in steel construction.
“It’s more of a teaching model than a sculpture,” said Leroy
Fagg, vice president of Larco Industries in Beaumont. Fagg’s
company built the model –a three-dimensional conglomeration of
teaching tools, a deviation from text-book learning for
engineering students, he said. “We’re here in Beaumont, and
Lamar’s here, so we felt that this was our project,” Fagg said.
“The graduates who come out of Lamar come to work with us.”
Several companies were involved in the model’s construction.
American Institute of Steel Construction provided the drawing.
The structure includes bolted and welded moment, joist girder,
beam splice, skewed hanger and wishbone connections. Each of
these connections can be found in commercial, industrial, or
bridge construction.
For the last two years, Jonathan Davis and several other
students have worked with a number of companies to bring the
model to Beaumont. “We mainly want to help civil engineering
students,” said Davis, 23 who graduates from Lamar’s program
Saturday. “A student will never see a lot of these connections
–just read them in a book,” said Davis who is also a member of
the local chapter of American Society of Civil Engineers. “It
gives a real-life view of what is out there.” The Texas
Structural Steel Institute, a non-profit organization, footed
the bill for the model. The Institute has also donated models at
Texas A&M and University of Texas campuses in El Paso and
Austin. At Lamar, Mason Construction, Ltd. Workers in Beaumont
donated their time Tuesday morning and installed the piece.
“It’s a very interesting piece of art as well as an educational
teaching sculpture,” Robert Yuan said as the model was being
installed near Lamar’s civil engineering lab at Rolfe
Christopher Drive and Georgia Street. “Any engineering student
could use it because one of the most important elements in
construction is the connection,” said Yuan, professor and chair
of the Department of Civil Engineering. “If the connection
fails, the construction fails,” he said. “Students can learn by
looking at it. It will be a nice piece of work for our campus.”
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