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Potsdam resident part of team that takes top honors in the collegematerial handling education student design competition

Posted 2/27/14

For the second year in a row, undergraduate engineering students, from Rochester Institute of Technology, including a Potsdam native, took top honors in the College Industry Council on Material …

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Potsdam resident part of team that takes top honors in the collegematerial handling education student design competition

Posted

For the second year in a row, undergraduate engineering students, from Rochester Institute of Technology, including a Potsdam native, took top honors in the College Industry Council on Material Handling Education student design competition.

Justine Nichols, Potsdam, was a member if the team.

Four industrial and systems engineering students in RIT's Kate Gleason College of Engineering shared the $2,000 grand prize and travel funds to the organization's annual conference and trade show in Atlanta in March.

Student teams were given a case study, and over five weeks during the semester, they had to redesign the processing system for a large sporting goods facility, targeting distribution of a new product for the company and enlarging space at the distribution center. The best plan from the class was submitted for the national competition.

The team said they drew upon strengths in organizational management, data analysis and experience understanding concepts of utilization and process-flow to complete the lengthy project objectives.

"Everyone wants to see the numbers," said Nichols, laughing. Nichols is originally from Potsdam, N.Y.

Components of the project included developing a plan that would help the company increase its core business as well as adapt its physical structure and processes to accommodate the growth. The team had to assess the current state of the operation and build a "real world" plan to expand, including equipment needs, cost estimates and resource allocations. A management presentation was also required, and it included cost justifications.

"The big part of this project was taking the information and analyzing it, then using what we had learned in class or common sense to make educated assumptions, then move forward based on that information," said Bates. "You had to wrap your head around a lot of different pockets of information."

RIT industrial and systems engineering student teams have been successful in past competitions, taking first place last year and top-five placements over the past five years.

"To win this competition in back-to-back years shows our commitment to practical application of industrial engineering methodologies. The students handled themselves very well," said Scott Grasman, industrial and systems engineering department head.