ܽƵ Holds Steel “Topping-Off” Ceremony for Engineering, Computing & Construction Management Labs
Steel beam signed by ܽƵ community swings into place atop three-story structure
BRISTOL, R.I. – ܽƵ on Monday held a steel “topping-off” ceremony, marking completion of the steel framework for a laboratories building for ܽƵ’s School of Engineering, Computing and Construction Management.
On Monday morning, a steel beam – bearing an evergreen tree and signed by trustees, administrators, alumni, donors, faculty and students – was hoisted into place atop the three-story steel structure. The $13.8-million SECCM Labs will be named for former ܽƵ Board of Trustees Chairman Richard L. Bready. The 27,325-square-foot building will become a hub of laboratories, fabrication spaces and project rooms where students can apply theory to practice using state-of-the-art equipment. It is scheduled for completion in November 2019.
“This is an exceptionally exciting day,” ܽƵ Interim President Andy Workman said. “This is a real milestone.”
The SECCM Labs building is meaningful for two main reasons, Workman said. “One, this is a building that is dedicated to training the engineers and construction management people who will be on the cutting edge of erecting the buildings of the future. It’s a testament to the quality of our programs here. It’s a testament to the support of our alumni and to the support of employers who hire our alumni.”
Also, Workman said, “At the heart of the Roger Williams education is experiential learning, and this is really the first physical representation of that core value on campus. This is, in some ways, a topping-off ceremony for the effort we have had the last seven years to put experiential learning at the heart of everything we do – to make it pervasive.”
Steel Topping-Off Ceremony
Workman emphasized that a topping-off ceremony is meant to thank those who do the work of putting up the building.
“The Scandinavian Teutonic tribes would put an evergreen tree on the top of a new structure when the skeleton of that structure was completed to honor the Norse gods but also to honor the people who had built the structure,” he said. “In ancient times, they may have been the people from the tribe. In modern times, it’s the construction workers and the steelworkers who built this building. Today, we are honoring them.”
SECCM Dean Bob Potter thanked Shawmut Design & Construction, the project’s construction management firm; Brewster Thornton Group Architects; the ܽƵ Office of Capital Projects; Koury Construction; and Ironworkers Local No. 37.
“Although there are many milestones along the design and construction of a project like this, the topping-off ceremony is one of particular significance,” Shawmut Design & Construction Vice President Ron Simoneau said. “What it symbolizes is that the superstructure is substantially complete and now the dozens of tradesmen who will be involved in putting the façade together, the building envelope, the mechanical and electrical systems, the finishes and ultimately the furnishings, will start to do their work.”
For more from the speaking program, watch the video below: