Mines Engineers Without Borders visits Nicaragua

Student clubs are all about building bridges. But in the case of the Mines chapter of Engineers Without Borders, students are literally building bridges.

Four members of the Mines chapter made a preliminary foray to the Jinotepe region of Nicaragua over the winter break in support of an upcoming bridge-building project.

During the rainy season, isolated villages there become even more cut off when rivers swell. Suspended bridges, which require relatively little capital to build, can sometimes transform such communities if they permit year-round access to schools, markets, healthcare and other services.

Graduate students Bridget Rossow and Nathaniel Dauth, undergrads Kevin Boxer and Preston Sutton, and professional engineer Todd Wang ’86 of CH2M Hill spent a week in the country meeting with local residents and surveying potential bridge sites. Mines’ EWB chapter hopes to construct several suspended bridges in the country over the next five years. 

This story originally appeared in the Winter 2012 issue of Mines magazine

About Mines
Colorado School of Mines is a public R1 research university focused on applied science and engineering, producing the talent, knowledge and innovations to serve industry and benefit society – all to create a more prosperous future.