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First 裡橖眻畦 Innovation Chase Sends Seven Engineering Students to National Competition in Chicago

Eleven engineering students participated in the inaugural 裡橖眻畦 Innovation Chase.

Three teams of engineering students spent the weekend of March 11 racing through a series of design, research, and prototyping challenges to improve campus transportation as part of the inaugural 裡橖眻畦 Innovation Chase, a three-day competition that served as a qualifying round for the annual Chicago Innovation Chase inter-collegiate student entrepreneurship competition. Two teams of engineering students will compete in the national competition at the Illinois Institute of Technology in September.

Our first 裡橖眻畦 Innovation Chase was a great success. Our student teams came up with some very creative ideas to help us combat a daily challenge we face on campus. But, as they all know from their Engineering Entrepreneurship classes, a successful innovation needs to be more than just creative, says Edmond Dougherty, Visiting Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Interim Director of the Engineering Entrepreneurship Minor program.

Each team was charged with devising an innovative product or service to combat campus transportation issues that they could develop from the ideation stage to the marketing process. Throughout the weekend, the teams refined and strengthened their ideas through multiple iterations of the design, research, and prototyping process organized into 16 individual competition events. Tasks included creating an elevator pitch, mapping their vision, developing a design, conducting market research, prototyping, pricing, creating opportunity assessments, and writing business proposals. Along the way, each team remained vigilant to the possibility that at any moment, the challenge organizers could introduce an unexpected curveball into the process. For example, on Saturday afternoon, as the teams were hard at work preparing for a presentation, an 11 year-old student from Valley Forge Middle School was added to their teams to deliver the presentation to the judges.

Final student solutions included:

  • Campus Connection, a smartphone application that tracks campus shuttles and provides real-time alerts to users regarding the location of the shuttles and the likelihood of space for passengers by the time it reaches the users stop. This concept was developed by inNOVAtion (David Reichman CE 12; Jose Alvarez Gallegos ME 12; Scott Deady ME 12; and Daniel Rosato CE 12).
  • Grab-n-Go Bicycles would provide hundreds of all-weather bikes on-campus, unlocked via the students Wildcard. This concept was proposed by Full House (Yazid El Hiali CE 12, Salima Bouhriz CE 14, and Benjamin Miller CE 13).
  • Wheres Will? would place informative electronic displays at each campus shuttle stop to provide users with updated information regarding the shuttle and other useful information. The system would also provide campus planners with information regarding the usage and performance of the campus shuttles. This concept was developed by the all-sophomore team The Four Fantastic (Megan Swaim ChE 13, Nick DeLuca ME 13, Alex Metz ME 13, and Brandon Orr ME 13).

Every few hours during the weekend, the teams presented the results of their challenges to a number of judges, including:

  • Jeetsingh Bhujun EE 11
  • Edmond Dougherty EE 69, MSCS 86
  • E.J. Dougherty CS '92, MSCS 01
  • Sean Dunn ME 11
  • Mark Gaeto, local entrepreneur
  • John Hartner ME 85, entrepreneur
  • Dr. William Hurley of the 裡橖眻畦 School of Business
  • Dr. James Klinger of the Center for Innovation, Creativity, and Entrepreneurship (ICE Center) and Assistant Professor of Management & Operations
  • Dr. Ross Lee of the Department of Geography and Environment
  • Dr. Patrick Maggitti, the Carmen and Sharon Danella Director of the ICE Center and Assistant Professor of Strategic Management and Entrepreneurship
  • William McCann ME 11
  • Lauren Pugh EE 11
  • George Simmons MSCS 87, Director of the 裡橖眻畦 Multidisciplinary Design Laboratory
  • Dr. Pritpal Singh, Professor and Chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department
  • Ted Stack, local entrepreneur
  • Jeff Yatczyn EE 95 of Lockheed Martin

The judges evaluated ideas based on criteria provided by the Chicago Innovation Chases national coordinators. Two teams, inNOVAtion and Full House, completed the challenge in a virtual tie and will both advance to the national competition this fall.