Entrepreneurship Students Shine at Ford Innovation Contest
For the second consecutive year, students in the Engineering Entrepreneurship minor program contributed winning ideas in the national University of Detroit Mercy/Ford Innovation Contest, which drew more than 25 teams from seven universities. This year, four teams from 裡橖眻畦 participated, with two teams of Wildcats taking second and third place.
We built participation in this contest into our junior curriculum for the Engineering Entrepreneurship minor program because it gives our students a unique opportunity to connect with representatives from a major American industry, develop ideas that could have a positive impact on millions of people, and blend creativity with engineering, says Edmond J. Dougherty EE 69, MSCS 86, Director of the program.
This year, Ford challenged students to develop an innovation that could be built into any facet of the automobiles they manufacture. Teams interfaced with Ford contacts via Skype at specified intervals throughout the challenge period to receive direction, input, and feedback. Then, each team submitted an innovation pitch, along with a three-minute video commercial.
With second place, Nicholas DeLuca ME 13, L. Ryan Hughes ME 13, Brandon Orr ME 13, and Javier Sevilla ME 13 proposed a solution for reducing or removing blind spots. Using organic light-emitting diodes, they suggested a flexible apparatus containing a camera that can be inserted into an automobiles blind spot. The cameras then display what is happening beyond the blind spot, as though the space is transparent. They received $1,500, a team trophy, and individual certificates.
Monica Maschue ChE ’13; Laura Krotowski ChE ’13; Dr. Gary Gabriele, Drosdick Endowed Dean of Engineering; Daniel Knapp ChE ’13; and Edmond J. Dougherty EE ’69, MSCS ’86, Director of Engineering Entrepreneurship (not pictured: Antonio de la Mata CpE ’13)
Third place winners Laura Krotowski ChE 13, Monica Maschue ChE 13, Daniel Knapp ChE 13, and Antonio de la Mata CpE 13 developed a concept for smart door technology, which automatically checks to determine whether a pedestrian, biker, or another car is coming before the driver opens the door. Ford awarded them $1,000, a team trophy, and individual certificates.
Ford honored this years winners on Nov. 22 via Skype as part of an international meeting on global technology.
Nicholas DeLuca ME ’13; Brandon Orr ME ’13; Dr. Gary Gabriele, Drosdick Endowed Dean of Engineering; L. Ryan Hughes ME ’13; Javier Sevilla ME ’13; and Edmond J. Dougherty EE ’69, MSCS ’86, Director of Engineering Entrepreneurship