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http://www1.umn.edu/news/features/2011/UR_CONTENT_29...
Members of Innovative Engineers, including Alejandro De la Mora (squatting), install the tower for their 1-kilowatt wind turbine in La Hermita. Photos: courtesy Innovative Engineers
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http://www1.umn.edu/news/features/2011/UR_CONTENT_29...
Coffee, homebrew, and a mail-order guidebook Innovative Engineers formed organicallyand rather quicklyin 2009. Several students had taken part in a global seminar on renewable energies in Scandinavia led by Paul Imbertson, a professor of electrical and computer engineering. Just prior to that, while up late studying for finals, civil engineering student and seminar participant Alejandro De la Mora found himself online searching for related materials. He ordered the book Homebrew Wind Power and brought it on the trip. On their return, some of the students began building a turbine in the basement of Imbertsons home. In December 2009 De la Mora and Josh Durand cofounded the new student group, whose mission is to partner with underdeveloped communities to meet their infrastructure needs for electricity and water according to locally available resources. Traveling turbine Last summer a group of U students brought the wind turbine to La Hermita and installed the tower foundation. They also began collaborating with a local technical school and taught classes on renewable energy and wind power. Were teaching them how [the turbine] works so if it fails or breaks, they are able to fix it, says De la Mora, who graduated in December. (The wind turbine will become operational after some further testing.) These people are very interested in this technology, adds Morton. They see the possibility of what it can do for people living outside of the cities. The education goes both ways. People may think, Oh, thats so nice that theyre going down and helping them, Morton says. But I honestly think that going down there helped us more. De la Mora points out that the common refrain from La Hermita residents is, I just need a light bulb and to be able to listen to the radio. They are happy with so little and we want so much, he adds. It helps you realize what really is important in life. Exploding growth In the past year, Innovative Engineers has grown to 85 members, spanning all the Us engineering disciplines and then some. Accordingly, the group has added many more activities, including a hydro project at another location in Nicaragua and a fledgling wave energy project on campus. Members have built two additional 1-kilowatt wind turbines, tooone with the help of area middle school students through a program with the Science Museum of Minnesota. And De la Mora, Imbertson, and a group of students just returned from Mexico, where they established a new chapter of Innovative Engineers at Universidad Ibero Americana in Mexico City. Ultimately, Morton hopes that the groups legacy will be lasting relationships with communities like La Hermita. We dont go in there and set up something and say, There you go, he says. For each generation of
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http://www1.umn.edu/news/features/2011/UR_CONTENT_29...
new engineers [at the U], were hoping that they will go down there and see the same people and continue that relationship. For more information about IEs projects and to watch a video of the summer 2010 trip to La Hermita, visit Innovative Engineers.
U civil engineering students Joel Petersen-Gauthier (left) and Emily Gross share a moment with some children from La Hermita.
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