2016 30 Under 30: Recognizing the Future Leaders of Manufacturing July 1, 2016 For the fourth consecutive year, Manufacturing Engineering recognizes 30 individuals under the age of 30 who are making a difference in manufacturing and STEM fields. These young people deserve recognition for their accomplishments in a field that gets unfairly branded as dark, dirty and dangerous—or even worse, as a career of the past.
30 Under 30: Fabian Bartos June 29, 2016 As a student in East Leyden’s Project Lead the Way (PLTW) Introduction to Engineering course, Fabian Bartos wasn’t satisfied with just completing his schoolwork. On top of the PLTW course curriculum, he designed and printed a model of his previous school.
30 Under 30: Troy Wallace Pierson June 29, 2016 When high-schooler Troy Pierson completes his engineering degree in four years or so, he may be one of few in his class who’s not sending out resumes and scheduling interviews.
30 Under 30: Andrew Siwicki June 29, 2016 For Andrew Siwicki of ABB Inc., robotics wasn’t always the goal. Growing up in rural Illinois, he was more interested in the wind farms that dotted the landscape. When he was applying to college, his focus was on the future of alternative energy.
30 Under 30: Aaron Birt June 29, 2016 Aaron Birt has been nominated “as much for what he will do in the future as for what he has already done in the past,” according to Diran Apelian, director of the Metal Processing Institute. “In many cases, the future is perfectly tied to past actions.
30 Under 30: Joseph Prosnitz June 29, 2016 There are three things you should know about Joseph Prosnitz that explain how his project Up-Ride, the bicycle-to-elliptical conversion kit, came into existence.