
Student-made solar module will provide power during ArtPrize

An 18-foot, solar energy-producing module created by Grand Valley
State University students will be on display during ArtPrize. Students
will demonstrate the benefits of solar energy by powering LED lights,
playing music and providing a space for event goers to charge their phones.
Thanks to a $55,000 grant from Consumers Energy, students and
faculty members spent the summer designing and building two
transportable, solar energy-producing modules. The structures were
designed and constructed by a team of students from the School of
Engineering and a team from Grand Valley's Muskegon Innovation Hub.
The engineering team's module is be set up near the Blue Bridge
and the Eberhard Center on Grand Valley's Pew Grand Rapids Campus from
September 21-October 9. Eight solar panels and a collection of solar
shingles make up the portable system. The unit, which took two months
to build, has the capacity to emit four kilowatts of electricity.
Music will be played that was performed by Grand Valley's
award-winning New Music Ensemble.
Students in a sustainability course, led by Kelly Parker,
professor and director of Environmental Studies, are organizing the
display as part of a class project. Their assignment was to think of a
way to promote the benefits of solar energy. The website is gvsu.edu/ens/solargarden/.
"We hope to give people a first-hand experience of the power
of solar energy. We decided to time the display during ArtPrize so we
could reach as many people as possible," said Cara Maney, a
geography major.
Engineering team captain Alec Nichols, a mechanical engineering
alumnus, said the modules travel to different sites in West Michigan
to demonstrate the technology and collect data, which is made
available on a public website: egr.gvsu.edu/~esm/.
The engineering group included Nichols, Tyler Roelfsema, William
Neuson, Benjamin Stenberg and John Wilks. Affiliate faculty member
Terry Stevens served as their advisor. The second solar energy module
was built by Energy Partners, a tenant at the Muskegon Innovation Hub.
Consumers Energy's solar power plant on the Allendale Campus will
continue to serve as an extension of the classroom at Grand Valley.
Consumers Energy will provide a $20,000 grant each year for the next
six years for proposed interdisciplinary projects and curriculum. Read
more in the summer issue of Grand Valley Magazine.
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