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Students Finish Second In City Planning Competition

November 27, 2017

A student-developed plan that models the city of Jacksonville’s vision for an autonomous public transportation system earned a second-place finish recently for Florida Polytechnic University.

The design was one of six presented Nov. 9 at the Urban International Design Contest in Las Vegas. Teams from universities around the globe entered their vision for how new modes of sustainable public transportation can be implemented in their host city.

Florida Poly students Brendan O’ Malley, Vamsi Hanamanthu and Jon Morris have been working with Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA) since the end of July learning about the transformative plan to convert the city’s existing Skyway into a more user-friendly, autonomous system. City planners have spent years researching options and developing plans; Florida Poly students took those plans and developed ways to graphically model the expansion of services outside the current downtown grid and off the existing Skyway.

“Jacksonville is on the leading edge in the deployment of autonomous vehicles for public transportation,” says Dr. Dean Bushey, assistant professor of computer science and faculty advisor on the project. “The student’s models represent a glimpse into the future of autonomous vehicle transportation systems.”

The projects are graded on the quality of the 3D digital model developed by the team, their presentation and the quality of their paper. Knowing that all three of their products were sufficient to win second place validated months of work, Vamsi says.

“It shows we’re not just a one-trick pony,” says Vamsi, of Morrisville, North Carolina,a Junior studying Cyber Security. “We can do all aspects of this project and communicate our ideas. It was really rewarding to be recognized.”

Brendan, of Brandon, Florida, a Sophomore studying Cyber Gaming, did a majority of the work on the 3D model, which was crafted using a program called Encitra by 4Dialog. The project required him to lean heavily on his Cyber Gaming programming as well as learn new skills. The finished product provides viewers a detailed look at what the new pods would look and how they would be deployed through Jacksonville. Also working on the project was Jon, of Tampa, Florida, a Junior studying Computer Science.

“I’ve always been interested in how cities interact,” Brendan explains. “This project not only gave me skills to use later in my career, but it exposed me to a lot of industry professionals.”

“Florida Poly really pushes applied learning. It’s not just memorizing what was on Page 52, but using our skills in actual projects,” Vamsi says.

Session Details

This session will demonstrate that practical risk management is for everyone, regardless of a formal program. Attendees will learn actionable and simple strategies that are easy to implement, enabling them to start immediately by focusing on their top risks to build greater operational resilience and ensure the sustained success of their auxiliary enterprises.

Presenter Profile

Michelle Powell serves as the pioneering Risk Manager at Florida Polytechnic University, the state’s sole 100% STEM-dedicated institution. Having been with the university for nearly 11 years, Michelle transitioned from a leadership role in Admissions in October 2023 to establish and evolve the risk management function from the ground up. In this solo capacity, Michelle builds robust frameworks for our dynamic, young university, overseeing our insurance portfolio, consulting on third-party and event risks, and developing critical campus-wide training programs. Michelle has obtained the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO) Enterprise Risk Management certificate and the Associate in Risk Management (ARM) and Construction Risk and Insurance Specialist (CRIS) designations. Her distinct background in mathematics and engineering, combined with extensive higher education leadership, brings an analytical and strategic approach enhancing the institution’s resilience.