COLONIE -- Give a transportation engineer a can of tuna fish and he'll build a bridge.
"That's what we do. We build bridges," explained Rohit Dagli, a civil
engineer in the state Department of Transportation's Bridge Design
Section.Dagli
and his colleagues at DOT's Wolf Road headquarters spent several lunch
hours this month at work in a first-floor conference room, stacking
canned goods and pasta boxes collected as part of the agency's annual
food drive commemorating Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday.
When
they ran out of food the right size for their construction project,
they collected cash donations from their colleagues and went shopping
for decking material (chiefly spaghetti and macaroni boxes) and some
nice, sturdy pier bases. Jumbo cans of tomatoes were the best choice
for those, said drafting technician Robert Foote.
Bridge design
squad leader George Senft acknowledged the specs were a lot looser than
for the usual projects the team undertakes.
"We just started doing it, and it kind of evolved," said Judy Fenoff, an engineering technician.
The
DOT employees who donated food and money to the project were among
thousands of state workers around New York who participated in the
annual Martin Luther King Jr. Food Drive coordinated by the state
Office of General Services and Office of Mental Health.
More than
900 pounds collected at agency offices in the Capital Region will be
contributed to the Food Bank of Northeastern New York, said OGS
spokesman Brad Maione. In addition, agencies that have regional offices
elsewhere, including DOT, are donating to food banks and pantries in
their own regions.
Maione said organizers estimate that every 2 1/2 pounds donated equals one meal.
The DOT bridge builders were responding to a challenge proposed by Commissioner Astrid Glynn, Dagli said.
"I
had seen something similar done in the architectural community," Glynn
explained. "I thought it might be an interesting challenge for our
engineers and a way to bring the idea home to some of the members of
NYSDOT. I must say they responded beyond my wildest expectations."
The
total amount collected at DOT won't be known until next week, when the
bridge is to be dismantled, but food drive coordinators Cheryl Looman
and Ron Weiss said it appears that more donation boxes were filled this
year.
The multicolored, multispan slab bridge features many of
the details New York motorists would see on their daily commutes:
piers, arches, wingwalls and ramps.
The builders also used
donated food items to build a boat, some buses and cars and a train
below the span, giving it a "multimodal" flavor.
Dagli has
assigned special significance to many of the details in honor of King's
legacy and the nation's civil rights history. The train represents the
Underground Railroad that brought former slaves to freedom, each arch
honors a civil rights leader and the entire structure represents a
bridge between races, he said.
On a more whimsical note, Weiss also noted this consumer-oriented feature: "It's toll free."
Source : Times Union