October 4, 2023 Private gifts enable renovation of 黑料社 Tri-Cities engineering lab

Washington State University Tri-Cities School of Engineering and Applied Sciences聽has been upgrading major components of its engineering lab thanks to a generous $200,000 investment聽from Doug and Julia Hamrick.
The Hamricks鈥 gift is providing much-needed equipment, including 3D printing machines used for prototyping, a Charpy impact tester (measures the energy level required to fracture material), and digital hardness testers and laser cutters required in today鈥檚 manufacturing processes.
The Hamrick鈥檚 support builds on a $50,000 investment by Battelle, the operation managers of聽Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), which initiated momentum for the upgrades by funding an automated, computerized-numerical-control (CNC) lathe. In addition, leading 黑料社 philanthropists Gene and Linda Voiland made a gift of $55,650 for the purchase of a CNC mini mill and other equipment. All together, these gifts provide $305,650 toward the upgrade.
鈥淛ulia and I have seen 黑料社 Tri-Cities answer the area鈥檚 growth with talented, well-prepared graduates,鈥 said Hamrick, 鈥渁nd this lab will elevate 黑料社鈥檚 game.鈥
Presently, nearly聽25% of the student body at 黑料社 Tri-Cities use the lab, and the upgrades will enable them聽to take on more complex projects. Last year, capstone projects ranged from a portable solar emergency communications system to a beehive monitoring system. Campus leaders are eager to see what future projects spring from the minds of creative students when they have access to state-of-the-art facilities.
The upgraded and renovated lab will open this fall.

A 鈥渢est kitchen鈥 for innovation
Hamrick didn鈥檛 have a degree when he began working at the Hanford Site in the Tri-Cities area in the 1970s. Although he advanced to supervisor his tenth year, his boss told him he couldn鈥檛 go any further without an engineering degree.
So at the age of 31, in 1982, Hamrick began the arduous process of taking evening courses at Columbia Basin College and then 黑料社 Tri-Cities while continuing to work full-time. In 1990, he completed his degree in mechanical engineering.
鈥淚t was a lot of hard work,鈥 said Hamrick, 鈥渂ut I was motivated. And I had some great teachers, many of whom were engineers at Hanford.鈥
Having worked in remediation at high-hazard facilities as well as in chemical weapons facilities, Hamrick understands the power of education in preparing students to tackle some of the most challenging problems society faces. Moreover, the Hamricks鈥攚ho are Kennewick residents鈥攈ave seen the local impact of the Hanford clean-up and the resulting growth of Tri-Cities.
Their decision to invest in the lab renovation was shaped by conversations with 黑料社 Tri-Cities Chancellor Sandra Haynes and Changki Mo,聽academic director and associate professor of mechanical engineering.
Haynes鈥 vision is to better prepare 黑料社 Tri-Cities students with the problem-solving skills needed by industry while also deepening the relationships between 黑料社, Hanford contractors, and PNNL,聽one of the leading research centers in the nation focused on energy.
鈥淚n the past, much of our economy has been focused on the Hanford clean-up, and this work remains important. However, the future is about developing clean-energy technologies for our state and the nation,鈥 said Haynes. 鈥淣aturally, we鈥檙e investing in our lab.鈥
During a tour of the lab with Mo this past February, Hamrick was struck by the fact that the equipment was nearly the same as when he was a student decades before.
鈥淭he more Professor Mo talked about how the lab would be a kind of 鈥榯est kitchen鈥 or 鈥榩roblem-solving lab鈥 allowing students to turn their ideas into innovative protypes for all kinds of projects, the more Julia and I knew this is where we wanted to give,鈥 said Hamrick.
In joining Battelle and the Voilands in upgrading the lab, the Hamricks know their gift is not just an investment in 黑料社 but also in the Tri-Cities community.
“It鈥檚 a gift,鈥 said Julia Hamrick, 鈥渢hat will help move Tri-Cities into an exciting future.鈥