E10: Engineering Design and Analysis
Mechanical Engineering Module
Spring 2009
Faculty:
Alice Agogino, Mechanical Engineering, agogino 'at 'berkeley 'dot 'edu
Grad Student Instructors:
Ryan Shelby, Mechanical Engineering, ryan_shelby 'at' berkeley 'dot 'edu
Kimberly Lau, Mechanical Engineering, lauk 'at' berkeley 'dot 'edu
Tobias Schultz, Mechanical Engineering, tschultz84 'at' gmail 'dot' com
Time and Location:
Lectures:
MWF 10-11 AM, 3108 Etcheverry Hall
Labs:
T 2-5 PM, 2105 Etcheverry Hall
W 2-5 PM, 2105 Etcheverry Hall
Th 2-5 PM, 2105 Etcheverry Hall
Syllabus:
Course syllabus and schedule for Spring 2009.
Course Description:
How do engineers design successful, sustainable products? Students in this module will follow the human-centered design process to investigate the needs of undergraduate university housing stakeholders and develop sustainable solutions. This sustainable product development process includes customer needs analyses, conceptual design, prototyping, testing and life cycle analyses.
Various prototyping tools will be available, including our new rapid prototyping equipment.
Students can expect to finish this module with an understanding of what sustainability means, how designers draw from sustainability concepts, and the process used to generate and evaluate sustainable solutions. Funding will be available for design development and prototyping.
Alice Agogino, Mechanical Engineering, agogino 'at 'berkeley 'dot 'edu
Grad Student Instructors:
Ryan Shelby, Mechanical Engineering, ryan_shelby 'at' berkeley 'dot 'edu
Kimberly Lau, Mechanical Engineering, lauk 'at' berkeley 'dot 'edu
Tobias Schultz, Mechanical Engineering, tschultz84 'at' gmail 'dot' com
Time and Location:
Lectures:
MWF 10-11 AM, 3108 Etcheverry Hall
Labs:
T 2-5 PM, 2105 Etcheverry Hall
W 2-5 PM, 2105 Etcheverry Hall
Th 2-5 PM, 2105 Etcheverry Hall
Syllabus:
Course syllabus and schedule for Spring 2009.
Course Description:
How do engineers design successful, sustainable products? Students in this module will follow the human-centered design process to investigate the needs of undergraduate university housing stakeholders and develop sustainable solutions. This sustainable product development process includes customer needs analyses, conceptual design, prototyping, testing and life cycle analyses.
Various prototyping tools will be available, including our new rapid prototyping equipment.
Students can expect to finish this module with an understanding of what sustainability means, how designers draw from sustainability concepts, and the process used to generate and evaluate sustainable solutions. Funding will be available for design development and prototyping.