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Tag: boys & girls club of greater lowell

  • Get your machines ready! Lowell Kinetic Sculpture Race returns for the 8th year

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    LOWELL — The 10K Lowell Kinetic Sculpture Race returns to the Mill City Saturday for the eighth year as teams combine engineering, art and a little determination to get a human-powered machine across the finish line.

    There will be 15 teams from across New England competing in the race, all with their own mechanical creations designed to be driven across the bumpy cobblestones of downtown Lowell, a mud pit and the Merrimack River.

    The race has been taking place in Lowell since 2016, and it is inspired by a similar event that takes place in California each year, which UMass Lowell art and design professor and Race Director Michael Roundy was able to see for himself.

    “I saw seven of them out there,” said Roundy in a video call Wednesday morning. “There is a culture that goes around the Kinetic Sculpture Races, and the people that were involved were my kind of people… When I came back to the East Coast and was working here in Lowell, it seemed like Lowell had that same kind of spirit.”

    The rules of the race are, mostly, straightforward. Many concern safety, like the requirement that the sculpture has to be easy to get out of, and cannot be harmful to the pilots or the environment around it as it moves. All kinetic sculptures must be able to move with no electric or gas propulsion allowed, only by the power of wind, gravity, or the humans controlling the sculpture. They must conform to Massachusetts vehicle size restrictions, while also having capacity for a single stuffed animal that must be carried by the team throughout the course.

    The full list of rules and safety requirements, and the course map, can be read at Lowellkinetic.com.

    While there is naturally a little bit of a competitive spirit to the race, Roundy said the teams are competing against themselves just as much as they are racing against each other.

    “Teams come into this with the idea of just making it through the race. It really is a battle against yourself more than a battle against everyone else,” said Roundy.

    As such, sculptures breaking down throughout the race is to be expected, and prompts teams to tinker with their machines and bring them back the following year.

    Still, a breakdown isn’t necessarily the end of the race for the team, said Kinetic Sculpture Race Producer Bianca Mauro.

    “Knowing that really tough challenges are a part of this course riddled with obstacles, we get to come up with the coolest volunteers ever to get these teams out of trouble,” said Mauro.

    Those volunteers, Mauro said, are called “The Wrecking Crew,” and they drive around the race course with tools in the back of their vehicle, ready to lend a hand or make a quick repair to a sculpture that finds itself stuck, or even transport them to the next obstacle.

    “We do what we can to bring in this wide range of people beyond the team who love to fix this stuff,” said Mauro.

    Festivities begin at 9 a.m. Saturday with “Meet the Machines,” where the participating kinetic sculptures will be on display for spectators to get a closer look and meet the pilots.

    The opening ceremony and race itself will begin at 11:30 a.m. on Market Street between Dutton and Palmer streets. The course goes toward Central Street before the sculptures turn toward Middle Street, which serves as the first obstacle of the course known as “Bone Shaker Alley,” thanks to the very uneven and bumpy old cobblestones that make up the street.

    The course then moves back to Market Street in the other direction to Cabot Street, then to Father Morissette Boulevard and into “The Maddening Mud Pit” across from the Tsongas Center. The sculptures then make their way across the University Avenue bridge and up the river toward the Sampas Pavilion on the Merrimack River along Pawtucket Boulevard. There, the sculptures have to get into the river and travel the water route before getting back onto the street and going back the way they came, eventually ending on Market Street where the race began.

    Among those designing a sculpture for this year is Brendan Falvey for his team “Stampede.” Falvey has a broad engineering background and works for Thermo Fisher Scientific in Tewksbury, where he tries to see the overall picture of a product and bridge the gaps between the needs of electrical, mechanical and software engineering.

    This year is Falvey’s first time participating, which he was inspired to do after watching the race for the first time last year. His sculpture consists of five tricycles welded together to work in tandem “serpentine” style with five pilots, with larger wheels ready to install before the mud pit and water obstacle to help the sculpture float. Every team must also have a theme and decorative piece to their sculpture, so Falvey and his four teammates will be dressed up in cow colors, and their flotation wheels will be painted as such as well, hence the name Stampede.

    Falvey’s goal, he said, is to “ace” the race, which means to finish without needing any outside assistance, even if a team has to fix a problem themselves.

    Falvey has been working on the design for the last 10 months, he said.

    “I joined Lowell Makes to learn new skills, and took a welding class. I have a wood shop at home, but I don’t have a metal shop, so I use the one there quite a bit,” said Falvey.

    One team will consist of members of the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Lowell, where members and volunteers have been modifying a kinetic sculpture donated by Make It Labs in Nashua, N.H. The club has participated in the Kinetic Sculpture Race in the past, but not since the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Their sculpture will be outfitted with sails and everything they need to make it look like a pirate ship. It consists of four bicycle seats on top of a mixed material platform, from which the four pilots steer and peddle the four large wheels lined with bicycle tire rubber.

    Among the Boys & Girls Club team will be Damaris Gomes-Nova, 17, who is participating in the race for her first time.

    “We had the opportunity to do something new we have never tried, so who knows, it could be fun,” said Gomes-Nova at the club Sept. 11.

    Gomes-Nova is one of six club members working on their sculpture with staff members, including UMass Lowell sophomore Aleah Colon.

    “I thought it was pretty cool to work on something that was a sculpture, but also was … hands on, and also engaging in the community and getting the Boys & Girls Club out there,” said Colon.

    Colon said they still have to take the machine for a test drive, but it is known to have worked in the past as it was featured in the race last year while being driven by a group of teachers from Lowell. Gomes-Nova felt confident in the team being able to get to the finish line.

    “I’ll make sure we win,” Gomes-Nova said with confidence in her team.

    In a statement, Boys & Girls Club of Greater Lowell Executive Director Joseph Hungler said club leadership is “incredibly proud of our members for taking part in the Kinetic Sculpture Race.”

    “This unique, creative event is a perfect reflection of the innovation, teamwork, and problem solving skills we foster and encourage every day at the club,” said Hungler. “Seeing our club kids bring their ideas to life and engage with the community in such a fun way truly showcases the power of experiential learning.”

    At the Lowell Makes workshop Sept. 6, Rudy Dominguez was doing some work on his own sculpture, The Aluminum Falcon, which will be featured for the third time this year. The sculpture is themed after the iconic Millennium Falcon from “Star Wars,” and is powered by two sets of bicycle seats with a model of the ship placed over the top. Dominguez said the sculpture failed two obstacles into their last two attempts, but they are bringing it back for a third try, with some modifications.

    “This entire front end is completely new and built from scratch,” said Dominguez, pointing toward where he made the changes.

    The race course covers a large area, but Mauro said there would be shuttles available to bring spectators to each of the obstacles throughout the day.

    Outside the race itself, Mauro said organizers are working to find more sponsors this year amid general cuts to arts funding by the state and federal governments.

    “Finding funding for arts and culture is becoming more and more challenging. We are going to great lengths to go to companies willing to invest in STEM and arts events. With that investment we do have plans to expand the course, make obstacles more challenging and making things more engaging for the teams and spectators,” said Mauro.

    She noted the KSR organizers have “been advised to proactively look for alternate funding for 2026.”

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    Peter Currier

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  • Distinguished U.S. Navy admiral, Lowell native to keynote Parker Lecture Series event

    Distinguished U.S. Navy admiral, Lowell native to keynote Parker Lecture Series event

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    LOWELL — The fall schedule of the Moses Greeley Parker Lecture Series begins Wednesday evening with Lowell native and retired U.S. Navy Adm. Michael Gilday serving as the keynote speaker and roundtable participant at UMass Lowell’s Comley-Lane Theatre at 6:30 p.m.

    Gilday served as the 32nd chief of naval operations from 2019 to 2023. He has also served as naval aide to the president, and is a recipient of the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, Navy Distinguished Service Medal, four Defense Superior Service Medals, three Legion of Merit awards, a Bronze Star, the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal and the Combat Action Ribbon.

    “We are thrilled that Admiral Gilday has graciously accepted our invitation to be a part of the Parker Lecture Series,” said Parker Lectures Chair John Carson. “With his background as a native Lowellian and a distinguished career serving our country, he is exactly the type of speaker that Moses Greeley Parker had in mind when he started the trust in 1917. We are pleased to offer our audience the opportunity to interact with Admiral Gilday in a roundtable discussion.”

    Gilday will participate in a panel discussion with Carson, City Manager Tom Golden and Mayor Daniel Rourke. After the panel, Gilday will deliver his keynote address, during which he said he will talk about the U.S. military by drawing on his experience in the Navy.

    “I’ll talk about why I think it’s important for people to understand what we do, and why we do it,” Gilday said in a phone call Friday afternoon.

    Gilday grew up in Lowell’s Centralville neighborhood as the oldest of five children, and said the city provided all five siblings “a fantastic foundation for the rest of our lives.”

    “We all benefited from growing up in Lowell,” said Gilday.

    Gilday now lives in Alexandria, Virginia after retiring last year, but he said he comes back to visit the Mill City once or twice a year as his mother and two of his siblings live in the region.

    Following the keynote address, Gilday will engage in a Q&A session with the audience. Before the event on Wednesday, Gilday will also be bringing a younger sailor with him to the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Lowell and Lowell High School. He said it is “one thing for an old guy to talk about his experience in the Navy,” but he also wants the youth to be able to see and talk to someone about their experience much earlier in their naval career.

    “We are incredibly honored to welcome Admiral Gilday back to Lowell,” Golden said in a statement Friday. “His extraordinary service to our nation and his deep connection to our city make this a truly special event. It’s not every day we get to hear firsthand from a leader of such stature, and I know our community will benefit greatly from his insights.”

    Rourke said in a statement that Gilday “embodies the spirit of service that defines the city.”

    “He has made Lowell proud on the world stage, and we look forward to hosting him for this event,” said Rourke.

    UMass Lowell Chancellor Julie Chen said Gilday “has had a profound impact serving the U.S. Navy, our nation’s top leaders and the people of our country.”

    “I look forward to hearing his views on leadership and the lessons he learned during an impressive and distinguished career in uniform,” Chen said in a statement.

    Admission to the lecture is free for all, with a seating capacity of about 400.

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    Peter Currier

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  • Lori Trahan highlights $2.2M in federal funds for local Boys & Girls Clubs

    Lori Trahan highlights $2.2M in federal funds for local Boys & Girls Clubs

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    LOWELL — U.S. Rep. Lori Trahan and leaders of local Boys & Girls Clubs celebrated $2.2 million in federal funding Trahan secured for the clubs in the 3rd Congressional District in a fiscal 2023 funding package.

    The funding negotiated by Trahan was used to support five Boys & Girls Clubs in her district, including the clubs in Lowell, Lawrence, MetroWest, Haverhill and the Fitchburg, Leominster and Gardner club. It is being used to fund new and existing workforce development programs at the clubs, including career pathways exploration, job skills training and work-based learning experiences for teenage club members.

    Trahan came to the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Lowell Tuesday evening to highlight the funding. She said all five clubs collaborated to request the $2.2 million, which was split evenly with each club receiving about $400,000.

    “It’s going to fill such a major need. I just learned of all the programs all the individual clubs are embarking on around the workforce, apprenticeships and career pathways,” said Trahan. “If you think about all the legislation we just passed, whether it was infrastructure, or CHIPS and Science, or inflation reduction with investments in clean energy, we need more workers.”

    Boys & Girls Club of Fitchburg, Leominster, & Gardner CEO Elizabeth Coveney called the federal funds “a transformative investment” in their workforce development projects.

    “This support will enable us to expand our programs, fostering the next generation of leaders right here in our district. We are profoundly grateful for Congresswoman Trahan’s vision and commitment to our mission, and we look forward to seeing the remarkable impact of this funding on our Clubhouse and beyond,” said Coveney.

    David Ginisi, the senior director of marketing and development at the Boys & Girls Club of Fitchburg, Leominster, & Gardner, said the funding for their club would be used for evolving their programs for their teenage members to help them explore a range of potential career interests.

    “We are looking to build a state of the art podcast studio with this. We are looking to create and establish licensing programs. Lifeguard licensing, drivers’ licensing, CNA programming, giving these kids the opportunities to develop skills that will better prepare them to enter the workforce as they move on and mature,” said Ginisi.

    Boys & Girls Club of Greater Lowell Executive Director Joe Hungler said the funds would help give his club’s members the resources and exposure to set themselves up for a good career in the future. As he spoke, construction surrounded the building as the club builds a new teen center.

    “Our goal is to make sure that as we build this new teen center with a separate teen entrance, there is the awesome programs that will inspire our youth by exposing them to different careers and what is possible,” said Hungler. “As well as to make sure they get the skills they need and the experiences and the connections. A lot of kids could be one of the smartest kids in the world, but if they can’t get their foot in the door, you can’t get to the interview.”

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    Peter Currier

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