55.6761° N, 12.5683° E

It’s been another packed week in Gothenburg, and this time Copenhagen as well! Let’s take a look back at the work we’ve done and the three day weekend afterwards.

This week was the first week of, well, the build part of Dare2Build. A few people stayed in Hammarkullen on Monday morning to finalize the schedule, material list, and drawings. The rest of us, excluding the food and fika teams, immediately got to work. I, along with a few others, started the day off by seeing how well the strategy of putting logs in holes works. We quickly found out that the ground was incredibly spongey, making this strategy impossible. Because this was at the core of my team, the frogs design, we spent the rest of the day coming up with something new. We eventually decided to dig a little bit, place the logs, and add connections in the form of wooden poles between them. I also helped the wilderness team to come up with a new plan of using rafts, as seen below.

Tuseday was very different. I was the food and fika guru, along with Megha, Sagar, and Walter. We cooked tacos with chicken, cheese, vegetables, and salsa. The quality of the food was very good, however a lot more people came after the fika so we didn’t have enough food for everyone. The chicken went especially quick, in hindsight I would’ve bought much more meat.

Wednesday and Thursday were very similar. I had an officer role on both days, Wednesday I was the communications officer and Thursday I was the safety and efficiency officer. I took a lot of photos Wednesday and conducted one interview as well all for instagram (that’s the communications job), but most of the day was spent helping the project manager, Ben organize people because we had a big turnout that day. On Thursday I was checking that everyone was using the equipment in a safe manner, but spent the majority of the day getting the log cutting stations to work efficiently. When I had the time, I helped the frog team level the path, lay down geotextile and gravel, and cut logs. Thanks to everyone’s hard work, a lot of progress was made this week, as seen in the second picture below.

Friday was a national holiday called Midsommar, which celebrated the longest day of the year. Everyone in our group was still really tired from the work week, so we took it easy during the day. I slept in, went for a run around Liseberg, the theme park in Gothenburg, got brunch with Megha, Scott, and Christian, and spent an annoyingly long time trying to plan a trip to Copenhagen over the weekend. That night, we went to the park for a few rounds of four square. Ben and I then decided to scooter to downtown Gothenburg to check out the Midsommar scene. Upon realizing that everyone was in a club (which we were too young to get into), we were forced to scooter back. Instead of going directly back, we went to the top of a hill I had ran up last week. It was pretty then, but I have to admit that nothing beats it in the middle of night, looking down upon rows of city lights gleaming below.

That’s it for Gothenburg. Now the exciting part begins. On Saturday morning the seven of us took a bus to what would be an awesome weekend in Copenhagen. I started the day off by getting some tandoori chicken at an Indian restaurant before we checked into our hostel, the Generator Inn. We then walked around the center of Copenhagen, which I immediately fell in love with. I’ll scatter some of the photos I took but they give you an idea of how pretty this place is.

The next place we went was an island known as Christiania, an awesome community where hippies are everywhere and rules are extremely relaxed (photo below is a statue in this area). We did some hardcore parkour in a skatepark, and then everyone except for Ben, Scott, and I left Christiania. We sat down in a park to enjoy the atmosphere, and were approached by a man named Peter. Peter had a guitar and an amplifier with him, and offered to play some tunes for us. Essentially, we got our own concert and had some great conversation with him as well. Ben offered him some money for playing for us, but he refused and said that true wealth is measured in friendship. Needless to say, that moment was special.

Peter had to go after a few songs, so we explored Christiania a little bit more. We stumbled upon a beautiful lake, which is shown in the picture below. This lake happened to have its very own rope swing, which all three of us used and somehow didn’t fall into the river.

After that we headed out of Christiania and joined the rest of our group closer to downtown Copenhagen. It was time for dinner, and Scott’s o-week mum who’s studying abroad in Copenhagen this summer. She recommended a place called Refshaleoen, a place on the other side of Copenhagen with a bunch of food trucks. We scootered there, and found it that it had a rock climbing wall as well. We all gave it our best effort on a number of paths, but I was only able to make it to the top of one of them. We then checked out the area and found a hundred food trucks all in one area. It was right next to a skate park,  so I enjoyed some delicious tacos while watching some kid showed everyone up on a scooter.

On Sunday morning I went for a run around the city, which was nice because I saw landmarks we didn’t have time to see otherwise, such as the famous little mermaid statue (which came out way better in other people’s pictures than mine).

After a quick brunch, we spent the rest of Sunday in the art museum and wandering through the botanical gardens. Our bus left at 5, and with that our awesome little trip to Copenhagen was over.

 

Woah, We’re Halfway There…

This week began really early. We woke up very early so that we could take the almost hour-long tram ride over to Chalmers @ Hammerkullen. The “campus” is really just a floor on a building but it’s nice. On the first day, we took the time to get to know one another and to get to know the project. I got assigned the (best) group, the mushrooms. I have the smallest group, one of me, two summer workers, and two Chalmers students, one architecture and one engineering master’s, Marie and Sagar. We right away got to work designing, with Ann-Sofie and Salam. We came up with a general idea of what we wanted to do. We also mapped out our main goals.

We spent Tuesday and Wednesday perfecting our design. Until Wednesday afternoon when our stakeholder representatives threw us a curveball and told us to basically redo the whole thing. Which was frustrating, to say the least. But we did it anyway. We grind-ed out and redid the whole thing. Then Thursday we spent the morning doing some final work and then the afternoon setting up the whole site. We had to set up fencing all around which took us a long while and then Sagar and I mapped out the path and came up with an addition which I am really happy with. We found a circle of mushroom stumps so we’re gonna invite people to explore over there.

Our final design is a packed dirt-gravel path that will weave through trees, then there is a wooden bridge into the wilderness circle. Off the sides of this path, there are hand posts that are staked into the ground with rope and can be used as rests for elderly or disabled people. Then also along the path are stackable mushrooms that are interconnected with the same rope that is used for the handposts. Basically, the bottom portion of the mushroom is fixed but the top portion is similar to lego so you can twist it around and move it around to make your own mushroom shape. I think it’s a nice idea and we’ll see how it ends up functioning.

Friday was spent doing the grunt work for the final schedule, making a Gantt chart, making drawings, ordering materials. We split up to get it all done and we did at the last second.

Friday night some of us hung out at the hostel but we didn’t really do anything. Then the next day all of us hopped on the tram and went to the archipelago. which was really cool. I found it reminiscent of Mackinac Island in Michigan. But this was much cooler. We also hopped into the water off some really high diving boards. Hurt my ears a lot and the water was freezing cold but I’m glad I did it. We also just walked around and saw all the rock formations as we walked along the pseudo shore. I’m fairly certain we were trespassing for like eighty percent of the trip but we didn’t get in trouble so no harm, no foul.

Sunday I spent the whole day either eating, grocery shopping or working on the ENGI 355 midterm. Here’s my photo dump for the week. (The ice cream is passionfruit flavored with fresh passionfruit on top).

Week 2 Title.

Sunday,June 9th:

Ended the weekend with a legendary day at the largest amusement in Scandinavia, Liseberg. After going to Disneyland earlier this summer and having to wait through 2 hour lines to get on the rides, the 0-10 minute waits for all the rides at Liseberg was a great change of pace.  All the rides were actually fun, especially helix where the whole ride is “the best part” of the ride. Once we were done, Ben and I took a long scooter ride back to the Hostel without a map because we are practically at this point.

Monday, June 10th:

This was the first day in our new ENGI 200 experience and even though I read the brief, I was still mostly unsure of what to expect. We arrived in Hammarkullen just before 8 and waited for the rest of the people in the program to show up.  After some quick icebreakers via paper airplane, the stakeholder representatives pitched the project to everyone. Our project is to create an outdoor classroom that represents the 5 characters of the Frog, Woodpecker, Mushroom, Plants, and Wilderness. People would be broken up into teams representing one of the characters and would be responsible for the planning of their path and how it would be represented in the wilderness circle in the middle of all the different paths.  I was then placed on the Wilderness team with Kunal, a Structural engineer from India, Kholoud, an architect rom Syria, and Mechanical Engineer Megha from Rice. We got to know each other for a couple minutes then got right into brainstorming ideas for the circle and the portal we would have tp design by the end of the week. After getting some exceptional Kebabs at lunch, we departed to the soon to be worksite so we could take measurements and have a better visualization of how our plans would look in the forest. Our group of Rice students left the site around 5:30 then made dinner and went to bed too late. For the time I would have to wake up the next day.

Wilderness on Site

Tuesday-Friday, June 11th-14th:

The next few days followed about the same schedule. Wake up at 6:30 to arrive in Hammarkullen at 8am, then wait for the rest of the people in the dare to build program to arrive, then listen to 1.5-2 hours of lectures related to our project. After that we designed until lunch time where we could get Kebabs from our trusted Kebab man. “Spicy no spicy?” -Kebab Man. Around 2pm, there would be some time for use to do some omore designing before the tutors came to check our progress and offer their thoughts and advice. Since the wilderness team has to integrate with all the other paths, we spent a lot of time talking with other teams to have a better understanding of how our individual projects would come together. By Friday I felt good about the direction of our design for the circle and we made a low fidelity 3D prototype so the other group to visualize how their path would come into the center circle.

After working all day, back at th eHostel I would either be working on the ENGI 355 assignments or watching Avatar: The Last Airbender with Christian.

 

Saturday, June 15th:

The Rice International Squad had a CAD Midterm due Sunday, we decided to delay going to Copenhagen and spend the day island hopping around the Swedish Archipelago. We spent a lot of time walking around looking for good rocks to climb but eventually settled for swimming in the water alongside a boardwalk with a diving board. It was tons of fun and enough to carry over into the hors of CAD that followed later that night.

Walking to Diving Board

Dare2Build a Centering Attachment

Good evening gamers. This week was our second week in Gothenburg as part of the iSEED program, and our first week of Dare2Build (a project that counts for us as Engi 200). It was a big switch from only CADing last week and we’ve made a lot of progress so let’s sum it up.

Monday was the first day of Dare2Build. We started off with a couple of introductory presentations that introduced the project and our roles in it. We were to create an interactive learning environment for children in the wilderness that’s eco-friendly and inspired by five characters: the woodpecker, the frog, the plants, the mushroom, and the wilderness. Each would be a team, and the first four teams created a path to a story telling circle that the wilderness team creates. We were also told that we would need to hold positions of authority for at least two days and also coordinate food and fika with three others for two additional days.  Below is a map of the site we would be building, with a circle in the middle and four paths coming towards it.

I requested to be on the frog team because I thought it would be more fun to create a path that children could jump around on. I was put on frogs, and got to know my team members: Kung, two Chalmers architecture students, Myrto and Poppy,  and two student summer workers, Walter and Iman. We spent the morning getting a better sense of our goal, and came up with some preliminary ideas.

That afternoon, we got our first look at the site. It was smaller than I expected, but that isn’t necessarily a bad thing. While checking out our area we realized that our path was dry and the woodpecker’s was muddy, so we switched with them. We then laid out some sticks to make a basic path from the river to the circle, and measured it to be around 10 meters.

The next two days were spent listening to guest presentations and getting a more firm idea of what our design was going to be. Our initial idea was to use logs to make three separate paths with one being easy, one being medium, and one being difficult, and color code the logs. We then realized that this could divide the kids and would limit their fun, so what we ended up deciding was to have a general trend in logs going from small and close together to bigger and more spread out, similar to a tadpole growing into a frog. At the end of Wednesday we made a model of this design to get a better idea of how it looks, with the only difference between this and what we’re going to do is that we aren’t color coding anymore.

We also came up with a few additional things we could add to the path: a place where kids could observe frogs by the river, a device that would make a frog noise when you slide a stick across it, and a tent that kids could hide in and watch their friends jump across.

Thursday went a bit different. Instead of planning, the entire day was spent getting the site set up. I spent most of the day helping getting logs from where they were stored a brief drive away to the site. I’ve been pretty tired all of this week but when I got back to the hostel after Thursday I was exhausted, and was glad we didn’t have to do anymore manual labor Friday.

Friday was our final day of prepping. I spent most of it working with Iman to create a schedule and later a Gantt chart to plan out the three building weeks, while Kung worked with Walter to get a material list and Myrto made a drawing on AutoCAD.

Those five days involved a lot of working, so I was extremely ready for this weekend. We capitalized it by taking a ferry to some of the island off of Gothenburg on Saturday. We got off on at two stops, the first was a built up island that was a little too crowded for our liking (but we did find a restaurant that served some pretty good pizza). The second was much more remote, and luckily had a couple of diving boards which we jumped off of and into some very cold water. The pictures below show the ferry, Kung caught in the midst of an epic gamer moment, and our group right after jumping into the water.

The last thing I’ve spent my time on this week is our midterm for our computer aided design course. We had to make a centering attachment, aka this bad boy right here.

I worked on it a little bit throughout the week, but did the bulk of it Saturday night and all of Sunday. I took a timelapse of the timeline, which can be seen in the link below.

IMG_4584

All in all, a lot of work but a good week nonetheless. I’m looking forward to the second half of our trip.

Sweden Week 2!

My second week of Sweden began early. I woke up at 6:30 AM to make the 40 minute tram ride to our new home base in Hammerkullen, Goteborg. Chalmer’s University has a floor in one of the buildings in the area. I had no idea what to expect going up the elevator…

Rice University is teaming up with Chalmer’s University to build an outside classroom in a nearby forest. We started with an introduction and a background on the project. After this, we were told our groups for the project. The outside classroom is split into 5 parts. There is a plant, woodpecker, mushroom, and frog path, and also a central circle built by the wilderness team. I was placed into the plant group. I was originally disappointed not being placed on the woodpecker team, but after our first brainstorming session I grew to like the plant path. We then traveled to the site to look at the forest where we would be working. It was so peaceful and beautiful. The birds were chirping, the sunlight was filtering in through the trees, and the soil was soft underfoot.

The rest of the week we met at the Hammerkullen site at 8 AM, and usually left at 5 PM. This week was very long as we were up and at it for about 12 hours each day and then had to come back to the hostel and make dinner and then start on homework for our other Engi 355 class. We had a homework due Wednesday, and then our midterm project due Sunday. Within our busy schedule, Scott and I found some relaxation time by watching “Avatar the Last Airbender,” a beautifully crafted show about transcending boundaries to defeat a larger threat.

Image result for avatar the last airbender

The week was also packed with different lectures learning about new and different topics. For example,  we sat through lessons on post-humanism, child-friendly design, and a lecture on collaborating across boundaries. I did not expect to be learning about topics like these while taking an engineering course, but i found them to be quite interesting and thought they provided a more liberal arts take to engineering design.

One of my highlights of the week was sitting in the patio of a coffee shop doing homework. The weather was beautiful, and I just felt a strong tranquil feeling sitting outside, sipping coffee, and drawing 3D designs.

My favorite moment from this week was when the 7 students visited the archipelago by Goteborg. It was a 20 minute tram ride out to the coast, and then we took a ferry out to the different islands. While we were out I enjoyed a very delicious seafood pizza.

We then went to a second island where we explored around and found a swimming area. There was a raised platform to jump off of into the water. Although we were all hesitant, eventually we took turns jumping in to the freezing cold water. It was indeed very cold, but luckily we were able to dry off and find a place to get some hot coffee. All in all it was a fun day outing.

Wo-oah We’re Halfway There!

We are officially half-way through the program! This week we began our Engi 200 course and met the other people we would be working with. We all gathered bright and early at 7am on Monday and took the tram ride to the second Chalmers campus in Hammarkullen. We were led to a classroom on the seventh floor where we waited for the masters students in architecture and structural engineering to join. We had been introduced to the Dare to Build project before, but none of us had a super clear vision of what we had to do. So, we began with a much needed and informative presentation on the five different groups that would be represented in our project: woodpeckers, mushrooms, frogs, plants, and the wilderness.

                 presentation on first day

Each group was tasked with creating pathway which was inspired by their part of nature. It seemed pretty simple, but when we began designing for the space we were in, it turned out to be much more difficult than I thought. Working with an architect and structural engineer in a group for the first time was a new and cool experience. It became apparent pretty quickly that we all had different perspectives of the project and how to approach it. But soon we began to understand the process better and worked together well. As the week went on we visited the site and started to sketch out and eventually model our plans. Designs started getting more and more concrete and I’m excited to start implementing them on Monday!

 

We were each given a pair of shoes and pants that would allow us to be safe on-site and that really started to get us excited and a little nervous about how much work we had ahead of us. On Thursday, we visited the site to put up fencing around the spot we would be working in, and carried A LOT of logs down a path to the site. It was a lot of heavy lifting and teamwork, but we got the job done. We had a safety talk about tools we would be using and then mapped out our path to conclude the day.

  building site
  tram line tunnel                                                

During our lunch break I asked one of the girls who had lived in Sweden for a while what some typical Swedish dishes were, and she told me to try the specialty pizza. Now, I’m not a particular fan of pineapple on pizza nor am I a hater, but this pizza had chicken, pineapple, and bananas. It seemed pretty crazy to me, but I couldn’t not try it, and it was actually pretty good!

pizza

 

 

 

 

 

 

On Friday we had to grind out deliverables, including site plans and drawing, materials lists, and schedules. Everything was getting more and more real and the pressure was setting in. We ended our week at Hammarkullen with our daily dose of Kebab from our Kebab guy down the street; He will be missed.

On Saturday, we visited the Archipelago and jumped in freezing water. It was definitely a shock to my body and maybe not the best idea in the world, but it was definitely worth it. We took the ferry to two different islands and enjoyed being a little bit more secluded than usual.

Our week ended with us grinding out the midterm for the our cad class; with all the design and project-work going on cad was put on the back burner, but we had to dive right back in. I’m excited to get started on Monday and see how things play out.  

iSEED Week 2

After a long week of sitting in the classroom and doing Computer Aided Design on Fusion 360, we decided that we need a little break. What better way to do it than to go to Liseberg, one of the best amusement parks in Europe located here in Goteborg. Typically, I am not the type of person to go to amusement parks for fun, but a little convincing from Christian did the job. Although the weather was a little rainy, we had a lot of fun going on the roller coasters and other rides they had. It was, hands down, my best experience at an amusement park ever. My favorite ride at there is the Helix. It wasn’t too terrifying like some of the other roller coasters, just thoroughly enjoyable.  

Helix @ Liseberg

Fun fact about Liseberg, it first opened in 1923, almost a hundred years ago! We saw pictures of people wearing suits and long dress on roller coaster and thought it was hilarious. We didn’t know it at the time, but the amusement park is also really close to us, only one stop away from Chalmers University. (I bet the students here go there all the time, and I am jealous!) 

So the 2nd Week of iSEED is actually the 1st Week of Dare2Build. We started off Day 1 with a presentation in the form of storytelling by the stakeholder representatives. Not gonna lie, the story didn’t make much sense and I was left confused. Luckily, I was able to have a chat with Victoria, one of the representatives, and able to ask questions. What I learned was that we will be building an outdoor learning center which is the final part of their plan to turn a previously dangerous area into a safe place for anyone to be able to come and reconnect with nature. This learning center will consist of a center circle for storytelling and 4 learning paths leading to the circle which represents the frogs’, plants’, mushrooms’, and woodpeckers’ path to the central meeting point. Each element is the responsibility of a small group of around 6 students.

We spent the entire week coming up with a design for what this learning center will look like and how we will build it. We took into consideration what the children want from a playing space, what would be least intrusive and damaging to nature, and tried our best to incorporate elements of nature that would provide some form of knowledge for the children who come to our learning space.

By the end of the week, we were able to complete about 70 percent of the design and preparation of work that was need to be done. Although we are not 100 percent done, we think that it is best that we move forward and start the construction phase due to the limited amount of time we have. We do not want a repeat of last year where we were not able to complete the construction of the project and the instructors had to get their hands dirty and finish the project themselves.

~Kung


Preliminary Material List

 

Second Week: Dare To Build Starts!

My mother has a friend in Gothenburg and on Saturday, I went to his house that is about 20 minutes’ drive south of the hostel. I had dinner there together with a bunch of his friends. We had some Chinese food and also rice dumplings together to celebrate the traditional dragon boat festival in China. I met a Canadian there who drove around America in a month in 1995. He shared some photos with me and I really appreciated such an unbelievable experience.

View from the house

Sunday was a pretty normal weekend day. I had a great sleep from 3 to 12 (I stayed up late for my laundry) as to compensate my sleeping hours in weekdays. Every day last week I had to get up at 7:30, which I hadn’t experienced since graduation from high school. After lunch, I began working on homework and went to bed early before 12 as I knew we would need to set off even earlier to Hammarkullen on Monday.

This was a new week for us as we switched from CAD to engineering design. Early at 7 a.m., we set off to take the tram all the way to Hammarkullen, a community in northern Gothenburg. With some master architects and engineers from Chalmers and some high school summer workers, the Dare2Build program officially started! We had five teams- Woodpecker, Frog, Plant, Mushroom, and Wilderness, and all the teams will collaborate to build an education place for children, which includes a center storytelling circle designed by the Wilderness team, and four paths for each species to meet together at the circle. I was in the Woodpecker team, and our team was tasked to build a path up in the air from tree to tree for woodpeckers to land at the circle. I was very pleasant to be in this team, as I had never seen a single woodpecker before, and I really wished to see one in the following two weeks. In the afternoon, we travelled to the building site in a forest called Gardsas mosse. The site is located in an area covered with grass and surrounded by tall trees. There we used twigs to roughly identify our path, and came up with some design ideas. Can’t wait to start our project!

First visit to site
The tram station at Hammarkullen

On Tuesday and Wednesday, we stayed at Hammarkullen and worked on our detailed design. Through brainstorming and discussions, we came up with a design that we would have logs attached to trees to enable woodpeckers to perch from tree to tree, and we applied biomimicry to design the attachment structure that it imitated the gripping movement of woodpecker’s paws to trees. Also, we would have logs of different heights connected together to create a descending path for woodpeckers to land on the circle. We would make some small tools for children to imitate the sound of woodpeckers as well. The design process was much faster than the one I had in ENGI 120, and with members from fields other than engineering, I really had a new and interesting experience.

Woodpecker drawings

Thursday was an exhausting day. For all day we had been setting up the site. We built fences enclosing the storytelling circle, and unloaded all the logs and placed them just next to the site. Unloading the logs was very challenging, as each log weighed more than 100 kilograms, and we needed to first unload it from the truck, and then carry it all the way down to the site, which was about 50 meters downhill. To finish the task, we needed to communicate and collaborate well to avoid dropping the log and hurting someone. By the end of the day, we had our material and tool containers set up with electricity, the circle enclosed by fences, and all the logs placed at the site. What a productive day!

The path in forest
Logs unloaded

On Friday we worked on all the documents required. After a short team meeting in the morning, each member got a task assigned to. I took charge of the building schedule and the model of the sound making tool. With several hours of work, at 4 p.m., we had mostly the schedule and material list down, and more than halfway through the site plan drawing. Next week we will start the construction phase, and I looked forward to having fun.

 

On the next Saturday we travelled to the islands east of the coastline of Gothenburg. We took a tram to the ferry station, and took ferry to go to several different islands. Houses of red roofs and white walls scatter around on the islands. Near the shores, there are many large rocks. We climbed up the rocks and got a great view of the island and houses. Except the tourists, the islands were so quiet that everyone was enjoying the weekend in relaxation, and so did we.

 

Group Photo
Houses near the shore
Houses
Houses up in a small hill
Swedish flag on the ferry
Houses along a path
The ferry

Top Tier Week in Sweden

May 31st:

After days of travelling, I finally landed in Sweden at 9:30, just in time for a great sunset. Then I took an Uber to the Slottsskogen Hostel where I promptly checked in a fell asleep exhausted.

View from plane just before landing

June 1st:

After forcing my jetlagged body to wake up at for breakfast, I returned to my room to check out then re checked into my new room that I would be staying in for the rest of the month. My sleep schedule was already messed up on California time from staying up until 3 am playing xbox with my friends which was not going to be sustainable for a month in sweden since I would be going to be at 12 pm Gothenburg time. To try adjust my circadian rhythm and keep myself from napping in the room all day, I walked around the city for about an hour before coming to a coffee shop where I decided I would have lunch. One man sitting in the shop heard me ordering in English and called me over to sit by him and chat. For the next few hours we talked about all sorts of things, ranging from his time in Sweden to the years he spent in San Francisco helping a single mother raise 2 disadvantaged twin brothers who eventually would both be drafted to the same NFL team.  (See Sean and Sam Manuel of the San Francisco 49ers). Eventually his 25 year old son arrived and we discussed the most notable things I should do during my time in Gothenburg. After saying goodbye, I walked back to my room and met up with the other students who were on the iSEED trip and we went out to dinner a few blocks away from our Hostel. The other Rice Students on this trip are Ben, Christian, Daniel, Kung, Megha, and Yufei.

 

June 2nd:

On my last day before classes, I explored more of the city with Kung and Christian. We had coffee at the shop I went to yesterday then walked over to a park with a super steep hill and  Fort with cannons on top. From up there I had a great few of gothenburg. Later in the night we went out to dinner with all the students and some professors at Chalmers University where we had a good view of the river while eating.

View of Gothenburg from the fort

June 3rd:

First day of classes for the month and first real work since the end of finals. We started off the day with some Tinker CAD, which I was able to handle relatively well given that is usually meant to introduce middle schoolers to 3D design.  A little after lunch we transitioned to the main 3D design program we would be working with for the remainder of the ENGI 355 course, Fusion 360. While it took me some more time to get adjusted to the program since it was more complicated than Tinker CAD, I eventually became more and more comfortable

Chalmers

June 4th&5th:

On Tuesday and Wednesday we had some more long days of CAD but I ended up enjoying the process of building the parts a lot more once we learned more techniques such as the sketch tool where you could draw out your design in the 2D then make it 3 dimensional, rather than just working with combining primitive shapes.  This made the 3D design process feel more like puzzle solving rather than tiring school work. Something else that helped pass the days was the daily fika break(s). I guess ~20 minute coffee breaks at 10am and 3pmn are customary in Swedish culture and these breaks helped recover from the work and also gave more time for me to get to know my classmates better.

 

June 6th:

Thursday was the Swedish national Day and the start of a long holiday weekend for many. Because of this, Professor Wettergreen gave us a half day so we could go out and participate in some of the festivities going on around the city. Walked around the huge park right by our Hostel which was packed with people. After walking to the the Zoo at the top of the park and getting Ice Cream, we walked by the symphony as they were playing 1812 overture for the finale of their performance. We then all downloaded the “Tier” app which allowed us to use the electric scooter we had seen parked everywhere around the city.  Once we had found 7 tiers, our menacing scooter gang rolled out and over to Haga where we ate and hung out for a while. After we finished eating we all split up looking for 7 Tier scooters again and planned to meet at the nearby mall which miraculously worked. Once we realized most of the shops in the mall were closed anyway, we got some super sushi for dinner then split up again depending on whether people wanted to use the tram or scoot back to the Hostel. While the scooter is very addictive, it is reasonably priced so i don’t feel too bad about doing it repeatedly.

In Haga

June 7th:  

It was mostly empty at Chalmers today because people were on their holiday weekend.  We learned some more complicated techniques on fusion 360 to keep things interesting and savored what might been our last Fika at Chalmers.  Once we got back to the Hostel Christian and I made 8 Burgers and they were some serious gourmet stuff if I’m being totally honest here but 4 big patties were still a lot. After that me and the boys played some soccer with a semi deflated ball we found and had a great time.

 

June 8th

Started Saturday off with some great Brunch at Egg & Milk with Megha and Christian.  The group spent the afternoon working on our homework problem set then some of us went out to the street festival for a few hours where it rained on and off for an hour.

 

The Swede Life

Hej! (that’s hello in Swedish which is now one of two of my favorite Swedish words).

Today marks the end of the first of four weeks in the iSeed program in Gothenburg, Sweden! I landed here on Saturday, June 1st, a bit too early to check into the hostel we would be living in for the month. So, I dropped of my bags and decided to walk around a bit and familiarize myself with the local area. I came across a huge, and when I say huge I mean HUGE, park with playgrounds and ponds and a zoo! I found a local cafe and got some lunch, which was my first (and pretty much last) interaction with someone who doesn’t speak english, however communicating wasn’t really an issue. That night the group went out for our first dinner and started to get to know each other.

On Sunday night we had our official welcome dinner at the rooftop restaurant that had a great view of the river. We met the rest of the professors that would be in charge of the Dare to Build program.

We dived right into classes that Monday and started at 9am. The tram system is pretty complete here so we can pretty much take it anywhere. Plus we got month long ride passes that work for any type of public transportation in Sweden (trams, buses, ferries). Our classes are held in the engineering/architecture building, which is super bright and modern. Days are pretty long as we go from 9-6, but we always looked forward to a nice, lively fika– a cultural tradition of taking a coffee break at 10am and 3pm every day– which is definitely something we have quickly gotten used to (also fika was the other of my two favorite Swedish words if you didn’t already guess). Classes increased in difficulty quite quickly, but with all the time we spent practicing, I definitely felt more and more comfortable as the week went on.

               View From the Park
               Concert at the Park

 

 

 

 

June 6th was Swedish independence day so we had a half day of classes and spent the rest of the day exploring and taking in some Swedish traditions. We went back to the park, which was packed, went to the zoo, saw a bit of a live orchestra concert. Later we headed over to Haga, which is a cute little street with cafes and shops and took a little fika. We checked out the mall after that, but most things were closed because of the holiday, so we got dinner and called it a day.

                    Group Photo on Haga
         Dinner at Haga

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On the weekend, we went to an annual street party, where we danced and interacted with some locals. There were some food stands and local vendors on the street as well that we checked out. On Sunday, we went to Liseberg, which is an amusement park nearby. 10/10 would recommend this amusement park; it had some of the best rides I have ever been on and it wasn’t too busy. We do have some homework and midterm coming so we all had to work on that as well.

               Amusement Park

In general, the first week was pretty jam-packed but it was filled with some pretty exciting stuff. I definitely feel like I have a much better understanding of fusion 360 and in general we tend to see things in a cad mindset, pointing at random things and shouting out how to make it. While we tend to joke about it, it really has changed the way we view things.

On Monday we start engi200, which will include working on a local project creating an interactive experience in the woods for both children and adults to enjoy. While I’m not entirely sure what to expect yet, I am super excited!