Dec. 20—NEW LONDON — A group of 10 burgeoning engineers from the city's high school spent part of their Wednesday morning in an outdoor classroom that featured towering wind turbine components, a massive off-loading barge and the kinds of activity expected at a major manufacturing site.
"It's the scale," Masyn Smith, a 17-year-old senior attending the New London High School Multi-Magnet School, said while gazing up at a stack of wind turbine sections at the edge of State Pier. "I had no idea those pillars were this big."
The students toured the turbine pre-assembly site in the company of several chaperones from the campus' college career and workforce readiness program, which aids students in exploring post-high-school careers.
"This is a chance for the kids to actually see the work being done right in their backyard," said course leader member Dale Clark. "There're students here interested in robotics, computer engineering and mechanical engineering. It's a chance for us to show students who might not see the value of staying in school why it's important to at least get a diploma so they can get jobs in these fields."
Ahead of the tour, the students got an overview of the ongoing work by Ulysses Hammond, interim executive director of the Connecticut Port Authority, which oversees State Pier.
Hammond walked students through the $309 million transformation of the site from a pair of finger piers into a heavy-lift cargo port currently tasked with assembling sections of wind turbines ahead of their delivery to the South Fork Wind project located 35 miles east of Montauk Point.
"We are bringing a new industry to America and it's happening right here in New London," Hammond said, rattling off the length of each turbine blade (330 feet), the weight of the nacelle generators (520 metric tons) and the height of the finished towers (more than 800 feet).
As they walked past an onloading ship and a row of stacked blades — the fifth of 12 such sets set to be delivered to the South Fork project — students looked up toward the sets of cranes responsible for shifting the wind components around the pier.
"There's so much work involved in all this," said Sergio Garcia, a 17-year-old senior considering a career in mechanical engineering. "It makes me wonder about the math and science behind all this. The magnitude of this — you can't compare being here to just hearing about it in a class."
Taking advantage of "backyard' projects