Showing posts with label creative problem solving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative problem solving. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 September 2013

Creative Problem Solving, #5

Click here for a trip to City Daily Photo, transporting you around the world every day.

747_slides

I took this photo August 28, 2011. Getting a 747 jet on top of a building is the epitome of creative problem solving. It's been accomplished in McMinnville, Oregon, about 50 miles from Portland. The Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum is also home to Howard Hughes' Spruce Goose. It's inside it's own building, along with lots of other aircraft. But, as you can see, this retired 747 has a penthouse view!
  747_ground

Here's a photo that I took in September 27, 2009, showing the 747 on the ground at the museum. It waited here until everything final preparations has been made on the new building and the weather forecast was as good as possible.
  747_roof

I have no photos of how it got situated on the roof, here's one that I took on June 27, 2010. I found a May 6, 2010, mention of the placement of the 747 on top of the building at the Daily Journal of Commerce Web site. It's the caption for a photograph: After closely following weather patterns, a crew carefully placed a Boeing 747 atop a steel structure at the Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum in McMinnville early Sunday morning. The jumbo jet is now the eye-catching centerpiece of a new water park and educational museum being built on the museum grounds. “We needed the winds to be less than 10 miles per hour,” said Rick Jenkins, right, superintendent with Hoffman Construction Co., general contractor for the project. “The weatherman promised and delivered winds of 2 to 3 miles per hour so we could get the big jet up there.” Workers operating two giant Campbell cranes needed 50 minutes to lift and place the 350,000-pound plane. “I can put this … on my resume, but I doubt that anyone else will need my expertise in placing jets on buildings,” Jenkins said.

747_roof_slides

Here's one more that I took August 28, 2011, with a closer view of the waterslides coming out of this side of the 747. Those two tiny people put it all in perspective.

About Wings & Waves Waterpark, from the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon. Evergreen Wings & Waves Waterpark is an indoor, all-season educational waterpark that includes ten waterslides (ranging from slides for the little ones to slides for daredevils), a wave pool and a children’s museum dedicated to teaching students about the power of water. Consisting of classic Evergreen Museum building design, the space features nearly 70,000 square feet of educational fun, topped by a massive Evergreen International Aviation B747-100 aircraft on the top of the building. Throughout the structure, Waterpark visitors will learn about the power of water and its effects on society through dozens of interactive exhibits and learning tools. Both the Museum and the Waterpark aim to serve an important community education role and further distinguish McMinnville as a premier location for teaching students of all ages about the wonder of science.

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Creative Problem Solving, #4

Click here for a trip to City Daily Photo, transporting you around the world every day.

DSC_0303_PM_HDR

How do you let passing bicyclists know that right there on the sidewalk--on NE Couch, just west of NE Martin Luther King--free coffee and donuts await? You make and hang a sign!
  DSC_0305_PM_HDR

How do you transport what you use to hang the sign to that spot on the sidewalk? You tow its folded-up-self behind your bicycle. Creative problem solving!

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Creative Problem Solving, #3

Click here for a trip to City Daily Photo, transporting you around the world every day.

DSC_0145

How to quick load your robot with Frisbees so that it can continue tossing them during the Autodesk Oregon FIRST Robotics competition at the Memorial Coliseum on March 9, 2013.
  DSC_0158

Keep at it while your teammates look on. The best I could understand it, those students on the right controlled all the movements of the robot--joystick, computer, something like that.

DSC_0217 />

Reloaded and off to shoot at the target slots at the opposite end of the arena.

DSC_0193

See the flying Frisbee on the left of the photo? That's one of theirs--you can tell from the bright green loading chute. Once out of Frisbees, the robot got sent back to the loader--you can see he's already got some stacked and ready.
  DSC_0228

Intense concentration on the face of the Frisbee-loader. The sequence repeated until the session ended. I have not idea who won, but I know creative problem solving when I see it. And this was a whole lot of it!

Monday, 9 September 2013

Creative Problem Solving, #2

Click here for a trip to City Daily Photo, transporting you around the world every day.

DSC_0293_PM

Richard's bicycle came up with a flat tire on its rear wheel as he rode near Sublimity, Oregon, on Sunday afternoon, September 8. I just happened to have pulled off in the gravel nearby to take a photo when I noticed him sitting on the railroad ties used to separate the parking area from the grassy area. I pulled closer and asked if all was well, and he told me yes and smiled. I told him that I have sons so I felt compelled to check, then I asked if I could take his photo and put him on my blog. He smiled again and gave me permission. I told him my blog's name and wished him a good ride the rest of the beautiful afternoon. He agreed that it was a wonderful day in Oregon.  I did not ask if he had walked along for a while with the flat tire or if it had happened just before he arrived at this spot on the highway. I did know that I had carefully passed him not long before. So, here's Richard, creatively solving the problem of having somewhere to sit while he changed his flat tire.

Sunday, 8 September 2013

Creative Problem Solving, #1

Click here for a trip to City Daily Photo, transporting you around the world every day.

CPS_Layers_PDX_9228704546_39427c4ffe_o

Layers are an ever-present necessity in Portland, no matter the season. These happy individuals used colorful clips to hang their discarded layers on their low-level chairs at the Waterfront Blues Festival on July 5, 2013. I particularly intrigued by how neatly it appears that the woman has hung hers, while the man to her right has somehow twisted his shirt prior to clipping it to his chair.