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Louis and Jeanette Brooks Engineering and Design Center
The purpose of the Louis and Jeanette Brooks Engineering Design Center is to emphasize the centrality of design in engineering by providing a physical focus for that activity. This center is an industrial-strength facility making available the tools, information and services that students and faculty engaged in design projects or design research require at the point of need. Interdisciplinary in character, the center was conceived to create a synergy of powerful computers, good software and people: students, faculty, engineers from industry, business people, artists, architects and even poets. In combination with the school’s Forrest Wade Rapid Prototyping Laboratory, the Andrew Labowsky Sr. Materials Engineering Laboratory and the Acoustics Laboratory, the Design Center emphasizes hands-on, real-life experience through the design and building of real products for real customers in conditions similar to those found in the best industrial practice. In combination with the Multimedia Presentation Room/Theater and the Gallery, it offers in its 3,000 square feet, an opportunity to explore new dimensions of design. Specific features of the Design Center include:
Since opening in February of 1998, the Jeanette and Louis Brooks Engineering Design Center has been in continuous use. The Brooks Center provides an excellent facility for high-end multimedia presentations, building on the earlier success of the Driscoll Multimedia Room. When classes are not being taught in the computer studio area, students, staff, and faculty make extensive use of the facilities. Faculty of the Art, Architecture Schools as well as the Humanities and Social Sciences Department also benefit from the varied facilities and look to schedule classes in the Brooks Center. Students, faculty and staff use high end engineering workstations from Sun, Silicon Graphics, IBM and Dell. Also popular are the Apple Macintosh G3 computers. All computers are equipped with twenty inch or larger high-resolution color displays, some with stereo visualization capabilities. Most computers have sound capture and playback capabilities and also offer CD-Rom or DVD/Rom drives fro multimedia software. The Brooks Center is busy outside of the Fall and Spring semesters. Summer internship programs offer young minds a chance to experience the wonders of science and engineering with the guidance of skilled professionals and motivated engineering students. The EID102 course, Introduction to Programming, is offered to incoming freshman engineering students in the summer preceding their freshman year. This intensive course teaches students basic programming skills as well as introducing the concepts of programmatic drawing in both two and three dimensions. As of April 5, 2000, the following software is available for student use in the Brooks Center. Many of the software titles can be used remotely as well as locally. Operating systems:
Applications and Application Suites:
Freely Available Software:
Cooper Union-developed Software:
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