Local

Robot debut on Oklahoma State construction site

OSU construction robot debut The Hilti JAIBOT robot made its Oklahoma debut at the construction site of Oklahoma State University's New Frontiers Agricultural Hall and will be used for the next three months. A group of students from the OSU Institute of Technology in Okmulgee, Oklahoma, visited the New Frontiers site to watch the robot in action. (Photo by Mandy Gross, OSU Agricultural Communications Services)

Nine students from the OSU Institute of Technology in Okmulgee not only got to tour Oklahoma State University’s New Frontiers Agricultural Hall but got a hands-on learning experience as OSU debuted its new robot.

The Hilti JAIBOT is the first of its kind to be used in Oklahoma explains project manager and 1993 OSU-IT grad, Danny Hancock.

The semi-automated anchor/hanger point layout and drilling robot arrived at the New Frontiers construction site in November and will be used on the site for about three months.

“This technology utilizes the project’s model created in Building Information Modeling or BIM to more accurately lay out the anchor points, which are areas where anchors will be located to hold piping or duct systems,” Hancock said.

Using digital plans to accurately mark and drill holes, the Hilti JAIBOT helps remove potential risks that come with overhead installation. With the ability to operate the robot on the ground, away from the drilling, fall hazards or risk of exposure to concrete silicate are reduced, making construction safer for the workers.

With the advancement of this technology and the excitement of the JAIBOT being used, it’s important for students to have the opportunity to take what they have learned in the classroom and see it applied on-site, Hancock said.

“It’s critical for students to connect actual installation with their classroom training, so they can see the byproduct of what they were taught,” he said. “Physically seeing something done has a better chance of making an impression that they will likely never forget.”

Zane Moneypenny, a construction management student at OSU-IT who participated in the tour, said watching this type of technology on a construction site and seeing what all goes into it is amazing.

“It was a big eye-opener,” Moneypenny said. “Being able to take what we have learned in the classroom and see first-hand the technology used in the field is a huge benefit, especially on a project like this one.”

In January, a group of construction management students from OSU-Stillwater will tour the New Frontiers Agricultural Hall construction site and watch the Hilti JAIBOT in action.


0
Comments on this article
0

mobile apps

Everything you love about krmg.com and more! Tap on any of the buttons below to download our app.

amazon alexa

Enable our Skill today to listen live at home on your Alexa Devices!