Don't Let that Cookie Crumble: SSE Teams Build, Test Gingerbread Houses
"More weight next year!"
Teams of students, faculty and staff in Saint Louis University’s School of Science and Engineering recently put their engineering skills to work for a December Innovation Challenge, building gingerbread houses designed to stand up during a weight-loading competition. Organizers tested the houses using sandbags of various weights. Multiple houses withstood 40 pounds, besting the 2023 winners by six pounds, leading organizers to plan for more weight in 2025.
Scott Sell, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education in SSE, adds weight to a gingerbread house during the innovation challenge on Friday, Dec. 6. Photo by Joe Barker.
Clayton Stout checks to make sure that the pieces of the gingerbread house are level for the SSE Innovation Challenge on December 2, 2024. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
A crowd gathered in the Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering (ISE) building to watch the Innovation Challenge. Photo by Joe Barker.
Scott Sell, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education in SSE, reacts as a gingerbread house collapses from the weight of the sandbags. Photo by Joe Barker.
Sophia Weaver decorates her team’s gingerbread house for the SSE Innovation Challenge on December 2, 2024. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Scott Sell, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education in SSE, and Amy Preis, director of undergraduate student success and retention, add weight to a gingerbread house at the Innovation Challenge on Friday, Dec. 6. Photo by Joe Barker.
Naveena Mutharasan and Clayton Stout work on their gingerbread house for the SSE Innovation Challenge as Sridhar Condoor, Ph.D., professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering watches on December 2, 2024. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Scott Sell, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education in SSE, adds weight to a gingerbread house during the innovation challenge on Friday, Dec. 6. Photo by Joe Barker.
Naveena Mutharasan and Clayton Stout construct their gingerbread house, as Sophia Weaver, right, works on decorations for the SSE Innovation Challenge on December 2, 2024. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Scott Sell, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education in SSE, reacts as a gingerbread house collapses from the weight of the sandbags. Photo by Joe Barker.
Scott Sell, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education in SSE, adds weight to a gingerbread house during the innovation challenge on Friday, Dec. 6. Photo by Joe Barker.
Teams of students, faculty and staff spent days building gingerbread houses. Each team was given three pre-made kits and a holiday Billiken to use in their design. All houses were required to be edible, created from only the materials in the kit and have a flat roof.
Students Naveena Mutharasan, Clayton Stout and Sophia Weaver worked with Sridhar Condoor, Ph.D., professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering, to construct a gingerbread model of Oliver Hall. Weaver participated in the 2023 challenge. The aerospace engineering major said she loved getting to challenge herself in new ways.
Her teammates concurred.
"It's teaching us some of the soft skills while also putting into practice what we are learning in our classes," said Mutharasan.
On Friday, Dec. 6, all houses were weight-tested to determine the strongest design. Scott Sell, Ph.D., professor of biomedical engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education in SSE, added sandbags to each house until the structure gave way. All entries were weight-tested, but those that didn't meet the project specifications were not considered for awards.
Winners of the competition received a cash price to split among the team.
Latest Newslink
- SLU History Professor Receives Fulbright Specialist Award to Create Digital Tool Focusing on Gaelic IrelandThomas Finan, Ph.D., associate professor of history at Saint Louis University, has received a Fulbright Specialist Award. He will work with colleagues at the University of Galway to create a joint database of archaeological and historical research focusing on Gaelic Ireland.
- Dr. Edward J. Feser Named 34th President of Saint Louis UniversityFeser, a Roman Catholic, Jesuit-educated leader in higher education, will assume the SLU presidency on July 1, 2025. Feser currently serves as the provost and executive vice president of Oregon State University (OSU), a land-grant institution with more than 38,000 students, a $1.8 billion budget and $480 million annually in externally funded research.
- SLU's Newest Alums Cheered at Commencement CeremonySaturday morning, hundreds of students walked across the stage at Chaifetz Arena and joined the Billiken alumni family. Saint Louis University celebrated its Midyear Commencement on Saturday, Dec. 14, In front of a packed crowd of family members, friends, and loved ones. Those in attendance and watching at home saw the newest graduates of SLU celebrated.
- Amy E. Wright Receives Honorable Mention for MLA's Katherine Singer Kovacs PrizeSaint Louis University's Amy E. Wright, Ph.D., received an honorable mention from the Modern Language Association of America (MLA) for the Katherine Singer Kovacs Prize for an outstanding book published in English or Spanish in the field of Latin American and Spanish literature and cultures. Wright, a professor of Hispanic Studies at SLU, received the honor for her book Serial Mexico: Storytelling across Media, from Nationhood to Now, published in 2023 by Vanderbilt University Press.
- SLU Professor and Author Jonathan Sawday Wins MLA's Prestigious James Russell Lowell PrizeSaint Louis University's Jonathan Sawday, Ph.D., has received the James Russell Lowell Prize for the most outstanding book published in 2023.
- University Core Honors Ignite InstructorsShannon Cooper-Sadlo, Ph.D. (Social Work), and Meadow Campbell, Ph.D. (Center for Anatomical Science and Education) were recognized for their work in teaching Ignite seminars. Cooper-Sadlo won for her Spring 2024 seminar entitled, “Conversations with a Mom, but not Your Mom.” Campbell was the Fall 2024 winner for her seminar entitled “Dissecting a Timeline: Anatomy Through the Ages.”