Office Building - G | Eastern USA
Dominic Coassolo | Construction Management
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Welcome to Dominic Coassolo’s AE Senior Thesis e-Portfolio
Senior Capstone Project: The Capstone Project Electronic Portfolio (CPEP) is a web-based project and information center. It contains material produced for a year-long Senior Thesis class. Its purpose, in addition to providing central storage of individual assignments, is to foster communication and collaboration between student, faculty consultant, course instructors, and industry consultants. This website is dedicated to the research and analysis conducted via guidelines provided by the Department of Architectural Engineering. For an explanation of this capstone design course and its requirements click here. |
Capstone Project News
Assignments Completed
04/27/11: cpep site complete and ready for final review 04/27/11: final presentation posted to cpep 04/27/11: Resources posted to cpep 04/27/11: Executive Summary posted to cpep 04/07/11: Final report posted to cpep 03/24/11: Sample presentation slides and outline 02/10/11: Question Posted to discussion board 01/10/11: thesis proposal revision #1 posted to cpep 12/10/10: CPEP Site is complete and Ready for review 12/10/10: Senior Thesis Proposal Posted to CPEP 11/29/10: Technical Assignment 3 Posted to CPEP 10/27/10: Technical Assignment 2 Posted to CPEP 10/13/10: Student Bio revised and updated 10/11/10: Building Statistics Part 2 Posted to CPEP 10/04/10: Technical Assignement 1 Posted to CPEP 10/04/10: Thesis Abstract Posted to CPEP 09/24/10: Thesis Abstract Draft 09/22/10: Building Statistics Part 1 Posted to CPEP 09/08/10: Student Bio Sketch Posted to CPEP 09/08/10: CPEP Full Menu Functionality 09/03/10: CPEP Homepage Draft 08/27/10: Building Statistics Part 1 Paper Draft 08/23/10: Thesis Begins 06/30/10: Owner Permission Obtained
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Note: While great efforts have been taken to provide accurate and complete information on the pages of CPEP, please be aware that the information contained herewith is considered a work-in-progress for this thesis project. Modifications and changes related to the original building designs and construction methodologies for this senior thesis project are solely the interpretation of Christopher Ankeny. Changes and discrepancies in no way imply that the original design contained errors or was flawed. Differing assumptions, code references, requirements, and methodologies have been incorporated into this thesis project; therefore, investigation results may vary from the original design. |
This Page was last updated on April 27, 2011 by Dominic Coassolo and is hosted by the AE Department © 2010 |