Skip to main content

Strong response for ARTBA’s student infrastructure video competition

A very strong response has been seen for the 3rd Annual Student Transportation Video Contest run by the Washington, DC-based American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). Illinois high school and University of Maryland college students took top honours in this national video contest on America’s transportation network. The association received more than 40 entries this year in two categories. Sponsored by ARTBA’s Research and Education Division (RED), the contest aims to raise awareness about
October 14, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
A very strong response has been seen for the 3rd Annual Student Transportation Video Contest run by the Washington, DC-based American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). Illinois high school and University of Maryland college students took top honours in this national video contest on America’s transportation network. The association received more than 40 entries this year in two categories. Sponsored by ARTBA’s Research and Education Division (RED), the contest aims to raise awareness about transportation infrastructure issues among younger generations by challenging students to develop a brief video exploring various topics relating to America’s transportation network.  Students are able to choose their own subject matter, with most focusing on how transportation infrastructure is built and paid for, the impacts of traffic congestion, transportation and urban development plans, and the public’s perception of transportation development. Submissions were reviewed by a panel of ARTBA members and the winning entries were shown last month during the association’s National Convention in Milwaukee.

Christian Surtz, a sophomore at Marmion Academy in Batavia, Ill., and Tom Rogers, an undergraduate at University of Maryland University College, are the top winners and will each receive a US$500 cash prize. First place in category I, for elementary, middle or high school students was the film; By the Numbers: Bridges in the United States. This was made by Christian Surz, a high school sophomore who studies broadcast and electronic communication arts. Surtz developed a creative and informative four-minute video highlighting the need to repair many of America’s more than 600,000 bridges. He combined alarming statistics with interesting visuals to make a compelling case for the importance of bridges to our economy and daily life.  As the narrator, Surtz explains how and why bridges are classified as structurally deficient includes a visit to a structurally deficient bridge in Illinois to drive home the message.

Second place was awarded to the film A Country in Motion, by Alexander Zemaitis of the Capital Area School for the Arts in New Cumberland, PA. Third Place was presented to the film Bridges: Why America Must Invest Now, by Alice and David Navadeh of North Allegheny Intermediate High School in Wexford, PA.

Related Content

  • High quality videos for ARTBA student competition
    October 14, 2013
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) has seen a strong response for its student video competition, highlighting US infrastructure. The third time this competition has been run, it attracted 40 entrants across a number of categories. First Place in Category II for post-secondary, college or graduate students was awarded to the film; Importance of Infrastructure.
  • ARTBA launching student video competition for 2015
    February 18, 2015
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) is running its annual student video competition. This is set up to challenge students of all ages to produce a two-to-four minute video about America’s transportation infrastructure. World Highways continues to support this competition and has also posted links to those videos from past winners and runners up on its websites in previous years. The ARTBA Student Video Competition is now in its fifth year. The aim of the competition is to raise a
  • ARTBA has revealed the winner of its senior student video awards
    October 9, 2015
    An undergraduate student from Texas was named winner of category two in the 920 American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s (ARTBA) 5th annual “Student Transportation Video Contest.” He will receive a $500 cash prize. Category two was for Post-Secondary, College or Graduate Students and was won by Alexis Gamboa of the University of North Texas, Denton, Texas.
  • ARTBA awards prizes in student video contest
    September 19, 2014
    The American Road Transportation and Builders Association (ARTBA) has awarded prizes to winners of its student video competition. In Category One for Elementary, Middle or High School Students Ty Miller from Boyertown Area Senior High School was selected as the winner with his video: “Infrastructure: the Unsung Hero”. Miller, a 12th grade student made a thoughtful video underscoring that transportation infrastructure is the catalyst of the US economy. It discusses how the construction of bridges, canals, wa