Skip to main content

ARTBA presents its student transportation video awards

October 9, 2015
A high school student from Maryland was named winners of the 920 American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s (ARTBA) 5th annual “Student Transportation Video Contest.” She will receive a $500 cash prize.  
 
The association received 26 entries this year in two categories. Sponsored by ARTBA’s Research and Education Division (RED), the contest aims to raise awareness about infrastructure issues by challenging students to develop a brief video exploring various topics relating to America’s transportation network. Students were able to choose their own subject, with submissions ranging from the challenges of transportation infrastructure financing, environmental and sustainable construction methods, streetcars and light rail systems revitalising urban areas, and the benefits of alternative modes of transportation.
 
The competition was advertised on college scholarship websites, posted on online video contest sites, shared with Council of University Transportation Centers (CUTC) members and high schools that focus on Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM), as well as shared on ARTBA’s social media accounts. Submissions were reviewed by a panel of ARTBA members, and the winning entries were screened during the association’s 2015 National Convention, held recently in Philadelphia.

In the category for Elementary, Middle or High School Students, the winner was De`Jia Long-Hillie of Montgomery Blair High School, Takoma Park, Maryland. Long-Hillie’s Metro Rail video is all about the Washington, DC rapid transit system, the second-busiest in the US after the New York City subway system. Her video emphasises the importance of transit and the need to maintain and upgrade infrastructure, focusing on the aging system that opened in 1976.
 
Second place meanwhile was a tie between Transportation Troubles submitted by Joseph Montesano of Morris County School of Technology in Denville, New Jersey, and Road Construction and the Environment submitted by Nicholas Parkes of La Salle College High School in Glenside, Pennsylvania.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Delays to New Jersey transport upgrades to prove expensive
    July 13, 2016
    A report by the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) reveals that a week-long shutdown of New Jersey transportation improvement projects will prove expensive.
  • AEM promotes photo competition
    February 29, 2012
    The Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) is partnersing with the I Make America campaign for a photo competition.
  • 3M is helping finance ARTBA programme
    February 28, 2013
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) Foundation’s Lanford Family Highway Worker Memorial Scholarship Programme is to receive a major financial contribution from the 3M Traffic Safety and Security Division. This programme provides post-high school financial assistance to the children of highway workers who have been killed or permanently disabled in the line of duty. The scholarship programme was originally launched in October 1999 through a gift from the families of past ARTBA cha
  • ARTBA highlights risk of deficient bridges in US and need for investment
    April 24, 2014
    Data from a new government report show that if all the structurally deficient bridges in the United States were placed end-to-end, it would take 25 hours to cross them while driving at 100km/h. The total distance is around 2,500km, roughly the distance between Boston and Miami. The Washington, DC-based American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) is highlighting these findings in a new analysis of US bridge conditions. ARTBA has a list of the top 250 structurally deficient US bridges, state r