Young Engineers Take LEGO 'Bots For a Swim

Young engineers built robotic Lego submersibles to compete in the Build IT Challenge at the Stevens Institute of Technology in June.
(Image credit: Dave Brody, LiveScience)

HOBOKEN, N.J.—Leaning over the edge of an inflatable pool, a team of five teenaged girls guided their underwater craft made of Legos to dart among sunken aluminum pans and Wiffle Balls. Their pointy-nosed submersible plucked the point-scoring balls from the pool's floor and deposited them in the pans. With that confluence of dependable design and expert driving, the team from Lincoln Park Middle School in New Jersey won the Build IT Challenge in their division. The Stevens Institute of Technology hosts this competition annually on its campus here, gathering students earlier this month from more than 40 middle and high schools to pit their designs against one another in kiddie pools on the banks of the Hudson River. In dozens of such competitions around the world, young people build, program and drive vehicles made of Legos and other more rugged materials. These events are a bid to interest a new generation in careers in engineering and robotics, and they are becoming more sophisticated. At Stevens, the twist is the water. "By doing it underwater we were hoping to be a little bit different than other Lego robotics projects that have land-based vehicles," said Jason Sayres, who runs Stevens' Build IT program. This way, the lessons are in science and engineering, specifically concepts like buoyancy, stability and 3-D motion, he adds.