Students take on green tech build challenge

Young people are being inspired by science as technology firm Lockheed Martin set them engineering challenges.
Students from Hastingsbury Business and Enterprise College get to work on their wind turbines PNL-160425-113317001Students from Hastingsbury Business and Enterprise College get to work on their wind turbines PNL-160425-113317001
Students from Hastingsbury Business and Enterprise College get to work on their wind turbines PNL-160425-113317001

More than 50 Year 9 pupils at Hastingsbury Business and Enterprise College, in Kempston, were asked to design and build an energy-efficient clean water system and a wind turbine.

Teams of students had to create a watertight reservoir and an electric pump to transfer collected water. They also had to make a wind turbine from scratch,

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Lockheed Martin UK communications manager Ampthill Julie Bevan said: “Energy and clean water supplies are modern engineering challenges. A project like this helps the students connect what they learn in the classroom with what actually happens in a working environment.”

The project was part of a series of events that Lockheed Martin UK is delivering with The Smallpeice Trust across the country.

The school has been given a kit to start a STEM club, which will design and build a propelled glider over a term, and see how far it will fly.