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Concrete canoe

A concrete canoe is a canoe made of concrete, typically created for an engineering competition.

Coed sprint race at 2008 National Concrete Canoe Competition in Montreal, Quebec

In spirit, the event is similar to that of a cardboard boat race—make the seemingly unfloatable float. However, since concrete and other poured surfaces are an integral part of a civil engineer's education, concrete canoes typically feature more development than cardboard boats.

Principles

Ignoring hydrodynamic effects, all ships or boats float because the weight of the water they displace is equal to the weight of the boat (Archimedes' principle). However, many boats are made of materials that are denser than water, meaning that the boat will sink if filled with water. Although it is not required by the rules of the competition, some competitive concrete canoes have concrete mix designs that are less dense than water. They must pass a test in which the canoe is filled with water and pushed below the surface; the canoe must then resurface in order to qualify for racing. This is possible because, unlike normal concrete which uses sand and small rocks, concrete canoes are created with porous aggregates such as Macrolite and microspheres. However, because many teams still design their concrete mixes to be denser than water, in the United States, teams are allowed to insert concrete-covered, non-structural foam pieces in their canoes to make the canoes float after being submerged.

ASCE National Competition

The ASCE (American Society of Civil Engineers) National Concrete Canoe Competition (NCCC) provides students with a practical application of the engineering principles they learn in the classroom, along with important team and project management skills they will need in their careers. The event challenges the students' knowledge, creativity and stamina, while showcasing the versatility and durability of concrete as a building material.

Each year, the NCCC, which is held in mid-June, is hosted by an ASCE Student Organization. Some 200 university teams attempt to qualify for the NCCC by placing first in one of the 18 conference competitions held throughout the United States during the spring. Until 2018, teams placing second in a conference competition behind a university that finished in the top five at the previous year's national competition are also invited. This was replaced by the Wild Card drawing in 2018. If the Concrete Canoe team was part of a student chapter that placed within the top one-third of all annual reports, and the team finished within the top half of all teams in their regional competition, the team was eligible for the Wild Card drawing. Of all qualifying team, six were randomly drawn to attend the 2018 National Concrete Competition. To be eligible to compete in the Concrete Canoe Competition, the entrant school must be a recognized ASCE Student Chapter or ASCE International Student Group. Typically, frontrunners include University of Alabama in Huntsville, University of Nevada, Reno, University of Florida, California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo, the University of California at Berkeley, Clemson University, École de technologie supérieure, Université Laval, and the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

The winners of the ASCE National Concrete Canoe Competition are determined by compiling the team's total number of points from the academic and race portions of the competition. Academic scholarships totaling $9,000 are awarded to the winning teams' undergraduate civil engineering program.

History

Concrete Canoe competition in the United States began in the 1960s, when a small number of ASCE student chapters began holding intramural Concrete Canoe races.[citation needed] Then, in the 1971, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign held the first intercollegiate race against Purdue.[1] In the more than 45 years since, the students’ efforts to combine engineering excellence and hydrodynamic design to construct water-worthy canoes have culminated in an advanced form of concrete construction and racing technique known as the “America’s Cup of Civil Engineering.”

In 1981 as part of the FIP congress in Stockholm, Sweden there was the 1st FIP international concrete canoe race.[2] won by the Danish team from Technical University of Denmark.[3] inspired by Herbert Krenchel

In 1988, ASCE expanded the competition to the national level, when Master Builders, Inc. (now known as BASF) signed-on to become the sole corporate sponsor for the event. In its first year, 18 teams of enthusiastic civil engineering students from the nation's premier academic programs gathered in East Lansing, Mich., to test the waters of this innovative and educational event. Over the next two decades, the competition became a great success, with regional winners traveling across the country by plane, train and Ryder truck, canoes in tow, in their quest to become National Concrete Canoe Competition champions.

As competition was developing in the United States, the idea had also taken hold in other countries. Today, concrete canoe racing happens around the world in places like Germany, South Africa, Canada, Japan and the United Arab Emirates; and with sponsorship from ASCE and the American Concrete Institute (ACI), the 2007 National Concrete Canoe Competition winning team, University of Wisconsin - Madison, travelled to the Netherlands to represent the United States in the 30th Annual Dutch Concrete Canoe Challenge.

The Concrete Canoe Competition is designed to provide civil engineering students with an opportunity to gain hands-on, practical experience and leadership skills by working with concrete mix designs and project management. Organizers, sponsors and participants are dedicated to building awareness of concrete technology and application, as well as the versatility and durability of concrete as a construction material, among civil engineering students, educators, practitioners, the concrete industry and the general public. They also strive to increase awareness among industry leaders, opinion makers and the general public of civil engineering as a dynamic and innovative profession essential to society. In its history, the National Concrete Canoe Competition has challenged the knowledge, creativity and stamina of more than 400 teams and 5000 students. In 2008, more than 200 teams competed in 18 conference competitions to qualify for participation at the national level.

Past winners

Year[4] Host City Host School Champion Second Place Third Place
1988 East Lansing, Michigan Michigan State University University of California, Berkeley University of New Hampshire University of Akron
1989 Lubbock, Texas Texas Tech University University of California, Berkeley Michigan State University University of New Hampshire
1990 Buffalo, New York State University of New York Michigan State University University of Maryland University of California, Berkeley
1991 Orlando, Florida University of Central Florida University of California, Berkeley University of Maryland University at Buffalo
1992 Fort Collins, Colorado Colorado State University University of California, Berkeley University of Alabama, Huntsville University of New Orleans
1993 Sacramento, California California State University, Sacramento University of Alabama, Huntsville Michigan State University University of California, Berkeley
1994 New Orleans, Louisiana University of New Orleans University of Alabama, Huntsville University of California, Berkeley University of New Orleans
1995 Washington, D.C. George Washington University South Dakota School of Mines & Technology California State University, Sacramento Michigan State University
1996 Madison, Wisconsin University of Wisconsin at Madison University of Alabama, Huntsville Michigan State University University of California, Berkeley
1997 Cleveland, Ohio Cleveland State University Florida Institute of Technology University of Alabama, Huntsville University of California, Berkeley
1998 Rapid City, South Dakota South Dakota School of Mines & Technology University of Alabama, Huntsville California State University, Sacramento Clemson University
1999 Melbourne, Florida Florida Institute of Technology Clemson University University of Alabama, Huntsville Oklahoma State University
2000 Golden, Colorado Colorado School of Mines Clemson University Oklahoma State University Florida Institute of Technology
2001 San Diego, California San Diego State University University of Alabama, Huntsville Clemson University Oklahoma State University
2002 Madison, Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Clemson University Université Laval Oklahoma State University
2003 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Drexel University University of Wisconsin, Madison Université Laval University of California, Berkeley
2004 Washington, D.C. The Catholic University of America University of Wisconsin, Madison Université Laval University of Alabama, Huntsville
2005 Clemson, South Carolina Clemson University University of Wisconsin, Madison Clemson University Michigan Technological University
2006 Stillwater, Oklahoma Oklahoma State University University of Wisconsin, Madison California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Clemson University
2007 Seattle, Washington University of Washington University of Wisconsin, Madison University of Florida University of Nevada, Reno
2008 Montreal, Quebec École de technologie supérieure University of Nevada, Reno University of California, Berkeley École de technologie supérieure
2009 Tuscaloosa, Alabama University of Alabama University of California, Berkeley École de technologie supérieure California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
2010 San Luis Obispo, California California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo University of Nevada, Reno École de technologie supérieure
2011 Evansville, Indiana University of Evansville California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo University of Wisconsin, Madison Université Laval
2012 Reno, Nevada University of Nevada, Reno California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Université Laval Michigan Technological University
2013 Homer, Illinois University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign École de technologie supérieure University of Nevada, Reno University of Florida
2014 Johnstown, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown University of Nevada, Reno California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Université Laval
2015 Clemson, South Carolina Clemson University University of Florida California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo University of California, Berkeley
2016 Tyler, Texas University of Texas at Tyler École de technologie supérieure University of California, Los Angeles University of Nevada, Reno
2017 Golden, Colorado Colorado School of Mines California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo University of Florida University of Akron
2018 San Diego, California San Diego State University California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo University of Florida Université Laval
2019 Melbourne, Florida Florida Institute of Technology University of Florida California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Université Laval

National sponsors

Sponsors include BASF, Kiewit Corporation, American Concrete Institute, Holcim, Bentley Systems, Cemex, and Propex.

Requirements and preparation

Teams of engineering students will gather for a weekend designed to be both challenging and fun. Twenty-five percent of each team's total team score will be based on the engineering design and construction principles used in the creation of their concrete canoe; 25 percent will be based on a technical design report detailing the planning, development, testing and construction of their canoe; and 25 percent will be based on a formal business presentation highlighting the canoe's design, construction, racing ability and other innovative features. The remaining 25 percent of each team's score is based on the performance of the canoe and the paddlers in five different race events: men's and women's slalom/endurance races, and men's, women's and co-ed sprint races.

For the purpose of the competition, concrete is defined as a mixture of cement, of which at least 30% (by mass) must be Portland cement, and aggregate, which must constitute at least 25% (by volume) of the mix. The aggregate need not be conventional construction aggregate (sand, etc.), but may include materials such as hollow glass beads and fibers. Epoxy is not permitted. Up to 50% of the thickness of the canoe may be a reinforcement mesh.

Concrete canoe teams must design their canoes from scratch. Typically they create the shape of the hull with a computer design program specifically made for yachts, canoes, and other watercraft. The shape is optimized for racing. This hull shape is then given to a construction team, responsible for making a mold for the canoe to be formed on. A special concrete mix is designed over several months, emphasizing among other qualities, an optimal balance between strength and low density. The finalized mix design is placed on the form; the hull thickness usually ranges from about 3/8" to 3/4". Teams later spend hundreds of hours sanding and applying exterior graphics to their canoes for a nice finish. Scoring in the competition is based on the quality of construction, race performance, a design paper, and a business presentation.

Canadian Concrete Canoe

Year Host city Champion Second place Third place
1995 Montreal, Quebec, École de Technologie Supérieure unknown unknown unknown
1996 Montreal, Quebec, École de Technologie Supérieure Université Laval unknown unknown
1997 Montreal, Quebec, École de Technologie Supérieure Université Laval University of Toronto Université de Sherbrooke
1998 Montreal, Quebec, École de Technologie Supérieure University of Toronto Université Laval École de Technologie Supérieure
1999 Sherbrooke, Quebec, Université de Sherbrooke École de Technologie Supérieure Université Laval Queen's University
2000 Kingston, Ontario, Queen's University Université Laval École de Technologie Supérieure Queen's University
2001 Quebec City, Quebec, Laval University Université Laval University of Toronto Queen's University
2002 Toronto, Ontario, University of Toronto Université Laval École de Technologie Supérieure University of Toronto
2003 Montreal, Quebec, École de Technologie Supérieure Université Laval Université de Sherbrooke University of Toronto
2004 Moncton, New Brunswick, Université de Moncton Université Laval Université de Sherbrooke University of Toronto
2005 Windsor, Ontario, St Clair College Université Laval Ryerson University Dalhousie University
2006 Sherbrooke, Quebec, Université de Sherbrooke Université de Sherbrooke Université Laval Queen's University
2007 Kingston, Ontario, Queen's University Université de Sherbrooke École de Technologie Supérieure University of Windsor
2008 Halifax, Nova Scotia, Dalhousie University École de Technologie Supérieure Université de Sherbrooke Université Laval
2009 Montreal, Quebec, École Polytechnique de Montréal École de Technologie Supérieure Université Laval Université de Sherbrooke
2010 Toronto, Ontario, University of Toronto École de Technologie Supérieure Université Laval École Polytechnique de Montréal
2011 Quebec City, Quebec, Laval University Université Laval Université de Sherbrooke École de Technologie Supérieure
2012 Moncton, New Brunswick, Université de Moncton Université Laval École de Technologie Supérieure Université de Sherbrooke
2013 Montreal, Quebec, École de Technologie Supérieure Université de Sherbrooke École de Technologie Supérieure University of Toronto
2014 Sherbrooke, Quebec, Université de Sherbrooke Université Laval École de Technologie Supérieure Université de Sherbrooke
2015 Toronto, Ontario, University of Toronto Université Laval École de Technologie Supérieure École Polytechnique de Montréal
2016 Montréal, Quebec, Mcgill University École de Technologie Supérieure Université Laval Université de Sherbrooke
2017 Quebec city, Quebec, Université Laval École Polytechnique de Montréal Université de Sherbrooke École de Technologie Supérieure
2018 Waterloo, Ontario, University of Waterloo École de Technologie Supérieure École Polytechnique de Montréal Université de Sherbrooke
2019[5] Montreal, Quebec, École Polytechnique de Montréal École Polytechnique de Montréal Université de Sherbrooke Université Laval
2020 London, Ontario, Ontario, University of Western Ontario Not held due to COVID-19 Not held due to COVID-19 Not held due to COVID-19
2021 (Online) Online University of British Columbia University of Toronto University of Waterloo
2022 Université de Sherbrooke Université Laval Université de Sherbrooke University of Toronto

Statistics

Université Laval 13 Gold 6 Silver 1 Bronze
École de Technologie Supérieure 6 Gold 7 Silver 3 Bronze
Université de Sherbrooke 3 Gold 7 Silver 6 Bronze
École Polytechnique de Montréal 2 Gold 1 Silver 2 Bronze
University of Toronto 1 Gold 2 Silver 5 Bronze
Queen's University 4 Bronze
Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) 1 Silver
Dalhousie University 1 Bronze
University of Windsor 1 Bronze

National news

National appearance

  • École de Technologie Supérieure
  • École Polytechnique de Montréal
  • McGill University
  • Queen's University
  • St-Clair College
  • University of Windsor
  • University of Manitoba
  • Université de Moncton
  • Université de Sherbrooke
  • Université Laval
  • University of Toronto
  • University of/d' Ottawa
  • University of Waterloo
  • University of Western Ontario
  • Ryerson University (now TMU)
  • University of British Columbia
  • Concordia University
  • University of Victoria
  • Université du Québec à Chicoutimi
  • Dalhousie University

Concrete canoe community

Concrete canoe competitions have a significant following from both present and past competitors. The concrete canoe community now includes a dedicated concrete canoe news website, ConcreteCanoe.org, which follows competitions around the world, as well as Concrete Canoe Magazine, which publishes scientific papers, studies, and articles written on the techniques used by top teams.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Forty Years of Concrete Canoes".
  2. ^ http://www.concretecanoepictures.com/Concrete_Canoe_Pictures/Correspondence_files/International_Competition.pdf[dead link]
  3. ^ "1st FIP International Concrete Canoe Race: Stockholm, June 8, 1982 : Result". 1982.
  4. ^ Concrete Canoe Past Winners
  5. ^ "CNCCC | CSCE Student Competitions".

External links

Canadian National Concrete Canoe Competition

concrete, canoe, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2009, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, co. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message A concrete canoe is a canoe made of concrete typically created for an engineering competition Coed sprint race at 2008 National Concrete Canoe Competition in Montreal Quebec In spirit the event is similar to that of a cardboard boat race make the seemingly unfloatable float However since concrete and other poured surfaces are an integral part of a civil engineer s education concrete canoes typically feature more development than cardboard boats Contents 1 Principles 2 ASCE National Competition 2 1 History 2 1 1 Past winners 2 1 2 National sponsors 2 2 Requirements and preparation 3 Canadian Concrete Canoe 3 1 Statistics 3 2 National news 3 2 1 National appearance 4 Concrete canoe community 5 See also 6 References 7 External links 7 1 Canadian National Concrete Canoe CompetitionPrinciples EditIgnoring hydrodynamic effects all ships or boats float because the weight of the water they displace is equal to the weight of the boat Archimedes principle However many boats are made of materials that are denser than water meaning that the boat will sink if filled with water Although it is not required by the rules of the competition some competitive concrete canoes have concrete mix designs that are less dense than water They must pass a test in which the canoe is filled with water and pushed below the surface the canoe must then resurface in order to qualify for racing This is possible because unlike normal concrete which uses sand and small rocks concrete canoes are created with porous aggregates such as Macrolite and microspheres However because many teams still design their concrete mixes to be denser than water in the United States teams are allowed to insert concrete covered non structural foam pieces in their canoes to make the canoes float after being submerged ASCE National Competition EditThe ASCE American Society of Civil Engineers National Concrete Canoe Competition NCCC provides students with a practical application of the engineering principles they learn in the classroom along with important team and project management skills they will need in their careers The event challenges the students knowledge creativity and stamina while showcasing the versatility and durability of concrete as a building material Each year the NCCC which is held in mid June is hosted by an ASCE Student Organization Some 200 university teams attempt to qualify for the NCCC by placing first in one of the 18 conference competitions held throughout the United States during the spring Until 2018 teams placing second in a conference competition behind a university that finished in the top five at the previous year s national competition are also invited This was replaced by the Wild Card drawing in 2018 If the Concrete Canoe team was part of a student chapter that placed within the top one third of all annual reports and the team finished within the top half of all teams in their regional competition the team was eligible for the Wild Card drawing Of all qualifying team six were randomly drawn to attend the 2018 National Concrete Competition To be eligible to compete in the Concrete Canoe Competition the entrant school must be a recognized ASCE Student Chapter or ASCE International Student Group Typically frontrunners include University of Alabama in Huntsville University of Nevada Reno University of Florida California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo the University of California at Berkeley Clemson University Ecole de technologie superieure Universite Laval and the University of Wisconsin Madison The winners of the ASCE National Concrete Canoe Competition are determined by compiling the team s total number of points from the academic and race portions of the competition Academic scholarships totaling 9 000 are awarded to the winning teams undergraduate civil engineering program History Edit Concrete Canoe competition in the United States began in the 1960s when a small number of ASCE student chapters began holding intramural Concrete Canoe races citation needed Then in the 1971 the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign held the first intercollegiate race against Purdue 1 In the more than 45 years since the students efforts to combine engineering excellence and hydrodynamic design to construct water worthy canoes have culminated in an advanced form of concrete construction and racing technique known as the America s Cup of Civil Engineering In 1981 as part of the FIP congress in Stockholm Sweden there was the 1st FIP international concrete canoe race 2 won by the Danish team from Technical University of Denmark 3 inspired by Herbert KrenchelIn 1988 ASCE expanded the competition to the national level when Master Builders Inc now known as BASF signed on to become the sole corporate sponsor for the event In its first year 18 teams of enthusiastic civil engineering students from the nation s premier academic programs gathered in East Lansing Mich to test the waters of this innovative and educational event Over the next two decades the competition became a great success with regional winners traveling across the country by plane train and Ryder truck canoes in tow in their quest to become National Concrete Canoe Competition champions As competition was developing in the United States the idea had also taken hold in other countries Today concrete canoe racing happens around the world in places like Germany South Africa Canada Japan and the United Arab Emirates and with sponsorship from ASCE and the American Concrete Institute ACI the 2007 National Concrete Canoe Competition winning team University of Wisconsin Madison travelled to the Netherlands to represent the United States in the 30th Annual Dutch Concrete Canoe Challenge The Concrete Canoe Competition is designed to provide civil engineering students with an opportunity to gain hands on practical experience and leadership skills by working with concrete mix designs and project management Organizers sponsors and participants are dedicated to building awareness of concrete technology and application as well as the versatility and durability of concrete as a construction material among civil engineering students educators practitioners the concrete industry and the general public They also strive to increase awareness among industry leaders opinion makers and the general public of civil engineering as a dynamic and innovative profession essential to society In its history the National Concrete Canoe Competition has challenged the knowledge creativity and stamina of more than 400 teams and 5000 students In 2008 more than 200 teams competed in 18 conference competitions to qualify for participation at the national level Past winners Edit Year 4 Host City Host School Champion Second Place Third Place1988 East Lansing Michigan Michigan State University University of California Berkeley University of New Hampshire University of Akron1989 Lubbock Texas Texas Tech University University of California Berkeley Michigan State University University of New Hampshire1990 Buffalo New York State University of New York Michigan State University University of Maryland University of California Berkeley1991 Orlando Florida University of Central Florida University of California Berkeley University of Maryland University at Buffalo1992 Fort Collins Colorado Colorado State University University of California Berkeley University of Alabama Huntsville University of New Orleans1993 Sacramento California California State University Sacramento University of Alabama Huntsville Michigan State University University of California Berkeley1994 New Orleans Louisiana University of New Orleans University of Alabama Huntsville University of California Berkeley University of New Orleans1995 Washington D C George Washington University South Dakota School of Mines amp Technology California State University Sacramento Michigan State University1996 Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin at Madison University of Alabama Huntsville Michigan State University University of California Berkeley1997 Cleveland Ohio Cleveland State University Florida Institute of Technology University of Alabama Huntsville University of California Berkeley1998 Rapid City South Dakota South Dakota School of Mines amp Technology University of Alabama Huntsville California State University Sacramento Clemson University1999 Melbourne Florida Florida Institute of Technology Clemson University University of Alabama Huntsville Oklahoma State University2000 Golden Colorado Colorado School of Mines Clemson University Oklahoma State University Florida Institute of Technology2001 San Diego California San Diego State University University of Alabama Huntsville Clemson University Oklahoma State University2002 Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Clemson University Universite Laval Oklahoma State University2003 Philadelphia Pennsylvania Drexel University University of Wisconsin Madison Universite Laval University of California Berkeley2004 Washington D C The Catholic University of America University of Wisconsin Madison Universite Laval University of Alabama Huntsville2005 Clemson South Carolina Clemson University University of Wisconsin Madison Clemson University Michigan Technological University2006 Stillwater Oklahoma Oklahoma State University University of Wisconsin Madison California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo Clemson University2007 Seattle Washington University of Washington University of Wisconsin Madison University of Florida University of Nevada Reno2008 Montreal Quebec Ecole de technologie superieure University of Nevada Reno University of California Berkeley Ecole de technologie superieure2009 Tuscaloosa Alabama University of Alabama University of California Berkeley Ecole de technologie superieure California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo2010 San Luis Obispo California California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo University of Nevada Reno Ecole de technologie superieure2011 Evansville Indiana University of Evansville California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo University of Wisconsin Madison Universite Laval2012 Reno Nevada University of Nevada Reno California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo Universite Laval Michigan Technological University2013 Homer Illinois University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Ecole de technologie superieure University of Nevada Reno University of Florida2014 Johnstown Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown University of Nevada Reno California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo Universite Laval2015 Clemson South Carolina Clemson University University of Florida California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo University of California Berkeley2016 Tyler Texas University of Texas at Tyler Ecole de technologie superieure University of California Los Angeles University of Nevada Reno2017 Golden Colorado Colorado School of Mines California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo University of Florida University of Akron2018 San Diego California San Diego State University California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo University of Florida Universite Laval2019 Melbourne Florida Florida Institute of Technology University of Florida California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo Universite LavalNational sponsors Edit Sponsors include BASF Kiewit Corporation American Concrete Institute Holcim Bentley Systems Cemex and Propex Requirements and preparation Edit Teams of engineering students will gather for a weekend designed to be both challenging and fun Twenty five percent of each team s total team score will be based on the engineering design and construction principles used in the creation of their concrete canoe 25 percent will be based on a technical design report detailing the planning development testing and construction of their canoe and 25 percent will be based on a formal business presentation highlighting the canoe s design construction racing ability and other innovative features The remaining 25 percent of each team s score is based on the performance of the canoe and the paddlers in five different race events men s and women s slalom endurance races and men s women s and co ed sprint races For the purpose of the competition concrete is defined as a mixture of cement of which at least 30 by mass must be Portland cement and aggregate which must constitute at least 25 by volume of the mix The aggregate need not be conventional construction aggregate sand etc but may include materials such as hollow glass beads and fibers Epoxy is not permitted Up to 50 of the thickness of the canoe may be a reinforcement mesh Concrete canoe teams must design their canoes from scratch Typically they create the shape of the hull with a computer design program specifically made for yachts canoes and other watercraft The shape is optimized for racing This hull shape is then given to a construction team responsible for making a mold for the canoe to be formed on A special concrete mix is designed over several months emphasizing among other qualities an optimal balance between strength and low density The finalized mix design is placed on the form the hull thickness usually ranges from about 3 8 to 3 4 Teams later spend hundreds of hours sanding and applying exterior graphics to their canoes for a nice finish Scoring in the competition is based on the quality of construction race performance a design paper and a business presentation Canadian Concrete Canoe EditYear Host city Champion Second place Third place1995 Montreal Quebec Ecole de Technologie Superieure unknown unknown unknown1996 Montreal Quebec Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite Laval unknown unknown1997 Montreal Quebec Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite Laval University of Toronto Universite de Sherbrooke1998 Montreal Quebec Ecole de Technologie Superieure University of Toronto Universite Laval Ecole de Technologie Superieure1999 Sherbrooke Quebec Universite de Sherbrooke Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite Laval Queen s University2000 Kingston Ontario Queen s University Universite Laval Ecole de Technologie Superieure Queen s University2001 Quebec City Quebec Laval University Universite Laval University of Toronto Queen s University2002 Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Universite Laval Ecole de Technologie Superieure University of Toronto2003 Montreal Quebec Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite Laval Universite de Sherbrooke University of Toronto2004 Moncton New Brunswick Universite de Moncton Universite Laval Universite de Sherbrooke University of Toronto2005 Windsor Ontario St Clair College Universite Laval Ryerson University Dalhousie University2006 Sherbrooke Quebec Universite de Sherbrooke Universite de Sherbrooke Universite Laval Queen s University2007 Kingston Ontario Queen s University Universite de Sherbrooke Ecole de Technologie Superieure University of Windsor2008 Halifax Nova Scotia Dalhousie University Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite de Sherbrooke Universite Laval2009 Montreal Quebec Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite Laval Universite de Sherbrooke2010 Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite Laval Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal2011 Quebec City Quebec Laval University Universite Laval Universite de Sherbrooke Ecole de Technologie Superieure2012 Moncton New Brunswick Universite de Moncton Universite Laval Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite de Sherbrooke2013 Montreal Quebec Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite de Sherbrooke Ecole de Technologie Superieure University of Toronto2014 Sherbrooke Quebec Universite de Sherbrooke Universite Laval Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite de Sherbrooke2015 Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Universite Laval Ecole de Technologie Superieure Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal2016 Montreal Quebec Mcgill University Ecole de Technologie Superieure Universite Laval Universite de Sherbrooke2017 Quebec city Quebec Universite Laval Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal Universite de Sherbrooke Ecole de Technologie Superieure2018 Waterloo Ontario University of Waterloo Ecole de Technologie Superieure Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal Universite de Sherbrooke2019 5 Montreal Quebec Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal Universite de Sherbrooke Universite Laval2020 London Ontario Ontario University of Western Ontario Not held due to COVID 19 Not held due to COVID 19 Not held due to COVID 192021 Online Online University of British Columbia University of Toronto University of Waterloo2022 Universite de Sherbrooke Universite Laval Universite de Sherbrooke University of TorontoStatistics Edit Universite Laval 13 Gold 6 Silver 1 BronzeEcole de Technologie Superieure 6 Gold 7 Silver 3 BronzeUniversite de Sherbrooke 3 Gold 7 Silver 6 BronzeEcole Polytechnique de Montreal 2 Gold 1 Silver 2 BronzeUniversity of Toronto 1 Gold 2 Silver 5 BronzeQueen s University 4 BronzeRyerson University now Toronto Metropolitan University 1 SilverDalhousie University 1 BronzeUniversity of Windsor 1 BronzeNational news Edit National appearance Edit Ecole de Technologie Superieure Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal McGill University Queen s University St Clair College University of Windsor University of Manitoba Universite de Moncton Universite de Sherbrooke Universite Laval University of Toronto University of d Ottawa University of Waterloo University of Western Ontario Ryerson University now TMU University of British Columbia Concordia University University of Victoria Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi Dalhousie UniversityConcrete canoe community EditConcrete canoe competitions have a significant following from both present and past competitors The concrete canoe community now includes a dedicated concrete canoe news website ConcreteCanoe org which follows competitions around the world as well as Concrete Canoe Magazine which publishes scientific papers studies and articles written on the techniques used by top teams See also EditConcrete ship Great Northern Concrete Toboggan RaceReferences Edit Forty Years of Concrete Canoes http www concretecanoepictures com Concrete Canoe Pictures Correspondence files International Competition pdf dead link 1st FIP International Concrete Canoe Race Stockholm June 8 1982 Result 1982 Concrete Canoe Past Winners CNCCC CSCE Student Competitions External links EditConcreteCanoe org Concrete Canoe Magazine 2018 National Concrete Canoe Competition Rules and Regulations 2018 National Concrete Canoe Competition Rules Page 2018 National Concrete Canoe Competition Main Site USA University of Nevada Reno Concrete Canoe at University of Nevada Reno University of California Berkeley Concrete Canoe at University of California Berkeley Concrete Canoe Collection from the ASCE Library Team UAH at University of Alabama Huntsville Concrete Canoes in Germany University of Twente NL The BetonBrouwers TeamCanadian National Concrete Canoe Competition Edit Canadian National Concrete Canoe Competition Home Page CNCCC 2013 at the Ecole de technologie superieure CNCCC 2010 at the University of Toronto Canoe de l Ecole de technologie superieure at Ecole de technologie superieure Canoe de l ecole Polytechnique at Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal University of d Ottawa Concrete Canoe at University of Ottawa Canoe de l Universite de Sherbrooke at Universite de Sherbrooke Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Concrete canoe amp oldid 1123972641, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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