200511 A Jd017 001 5eb9abda4d0e8

Corps Update: 30 Emergency Projects Now Complete

May 11, 2020
Continuing its torrid pace, the Corps of Engineers has now added more than 15,000 hospital beds nationwide in response to ongoing pandemic.

WASHINGTON, DC, Monday, May 11, 2020 | Since April 27, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has finished 10 more projects for alternate care sites across the U.S. in response to the COVID-19 crisis. That brings the total number of completed projects now to 30, with seven more remaining to be done under the Army Corps's ongoing emergency program. To date, the efforts have added more than 15,000 emergency hospital beds nationally since early April.  

Today, the Corps posted this update on its website...

TECHNOLOGY SNAPSHOT 

ERDC enlists augmented reality to fight COVID-19

By Mary Margaret Edney, USACE

VICKSBURG, MS, May 5, 2020 – Scientists and engineers at the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) are using augmented reality technology to assist peers throughout the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) in virtually conducting site assessments of alternate care facilities (ACFs) across the country.

Augmented reality technology, developed by researchers at the ERDC Information Technology Laboratory (ITL), offers a way for the USACE to assess potential ACF locations while assisting with social distancing and safety considerations.  

“The ERDC team is forward thinking in terms of how immersive computing can be applied to solve real-world engineering science and defense-related challenges,” said Jonathan Boone, an ITL research civil engineer.

Using live-streaming and mixed-reality overlays, smaller groups of engineers located on-site have the capability to share information with subject-matter experts working remotely. In addition to the safety benefits of leveraging the technology, real-time collaboration of assessment results has expedited the  delivery of information to FEMA.

Currently five USACE districts are prototyping the technology, with two more districts planning to use the technology soon.

“Facility assessments are critical to the success of the ACF mission,” Boone said. “Having reach-back, live-stream capabilities allows engineers and architects who are leading efforts from a ‘boots on the ground’ team perspective to get virtual support from other USACE subject-matter experts.”

Using augmented reality for ACF assessments is just one way that the ITL team has and continues to identify ways to use innovative technology to address real-world challenges. “Innovate, immerse and inspire” is the mission of the ERDC team members delivering solutions with augmented reality technologies.

“Augmented and virtual reality is the connective tissue for all things the ERDC is doing with artificial intelligence and robotics to leverage more informed decision-making for the nation and the warfighter,” Boone said. “In a virtual world, our stakeholders can practice, fail, learn and improve through repetition in a safe environment. That way, they’ll be better suited to perform their duties.”

For more on this story, and other national updates, click here.