SCE Volunteers Cook Up Electric Bucket Truck Made of Food Cans

The creation for this year’s Canstruction event will provide more than 4,000 cans of food to the Orange County Food Bank.
Sep 7, 2017 2:20 PM ET

Originally posted on Inside Edison

When Southern California Edison engineer Martin Barriga heard the company was seeking volunteers to design and build an entry for this year’s Canstruction charity event in Orange County, he was one of the first with his hand up.

Canstruction is an annual nationwide event in which teams of volunteers build art exhibits out of food cans that are later distributed to food banks and other local hunger relief programs.

SCE’s Transmission and Distribution unit spearheaded this year’s effort, which is the company’s first entry in the 10-year-old Orange County event.

“I thought, ‘Wow, this seems like a cool thing to do,’” said Brian Chen, SCE principal manager of engineering. “We could do something for the community and be able to showcase the technical and creative skills of our engineers.

Barriga, a transmission engineer who took the Transmission and Distribution design team lead, figured it couldn’t be that hard building something with cans. After all, when he was a student at Cal Poly Pomona, he built a concrete canoe that could float.

“We are engineers here,” he said. “We design stuff and put it together all the time.

Four months and 80 hours into the Canstruction project, Barriga knows better. He estimates it has taken the core team in Transmission and Distribution and about 75 other SCE volunteers all their engineering and creative know-how to design and build a waist-high version of an SCE electric bucket truck with a charging station and wall mural, all made of cans.

The SCE team’s efforts will be on full display at John Wayne Airport in the Terminal A baggage area until Sept. 24.

As easy as the project seemed, it was the cans that posed the biggest challenge.

“We learned that not all cans are created equal,” said Kristine Bugarin, an SCE administrative assistant, who was the design team lead for volunteers.

For instance, although they used a variety of one-pound cans of beans, they quickly learned some brand’s cans were taller and others had a wider diameter. That made them not only difficult to stack, but it was even harder to load the dimensions into the computer program to calculate how many they would need to build the project.

“We’re used to standardized sizes of things like poles or hardware,” Barriga said.
The other complication was they needed the right combination of can label colors — white for the truck body, black for the “bucket” on the back, silver for the “chrome grill.”

They ended up with a combination of 4,200 cans of green, ranch style and cannellini beans, peas, tuna, chicken broth and hominy.

They had to get even more creative with some of the truck’s special elements. They used Pringles cylinders for the truck’s boom, ramen packages for the orange “hazard lights” on the cab and Mentos rolls for the charging station power cord.

Although it took a lot more effort than expected, volunteer coordinator Bugarin said they were all motivated by the opportunity to create something using SCE’s engineering skill that would benefit such a good cause. All the food will be donated to the Orange County Food Bank.

“We all live and work in the communities we serve and we like being able to give back,” she said.

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