A Reflection by Rebecca McCue, Build Up Engineering Member, Acadia National Park
Throughout my time at Acadia National Park, I have been staffed on a variety of engineering projects aimed at stormwater infrastructure improvements, visitor accessibility, construction, and coastal resiliency. I have worked on a design-build project located at Bass Harbor Head Light, aimed towards making the site more accessible for visitors with mobility challenges. I collected LiDAR survey to gather information about the site, worked with my fellow ACE coworker Colin Pearson to create a CAD design for an accessible viewing platform, utility relocation plan, demolition plan, and materials sourcing. I worked with a ACAD construction laborer to perform the physical construction of the project for 2 months including demolishing an obsolete building, relocating overhead electric lines to underground, preparing the foundation of the accessible viewing platform, and seeding disturbed sites with native grasses for a meadow restoration effort. This addition to the site allows visitors of all abilities to view the iconic lighthouse.
I have also collected survey at the Acadia Wild Gardens to aid in the understanding of ongoing drainage and flooding issues within the gardens. These survey scans allow for a concise topographic map on the area, to be used for future drainage improvement efforts. I have also created site plans for Thompson Island Living Shoreline project in CAD, to aid in the planning stages for improving coastal resiliency through native plantings. I have also aided in the preservation and maintenance of Carroll Homestead, a vital space to the education and interpretation program at ACAD. Here I led a survey effort onsite to collect exact points of historic structures and features for the creation of a Cultural Landscape Inventory Map.
I have also performed survey of the Duck Harbor culvert located in Isle au Haut to gain information about the current condition, and improvement plans for the future. With this survey, I could create a design to size the new stormwater infrastructure to accommodate rising sea level and larger storm events over the next many years. It has been incredible to work on projects all throughout Acadia National Park, collaborate with NPS staff across many divisions, and learn new technical skills that are so valuable for my career in environmental engineering.
