A student in rural Virginia has the same potential to become an engineer as anyone in Northern Virginia. What they lack is access. Chesapeake BRIDGES closes that gap through shared fabrication hubs, industry mentors from Booz Allen, Leidos, and Northrop Grumman, and direct pathways into the Mid-Atlantic's most in-demand technical careers. You're not funding a program. You're building the infrastructure that gets them there.
The Mid-Atlantic powers national defense, cybersecurity, and advanced manufacturing - and it is running out of engineers. Virginia, Maryland, and DC face tens of thousands of unfilled technical roles right now. The students who could fill them exist. But in rural and underserved communities across the region, they lack the tools, mentors, and pathways to get there. Geography is determining opportunity. That has to change.
BRIDGES builds what's missing: shared fabrication hubs where students access industry-grade tools, and mentor networks connecting them directly to engineers at Booz Allen, Leidos, and Northrop Grumman. Not one-time visits - long-term coaching through build seasons and into careers. Brandeis research confirms it works: FIRST alumni are 2.3x more likely to major in engineering. BRIDGES takes that proven model to the communities that have never had access to it.
A generation of students from rural and underserved communities across the Mid-Atlantic - trained, mentored, and credentialed - entering the region's most in-demand technical careers. Employers with the workforce they need. Communities with the economic mobility they've been denied. BRIDGES doesn't just move students into jobs. It builds a self-sustaining regional talent pipeline that outlasts any single grant cycle.
This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).
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