Building Bridges: Niner engineers support a community’s recovery

Story by Susan Messina
Photography: Amy Hart, Videographer: Harrison Hieb, Producer: Whitney Wilson
Despite its once-in-a-century destruction, Hurricane Helene — when all seemed lost to some — brought out the best in many.
Helping neighbors. Galvanizing communities. Looking ahead.
In the Blue Ridge Mountain town of Lansing, North Carolina, a 10-foot wall of water surged through downtown in September 2024 when the banks of Big Horse Creek overflowed, destroying nearly every business on the main street. Beyond town, hundreds of Ashe County residents were cut off from food, essential supplies and medical care as the bridges that connected their homes to county roads and highways washed away. Over the past year, the paths of three Niner engineers — a determined alumna, a dedicated researcher and a motivated student — have converged, each working alongside family and friends, colleagues and classmates, to help rebuild the bridges of Ashe County.

Emily Davis ‘12
Principal, Solid Earth Engineering PLLC
Cofounder, Lansing’s Bridge to Recovery
Davis, a Lansing resident, took action in the hurricane’s aftermath. A structural engineer, she reached out to her alma mater, UNC Charlotte’s W.S. Lee College of Engineering, for support and big ideas.

Shen-en Chen, Ph.D., P.E.
Professor,
Civil and Environmental Engineering
A researcher and instructor whose academic expertise and compassionate nature are well-matched to Lansing’s needs, Chen moved quickly to develop a course to accelerate local bridge repair and replacement.

Nathan Hall
Class of Fall 2025,
Civil and Environmental Engineering Major
Hall, whose hometown borders Lansing, has learned firsthand — from the bridge design course and related field work — how civil engineering is much more than a field of study; it also shapes the way people live.