Chattanooga Times Free Press

Metal artist welds his life back together

- BY MYRON MADDEN STAFF WRITER

When Michael Brandt was arrested for drug traffickin­g in 2002, he decided to use his five-year sentence in federal prison to whittle away the parts of himself he didn’t like and change his life for the better.

Today, Brandt is an accomplish­ed welding artist, respected mentor and the owner of custom fabricatio­n and mobile welding studio Garage Bound LLC, which recently celebrated one year at its newly acquired East Chattanoog­a location.

Though it didn’t come easy, he says. Brandt’s journey began in the U.S. penitentia­ry in Atwater, Calif., where he transforme­d his anger into something beautiful by channeling it into the arts. From behind bars, the 20-yearold began to write poetry and songs about how he felt his life was moving on without him due to his mistakes.

“[It helped me] come to terms with the fact that I was exactly where I was supposed to be and I was there because of the things I’d done. Then I asked myself, ‘How am I going to turn this around?’” Brandt said.

He took his first step on that journey by teaching classes in the prison’s education department to help other inmates get their GED diplomas. Having obtained his own GED certificat­e years before, Brandt used his past experience to break down complex principles, crafting drug weighing analogies to make fractions understand­able.

“Being able to relate on their level to help them succeed was really rewarding for me,” Brandt said. “I felt like I was doing something good for people.”

Over the next four years, Brandt continued to write and teach, even after being transferre­d to a lower-security prison in Alabama in 2004. With the help of a residentia­l drug treatment program, he was able to shave a year off his sentence and leave the correction facility in 2006 a new man.

After moving to Chattanoog­a to be closer to his sister, Brandt quick-

ly began putting his new artistic skills to the test by selling handcrafte­d greeting cards. His intricatel­y designed cards had been popular among inmates and prison staff while he was incarcerat­ed, but he soon found he could not secure enough orders on the outside to make the enterprise viable.

Discourage­d but not defeated, Brandt turned his talents to welding, which he’d dabbled in as a child under the watchful eye of his grandfathe­r, who was a welder. Night after night, Brandt collected stray scraps of metal and practiced fusing them together, hoping to build a pair of chopper bicycles for himself and his son, Arron.

“I had no formal training; just a desire and drive to learn,” Brandt said.

As his skills progressed, he was surprised to discover that people were willing to pay him to repair items like lawn mower blades, and he soon started working on orders from within a two-car garage behind his East Brainerd home.

It wasn’t long before the way Brandt shaped metal caught the attention of local organizati­ons. In 2011, he got a chance to build a trellis for Rock City, and though he admits it was “way over my head” at the time, the end result was impressive enough to make him the go-to for several other projects at the Lookout Mountain attraction.

For his trellis, titled “Invitation,” Brandt also received the Artist of the Year award from the Young Profession­als Associatio­n of Chattanoog­a — though his biggest reward can’t sit on a shelf.

As the owner of Garage Bound, Brandt seizes every opportunit­y he can to pay it forward. With the help of the American Welding Society, Holston Gases, Miller Welders and others, he hosts a yearly welding merit badge session for local Boy Scouts. The sessions have given Brandt a chance to become a mentor to local teens like Ethan Cavanaugh, 14, who continued to work with Brandt even after his badge was acquired.

“He opened up the window that I really needed to take in order to get into the career of welding,” said Ethan, whom Brandt remembers as the most engaged of the 12 members in his group.

Brandt is also willing to share his experience with local students through summer internship­s.

“He’s a good manager, but he comes off as a friend, too,” said Sequoyah High School student Austin Waldo, 16, who has been training at the studio for about two months. “This will get you in the real work world and teach you how things work — it’s not just like playing around in high school. You’ve got to get in here and stuff’s got to get put out.”

With support from local partners and groups like Baileigh Industrial, which has supplied Brandt’s business with needed tools and machinery, he hopes to expand to the property next door and build a building capable of handling large projects.

He also hopes to continue sharing his story and the message that life rewards those who are willing to put in the work.

“I’m not ashamed of my past because it makes me who I am today, and I like who I am today. I have something to offer,” Brandt said. “Sky’s the limit, and I ain’t looking back.”

Editor’s note: This story originally appeared in the Aug. 30 edition of Metro Community News. Contact Myron Madden at mmadden@timesfreep­ress.com.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MYRON MADDEN ?? Garage Bound owner Michael Brandt, middle, stands in his studio with two of the local teens he mentors, Ethan Cavanaugh, left, and Austin Waldo.
PHOTOS BY MYRON MADDEN Garage Bound owner Michael Brandt, middle, stands in his studio with two of the local teens he mentors, Ethan Cavanaugh, left, and Austin Waldo.
 ??  ?? Garage Bound is a custom fabricatio­n and mobile welding studio in East Chattanoog­a.
Garage Bound is a custom fabricatio­n and mobile welding studio in East Chattanoog­a.
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