Chattanooga Times Free Press

Annual EPB holiday windows bring magic

- BY MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITER

An animatroni­c Mrs. Claus nods knowingly inside the Gumdrop Green House while elves and a service dog slowly sway outside over a campfire. Lollipops and candy grow outside a gingerbrea­d house and a squirrel pops out, with nuts and candy between his paws, over and over like a coo-coo clock. Santa Claus himself and his trusty elves watch the radar and slowly design a new sleigh while lights twinkle overhead.

These are scenes that 21 juniors at STEM School Chattanoog­a helped create and are a part of what has become an annual holiday tradition in Chattanoog­a — EPB’s holiday windows. The newest crop was unveiled Wednesday night.

For five years now, EPB has worked with students to brainstorm, design and build the windows as part of the school’s mission to provide real-life, project-based learning.

“For us, we have things that we focus on like innovation, collaborat­ion and critical thinking, Collaborat­ion is one of the tenets of our school and they are demonstrat­ing that in so many ways with this project,” said Ken Kranz, the school’s Fab Lab instructor. “It’s a chance for the students to actually design and fabricate things that can be made and put into the holiday windows.”

The STEM School is one of several in Hamilton County that has a digital fabricatio­n lab where students can use the latest technology and tools such as laser cutters, 3D printers and more to bring their idea to life.

Students spend three to five hours a week — in class, in the evenings and on the weekend — for the first and second quarter of the school year working on the windows. Part of the project, which includes small-scale models, behind-thescenes videos, and the actual constructi­on, includes documentin­g problems and how they solved them.

Kenny Tran, 16, a junior at STEM School, said being able to see his work come to life was his favorite part of the project.

“Being able to work with EPB and go down in the warehouse where they constructe­d everything and see how your work is actually being used,” he said.

One of his group partners, Ethan Everett, also a 16-year-old junior at STEM School, said it took a lot of “patience, time and hard work.”

The boys helped create Santa’s control room near the main doors into EPB’s downtown headquarte­rs. The theme of this year’s windows, “Spirit of Chattanoog­a,” gives them an entreprene­urial, innovative spin.

Mayor Andy Berke greeted the crowd gathered before the unveiling and described the city as a “city of creators,” as evidenced by the window scenes.

The project also provides the students the opportunit­y to work not only with their peers, but with EPB employees and Step Up interns that helped design the concept over the summer.

Kranz calls the partnershi­p “a win” for the school and its students.

“For many of them this is their holiday tradition, and when they get to 11th grade they look forward to working on this project,” he said. “It’s by far our most popular project.”

The school, which opened in 2012, is a magnet school for students in grades 9 through 12. With a focus on STEM (science, technology, engineerin­g and math), students have a project-based learning class each year.

EPB’s holiday windows are among several unique projects that also include partnershi­ps with the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a, the prosthetic­s manufactur­er Fillauer and greenspace­s, a local nonprofit focused on sustainabi­lity.

Each of EPB’s seven street-facing windows along Market Street, Broad Street and M.L. King Boulevard are decorated each year to feature a holiday scene. The displays are unveiled annually the night before Thanksgivi­ng and continue to shimmer and sparkle through Jan. 2.

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Kids check out the holiday window display during EPB’s revealing event on Wednesday. The EPB Holiday Windows will remain on display through January 1.
STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH Kids check out the holiday window display during EPB’s revealing event on Wednesday. The EPB Holiday Windows will remain on display through January 1.
 ??  ?? Luke Wright, 2, looks at the EPB Holiday Window display with his grandmothe­r, Billie Wright. Each year, EPB reveals its holiday windows on the night before Thanksgivi­ng.
Luke Wright, 2, looks at the EPB Holiday Window display with his grandmothe­r, Billie Wright. Each year, EPB reveals its holiday windows on the night before Thanksgivi­ng.

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