Free Tour to the Frist Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville
We would like to encourage all current ACE students or those interested in Architecture, Engineering or Construction as a career to take advantage of a free architecture tour of the Frist Center for the Visual Arts on Saturday, February 7th at 4:30pm. The tour is sponsored by the Frist Center and is a great way to get a “behind-the-scenes” tour of the architecture of one of Nashville’s great landmarks as the building is the former main post office constructed between 1933 and 1934. http://fristcenter.org/calendar-exhibitions/detail/architecture-tour or @FristCenter on Twitter
The monthly tour is sponsored by Messer Construction, “(@messerwearebldg on Twitter)
(https://twitter.com/messerwearebldg )
Here is the Building background information for those not able to take the tour: http://fristcenter.org/about/the-building
After a very informal but informative presentation by Jud Adams (President of Power Management) the students were rotated through electrical, plumbing and mechanical engineering exercises where the sized air duct, researched code on required number of plumbing fixtures and designed electrical circuits for an actual office building.
This link will take you to the presentation the provided our students:
We would like to encourage all current ACE students or those interested in Architecture, Engineering or Construction as a career to take advantage of a free architecture tour of the Frist Center for the Visual Arts on Saturday, February 7th at 4:30pm. The tour is sponsored by the Frist Center and is a great way to get a “behind-the-scenes” tour of the architecture of one of Nashville’s great landmarks as the building is the former main post office constructed between 1933 and 1934. http://fristcenter.org/calendar-exhibitions/detail/architecture-tour or @FristCenter on Twitter
The monthly tour is sponsored by Messer Construction, “(@messerwearebldg on Twitter)
(https://twitter.com/messerwearebldg )
Here is the Building background information for those not able to take the tour: http://fristcenter.org/about/the-building







