complete session descriptions in the Convention brochure.
Transcription
complete session descriptions in the Convention brochure.
RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • October 30 The 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition will be held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Philadelphia is one of the most centralized major cities on the Eastern Seaboard. Attendees are going to experience an unbelievable array of history—history that will come alive right in front of your eyes. Philadelphia is the gateway to the past 200+ years of the United States, who we are, and what we have become. Philadelphia offers spectacular historical sites at every turn, entertainment options that will boggle the mind, eatery choices that will boggle the stomach, thousands of shopping opportunities, museums, galleries, and artisans for every palate, and educational institutions that rival the world's best. Education and Professionalism The Convention's technical and professional development programs are designed to impart basic to advanced technical information and knowledge to please the widest possible array of engineers, designers, specifiers and contractors. There will be six areas of technical and educational concentrations, with combinations of stand-alone, 1.25-hour programming and double sessions of 2.5-hour duration to allow full immersion in a subject area Earn While You Learn Six educational time blocks offer participants almost 50 technical programs from which to chose. Every technical program carries with it Continuing Education Units (CEUs) or Professional Development Hours (PDHs). (ASPE is an approved provider in all 50 states for its technical programs.) CEU/ PDH certificates will be sent to all attendees immediately following the Convention. Continued on back page Not a Member of ASPE? Special Convention discounts are available if you register early and become an ASPE member. ★★ See the registration form. ★★ November 3, 2010 ASPE’s Engineered Plumbing Exposition The 2010 ASPE Convention Education • Professional Development Networking • Exposition And let's not forget the Fun • Food • Beverages • Music Receptions • Banquet • Tours to Largest of Its Kind Under One Roof The 2010 ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition is the world’s largest gathering of plumbing industry products, equipment, and services for plumbing engineers, designers, and contractors—four football fields of exhibits—under one roof. More than 300 manufacturers, suppliers, and consultants will have technical exhibits featuring everything from pipes to pumps to fixtures, from compressors to computers to consulting services. This unique opportunity to view and examine the equipment, products, and services that you will be recommending and specifying only occurs once every two years. The Exposition features more than six hours of uninterrupted, non-competing exhibit time on Monday with another four hours on Tuesday. To help you find the latest and greatest new products, be sure to browse through the New Product Showcase located in the Registration area, right at the entrance to the Exposition hall. The New Product Showcase will feature more than 50 informative displays and will pinpoint the product displays on the Exposition floor. The ASPE Engineered Plumbing Exposition is unique: No selling or order taking is allowed on the floor—nothing but the How Do You Get One? There is only ONE way to get one of these coins. You must be registered for the 2010 ASPE Convention. When you receive your Convention registration packet, one of these coins will be included with the material. HINT: DON’T LOSE THE COIN! There is no way to trace who got what coin, and if you lose it, you will not be able to use it. Even though we will know you registered for the Convention, you will NOT be able to get a second coin. Lunch and Snacks Included! To make it even easier for business to be conducted without distraction, a compli- Earn CEUs YE OLD ASPE CONVENTION COIN The 2010 Ye Old ASPE Convention Coin doesn’t have any value stamped on it, but it can be worth an immediate registration discount, an additional chance for a laptop computer, and an additional chance for a grand prize. Every ASPE coin has a number on it. The coins will be randomly mixed into a box to help ensure that they are in no way connected or in any order. providing of technical information and specifications. This allows ASPE to provide continuing education units for time spent on the Exposition floor. (Not every state recognizes a technical and educational exposition as permissible for earning credit hours. Check with your locality.) An electronic tracking system will be in place to mark your entrance and exit to the Exposition hall. With 10 exclusive noncompete show hours, there's the perfect opportunity to earn 1.0 CEU/10 PDHs as you visit product demonstrations and meet the manufacturers' research and product engineers. the coin. If you have a winning coin, you will immediately receive a $50 instant cash registration discount, and you will receive an extra ticket for both the laptop and the grand prize drawing. (Remember to print your name on the ticket before you drop it in the proper box in the Exposition Hall.) Good Luck! What to Do With It Be sure to bring the coin with you when you come to the 2010 ASPE Convention to pick up your registration materials. When you get your materials, hand the coin to the registration staff. They will be able to immediately check the number that is on 2010 WORLD TOILET ORGANIZATION SUMMIT FIRST TIME IN THE UNITED STATES (See page 2 for more information) ASPE Members: Special Convention discounts are available if you register early. ★★ See the registration form. ★★ Continued on page 3 RING IN THE FUTURE 2010 is indeed Ringing in the Future for the American Society IN THE of Plumbing Engineers. year, the Society is FUTURE This partnering with the InOF ASPE ternational Code Council to combine technical programs and what would otherwise have been this year’s Mechanical, Plumbing, and Fuel Gas Code meeting, as well as the World Toilet Organization Summit, into one event. RING The ICC works in conjunction with and produces the World Toilet Organization Summit, and ASPE and ICC have agreed to partner in overseeing the first summit event in the United States. Recently ASPE signed a Memorandum of Understanding with ICC. This was the Society’s first cooperative venture with an organization such as the ICC, and this event is the first cooperative venture to occur from that agreement. The opportunity to partner with the ICC on technical programs and a major charitable worldwide organization is indeed a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. We are pleased that coordination for these events became practical and where better than in the city that gave life and spirit to the United States, the city of Philadelphia. American Society of Plumbing Engineers 2980 S. River Rd. Des Plaines, IL 60018 DISCOVER CHALLENGE PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PAID Permit #50 Fort Atkinson, WI ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô1 BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE First Time in the United States 2010 WORLD TOILET ORGANIZATION SUMMIT ★★★ October 30 through November 3, 2010 — Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA ★★★ Presented by the International Code Council ★★★ In Partnership with the American Society of Plumbing Engineers Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition Jack Sim, founder of the World Toilet Organization + ASPE is proud to partner with the International Code Council (ICC), World Toilet Organization (WTO), and the World Toilet Summit, presented by the WTO’s global sanitation partner, the ICC. This is the first time the WTO has come to the U.S. to share the innovative designs, trends, opportunities, and sustainable, market-based sanitation solutions that are starting to improve conditions for so many people around the world. The global sanitation crisis takes the life of a child every 15 seconds. Nearly 40% of the world’s population has no access to proper sanitation. This marketplace of 2.6 billion potential sanitation consumers needs the help of plumbing professionals to eradicate these horrific statistics. While altruism is wonderful, there are also huge profits to be made for those who engage in developing and delivering sanitation products and services to the developing world. It is a startling but true fact that the poor have been buying more mobile phones than toilets, which is causing the developed world to realize that there is a tremendous market for goods and services at the bottom of the economic pyramid. The purchasing power of the poor has been increasing with the availability of improved access to financing, as well as better market data that results in fairer prices for products. ICC: PROUD TO BE A PARTNER OF WTO The Code Council is proud to assist the WTO, not only to bring the World Toilet Summit to the United States, but also in its continual efforts to help dramatically improve global sanitation conditions. Through its extensive knowledge and expertise in the plumbing and sanitation market, the ICC is working with the WTO on several global initiatives. The most recent collaborative effort is the development of Global Guidelines for Practical Toilet Design, which will go far in advancing toilet design and sanitation initiatives overall. COMMITTED TO IMPROVING TOILETS AND SANITATION WORLDWIDE The WTO is a global nonprofit organization committed to improving toilet and sanitation conditions worldwide. It is one of the few organizations to focus on toilets instead of water, which receives more attention and resources under the common subject of sanitation. Founded in 2001 by Jack Sim, the WTO sought to position itself as a platform to bring key stakeholders in sanitation together to work collaboratively to help bring toilets to the 37% of the world’s population who have no access to sanitation. The WTO network has grown exponentially to 235 member organizations in 58 countries. It now acts as a global hub where toilet and sanitation organizations can learn from one another, leverage media and global support and, in turn, help to influence governments to promote sound sanitation and public health policies. KEY INITIATIVES The WTO is actively implementing a number of key intiatives to improve conditions: Field Operations: With nearly a decade of practical experience, WTO has been at the frontline in improving sanitation conditions in the developing world. From post-tsunami sanitation infrastructure construction in Indonesia to refurbishing and designing ecologically sound school toilet facilities in India, WTO has leveraged its network to respond to communities in need. Today, WTO is focusing its efforts on driving sustainable, marketbased solutions to boost demand for and strengthen supplies of household latrines in the developing world. Education and Training: In 2005, WTO started the world’s first World Toilet College (WTC) to provide training in personal hygiene, toilet design, maintenance, school and disaster sanitation, and implementation of sustainable sanitation systems. WTO and WTC educational programs cover a wide range of topics on toilet sanitation, including technology, social entrepreneurship, funding, capacity building, and research methods. WTC has contributed directly to the hygiene and sanitation-related education of over 2,500 children, teachers, engineers, aid workers, and professional cleaners since its inception. Events: Annually, WTO organizes the World Toilet Summit, providing a common platform for stakeholders to connect, share, learn, and collaborate with the aim of meeting the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals for Sanitation. In Touch with the World: WTO engages in social media, including Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, YouTube, and Ammado, to keep followers up to date on events, resources, outreach, and the organization’s mission, as well as facilitating easy access DISCOVER to WTO’s educational tools and advocacy resources. WORLD TOILET DAY November 19 is World Toilet Day. World Toilet Day is a global day of action to increase awareness for toilet users’ rights and to advocate a better toilet environment. This day is marked by individuals, toilet associations, and other advocacy groups across the world to bring attention to a cause that truly affects everyone on earth. SUPPORT FROM GLOBAL LEADERS The organization also receives regular global media coverage, helping raise important key issues around the topic. Coverage has been received in outlets such as Forbes, Bloomberg News, The Economist, The New York Times, Cape Times, and the Associated Press. WTO also fosters numerous working relationships with organizations such as the United Nations Environmental Program, Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, and the Clinton Global Initiative, World Health Organization, World Entrepreneurship Forum, and the Sustainable Sanitation Alliance to name just a few. In addition, WTO was recently appointed as Schwab Fellow of World Economic Forum and Ashoka Global Fellow. To learn about all the important initiatives in which WTO is involved, visit www. worldtoilet.org. WHY THE WORLD TOILET ORGANIZATION? Factoid: Because even the world’s wealthiest people still have toilet problems—from unhygienic public toilets to sewage disposal that destroys our waterways. Factoid: Because 2.5 billion people worldwide are without access to proper sanitation, which risks their health, strips their dignity, and kills 1.8 million people, mostly children, a year. Factoid: Few people in what we call “developed nations” or advanced society give even a moment’s thought to the problems of the worldwide plight of the lack of sanitation in the world—and how it might directly affect them. Factoid: The basics of sanitation is not a subject most people like to talk about or discuss. However, there is the World Toilet Organization that has organized to attempt to deal with the overall sanitation dilemma facing the world. CHALLENGE Mr. Jack Sim, or Toiletman, as he humorously introduces himself, founded the World Toilet Organization (WTO) in 2001 His advocacy for better toilets and sanitation has earned him numerous awards, such as the World Environment Award in 2004 and the Social Entrepreneur of the Year Award in 2006. Mr. Sim developed a keen interest and concern for toilets because he felt this subject was neglected, which led him to establish the Restroom Association of Singapore (RAS) in 1998. As Mr. Sim began his work in Singapore, he realized there were other existing toilet associations doing good work in other countries, but no channels existed to facilitate information sharing and resource mobilization. Hence, with a dream to have a world body to unite various toilet associations, he founded the World Toilet Organization (WTO) in 2001 and the World Toilet College (WTC) in 2005. In 2004, Mr. Sim was awarded the Singapore Green Plan Award 2012 by Singapore’s National Environment Agency for his contribution to the environment. In 2006, he was invited to launch the German Toilet Organization in Berlin. He is also a founding member of American Restroom Association. In 2007, Mr. Sim became one of the key members to convene the Sustainable Sanitation Alliance (SuSanA), comprised of about 104 participating organizations active in the field of sanitation. He is also an Ashoka Global Fellow and was named by Time magazine as Hero of the Environment 2008. He sits in the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council (GAC) for Water Security and also the GAC for Social Entrepreneurship. In 2009, he joined the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy as a master student in Public Administration as well as a visiting fellow at its Institution of Water Policy. BUILD 2 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE ASPE’s Engineered Plumbing Exposition Largest of Its Kind Under One Roof mentary lunch and beverages are available on the Exposition floor each day. In the afternoon, just when you’re getting a snack attack, complimentary snacks and soft drinks will be available right on the Exposition floor. Participants can maximize every minute discussing the technical details of each product as they visit the exciting and innovative exhibits. GRAND PRIZE: Take Home a $3,000 65” TV As part of the Engineered Plumbing Exposition experience, you have the opportunity to win a laptop computer right on the Exposition floor. This year, there will be six to eight 65” LCD HD televisions* given away during the Exposition—one every couple of hours each day. You have lots of ways to be entered to win. First, everyone who is a paid registrant to the Convention will receive one complimentary grand prize ticket for both Monday and Tuesday with their registration materials. (Be sure to drop the right ticket in the correct grand prize drawing box on the right day.) BE SURE YOUR NAME IS CLEARLY PRINTED ON THE TICKET. The grand prize ticket drawing boxes will be collected every half-hour. You can also get a grand prize ticket simply by filling in one of the ASPE Almanacs that everyone entering the show floor will receive. Inside this almanac will be sample logos of all of the Sponsors and Patrons of the Exposition. As you visit each exhibit, be sure to stop by the Sponsor and Patron booths and get one of their stickers to put onto the right sample on the right page of the ASPE Almanac. Fill in an almanac and you will be able to exchange it for grand prize and laptop computer drawing tickets for both Monday and Tuesday. The only basic rule is that you must be on the Exposition floor when your name is called. (*To avoid shipping and breakage and all the other headaches that go with winning a television set, a Best Buy gift card will be provided for the approximately $3,000 value of the television to each winner.) Laptops Every 15 Minutes! Here’s something you won’t see or find at any other Exposition: How about winning a major-brand laptop computer? At the ASPE EPE, winning a laptop is easy. Everyone who is a paid registrant to the Convention will receive one complimentary laptop prize drawing ticket for both Monday and Tuesday with their registration materials. (Be sure to drop the right ticket in the correct laptop drawing box on the right day.) BE SURE YOUR NAME IS CLEARLY PRINTED ON THE TICKET. The laptop prize ticket drawing boxes will be collected every quarter-hour. You can also get an additional laptop prize ticket simply by filling in one of the ASPE Almanacs that everyone entering the show floor will receive. Inside this almanac will be sample logos of all of the Sponsors and Patrons of the Exposition. As you visit each exhibit, be sure to stop by the Sponsor and Patron booths and have them give you one of their stickers to put onto the right sample on the right page of the ASPE Almanac. So remember: Fill in an Almanac, and you will be able to exchange it for additional grand prize and laptop drawing tickets for both Monday and Tuesday. THE ONLY BASIC RULE IS THAT YOU MUST BE ON THE EXPOSITION FLOOR WHEN YOUR NAME IS CALLED. (Unclaimed prizes will be added to the next hour’s prize giveaway. All prizes will be awarded before the end of the Exposition.) Bring Your Walking Shoes! Be sure to bring comfortable walking shoes. You must cover more than 200,000 square feet of Exposition floor to see all of the exhibits representing more than 300 exhibitors. Don’t forget to visit the New Product Showcase, the ASPE Pavilion, the ASPE Research Foundation Pavilion, and the ASPE Bookstore. Dress for Respect The basic and proper dress for the majority of events at the Convention and the Engineered Plumbing Exposition is business attire or business casual. Business casual is typically defined to be a shirt with a collar, shirts with the ASPE logo, sweater or turtleneck, slacks, trousers, khakis, and/or a blazer or vest. For women, a skirt, blouse, dress, suit, or pantsuit is acceptable dress. In general, the common sense rule of neatness, good taste, and comfort shall be the rule of the day. Being dressed nicely and properly is nothing more than showing respect for your peers and other professionals. A “Short” History of Philadelphia Its name meaning the City of Brotherly Love, Philadelphia was essential to the formative years of the United States. It continues to serve as a vibrant center of religious and social freedom, these qualities deeply rooted in the founders’ strong beliefs in tolerance. Philadelphia served as the permanent home to significant historical figures such as Benjamin Franklin and the financiers of the American Revolution. Formerly the nation’s capital, Philadelphia’s historic district (known as Old City and largely occupied by Independence National Historical Park destinations) includes iconic images of American freedom, nationalism, and patriotism, such as the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall. Beyond its revolutionary significance, Philadelphia maintained an important position in the country’s development throughout the 1800s. Philadelphia features prime examples of the imposing Greek Revivalist architecture, providing former and present residents with a sense of permanence. Additionally, Philadelphia serves as a continual key location for the development and innovation of medicine, and its government now champions green, earth-friendly initiatives. Today, Philadelphia is known affectionately as “Philly” to local area residents. While offering multiple classic and innovative museums for the art or architecture lover, it serves as a general center of arts and culture for the area. The Avenue of the Arts on South Broad Street features multiple venues such as the Kimmel Center, Wilma Theater, and Merriam Theater. As you explore the city, you can also experience exquisite graffiti art murals on the sides of buildings, championing the accomplishments of heroes from that particular neighborhood, highlighting prominent figures from multiple eras and cultures. Still consisting of individual cultural and ethnic neighborhoods such as Chinatown and South Philly, Philadelphia is renowned for its cuisine. Reputed to be the highest-tipping city in America, Philadelphia’s residents like to dine out and explore new food options like the delicious and earth-friendly Maru Global or the upscale but affordable Continental Restaurant & Martini Bar. From the reportedly haunted location of Eastern State Penitentiary to the ritzy dining experience aboard the Spirit of Philadelphia on the Delaware River, Philadelphia has something for every visitor, the passionate sports fan and the history buff alike. The Original Philadelphia The city of Philadelphia, as laid out by William Penn, comprised only that portion of the present city situated between South and Vine Streets and the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers. In fact, the city proper was that portion between High (Market) Street and Dock Creek. Here is where the pioneers dug caves in the banks of the Delaware or built huts on the land higher up. Meanwhile, the women, equally busy in their sphere, had lighted their fires on the bare earth, and having "their kettle slung between two poles upon a stick transverse," thus prepared the meal of homely and frugal fare for the repast of diligent builders. Native Americans were more or less present, either as spectators of the improvements then progressing or venders of their game and venison from the neighboring wilds. The Swedes and Dutch, who were the earliest settlers, brought their productions to market as a matter of course. Settlements were made, however, outside of these boundaries, and in the course of time they became separately incorporated and had separate governments, making congeries of towns and districts, the whole group being known abroad simply as Philadelphia. Besides these, there were a number of other outlying townships, villages, and settlements near the built-up town, though detached from it. Among these were Bridesburg, Frankford, Harrowgate, Holmesburg, the unincorporated Northern Liberties, Port Richmond, Nicetown, Rising Sun, Fox Chase, Germantown, Roxborough, Falls of Schuylkill, unincorporated Penn township, Francisville, Hamilton Village, Mantua, Blockley, Kingsessing, and Passyunk. Some of these also became absorbed in the extending streets of the congeries of towns of which Philadelphia was composed, and in 1854 they were all consolidated under one municipal government, the boundaries of which are coincident with those of the old county of Philadelphia. In the earlier times some of the districts mentioned had marked characteristics, but these have mostly passed away. Southwark, immediately on the riverfront, was marked by great woodyards for supplying fuel before the days of anthracite coal, by the sheds and yards of boat-builders and mast-makers, and by ship-builders' yards down to the site of the United States Navy Yard. A great many of the Southwark dwellings were inhabited by sea captains and seafaring men, and down to quite a recent period a considerable portion of its inhabitants were the families of seagoing people and "watermen." The Northern Liberties also had its great cord-wood wharves and yards along the riverfront and extensive lumber-yards. The wood-yards have mostly disappeared and have given way to large markets for farm produce, commercial warehouses, railroad landings, depots, and shipping wharves. Some of the lumber-yards remain, as do many of the farmers' market-yards for the wholesale trade in butter, Continued on 4 DISCOVER CHALLENGE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô3 BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô American Society of Plumbing Engineers RING IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE A “Short” History of Philadelphia Getting to Philadelphia ACCESSIBILITY You will find that Philadelphia is a relatively convenient and accessible city. (Continued) eggs, poultry, meats, vegetables, and other products of the farms of the adjacent country. Their marked characteristics have become obscured by the spread of the great city. Kensington was a ship- and boat-building district, and another considerable portion of its old-time inhabitants were fishermen engaged in supplying the Philadelphia markets. Kensington, however, soon got into the iron and steel manufacture and the building of steam-machinery, the outcropping of which may be seen in the large works now in operation there and on the riverfront above. Kensington embraced part of the present Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Wards. Spring Garden District, which is now characterized by extensive manufacturing establishments of nearly all descriptions— among them the great Baldwin Locomotive Works and Powers & Weightman's chemical laboratory—and for its masses of handsome dwellings, was, in the old time, one of the most pleasant suburbs of Philadelphia and the principal dwelling place of the Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Butchers or Victuallers. Port Richmond, occupying the Delaware Riverfront to the north and northeast of Old Kensington, was brought into prominence by the establishment at that point of the tidewater terminus of the Reading R.R. Co. for its immense coal traffic by sea. This was followed by a large increase of population, the erection of dwellings, great activity, and rapid progress in all respects. The coal trade built it up in the first place, but the district is now the center of a manufacturing trade that has but few superiors in the United States. [Note: Sections of this column have been excerpted from From the Evening Bulletin, January 27, 1919 BY PENN (WILLIAM PERRINE).] Dock Street Within the old incorporated city of Philadelphia—the city proper as it was once called—every street is laid out at right angles with another except one. The visitor who comes to Philadelphia for the first time and walks through the central district seldom fails to remark something about the topographical checkerboard. Dock Street down toward the river region of the Fifth Ward is the one exception to the rectangular arrangement. It takes a curving or irregular course, from southeast to northwest, between the vicinity of Spruce Street and comes to an end at Third Street, in front of the old Bank of the United States. It is a peculiarly interesting bit of old Philadelphia in what it has been and in what it still suggests. Along or near the shores of Dock Creek some of the most prosperous of the early citizens of Philadelphia erected their homes. The soil was grassy, the water clean, and in the summertime the view was pleasant. But trade and industry also promptly took advantage of the opportunities that this waterway gave them. Market Street Old Market Street is rich in historic associations. It was past the old courthouse and the Market Square that General Howe and his army made their triumphal entry into the city when the throngs of citizens, clad in their best arrays, lined the sidewalks to see the grenadiers march by steadfast and composed and splendidly equipped. It was a major contrast to the little patriot army that Washington had led along the same street not so long before, a sprig of green in the men’s hats forming the only sign of uniformity! On the site of the building now numbered 110 the English bible was first published in America by Robert Aitken, and at the southwest corner of Second and Market there stood until 1810 the Meeting House of the Society of Friends. No history of Philadelphia would be complete without a record of the early inns and theaters. Philadelphia, very fittingly, had the honor of seeing the first Shakespearean presentation in America in 1749. Many important events and illustrious personages are connected with the old inns, and not a little of early history was made in them. All the earliest innkeepers were Friends, and the most famous inn, the Blue Anchor Tavern, situated at what is now the northwest corner of Front and Dock Streets, is supposed to have been not only the first house erected in Philadelphia, but also appropriately the first tavern. It was subsequently called Boatman and Call. The present Blue Anchor tavern, near this spot, is supposedly the third of the name. Last Chance for Custom ASPE Padfolios BY AIR: The main airport in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is the Philadelphia International Airport. (PHL is the code.) Virtually all the airlines fly into Philadelphia, including Air Canada; Air Jamaica; AirTran Airways; American; British Airways; Continental; Delta; Frontier Airlines; Lufthansa; Midwest; Southwest; United; and US Airways. There are other opportunities to fly into nearby airports, including into New York City. BY AUTOMOBILE: Philadelphia and most of the Eastern United States are easy to access by the U.S. Interstate Highway System. Of course, for those coming from the West Coast, it's about a 2,750-mile ride whether you use the northern or southern route. From Orlando, Florida, it's a mere 1,000 miles. For many in cities west of the Mississippi, the driving distance becomes a bit more reasonable. From St. Louis, it's about 1,000 miles and 1,800 miles from Denver. However, if you do undertake the drive to Philadelphia, you will see some of the finest scenery the United States offers and will meet some of the nicest people you would ever encounter. BY TRAIN: Amtrak’s rail passenger service links most large cities in the United States to Philadelphia. Embarking on a train ride from anywhere in the United States to Philadelphia will be a fantastic experience and one you will never forget. If you have never traveled long distances by train, then you are in for a treat and a surprise. In Europe, a train is the way to go. In the United States, it's a grand adventure. AIRFARES: As for all airlines, airline rates are climbing, climbing, climbing. As soon as you are able, you should make your airline reservations. Right now, there are some great round-trip rates. Be sure to book your travel at least 30 to 90 days prior to your trip and stay over a Saturday night to get the best possible fare. Rental Cars: The best deals for rental cars are through hotwire.com and priceline. com. The benefit of Hotwire is that they tend to only deal with the major car rental agencies. With Priceline, you can find yourself with a no-name company a couple of miles from the airport—but you can get a great deal. Unless your company has a corporate account with a particular automobile rental agency, you are better off going through one of the discount sites; often when you use one of the discount airline sites such as Cheapflights or Orbitz, you can tag on a discount car as well. TRANSPORTATION TO/FROM THE AIRPORT TO DOWNTOWN Ground Transportation—Getting to and from PHL Philadelphia International Airport is located just 7.2 miles southwest of Central Philadelphia. The Ground Transportation System at the airport is an extensive network of taxicab, car rental, shuttle-bus, limousine, and van operations working to get you where you want to go in a safe, courteous, and efficient manner. In addition, the airport also offers SEPTA bus and regional rail service to Downtown Philadelphia and points in between. The local rail service will take you to the train station connected to the Marriott Hotel and right into downtown Philadelphia. It’s minimal cost and an easy ride. Get directions from any booth at the airport. Parking: Parking is expensive throughout Philadelphia. Taxi Services: Taxi services can be picked up at Zone 5 on the Commercial Trans- portation Roadway. All taxi rates are based per trip, not per person. Most taxis can accommodate up to three passengers. In some cases certain vehicle types can accommodate four passengers. There is a $28.50 flat rate from the airport to the central Philadelphia area. This area encompasses Fairmount Avenue (most northern point) to South Street (most southern point) and Delaware River (most eastern point) to University City/38th Street (most western point). Any destination that falls within these boundaries is eligible for the Center City flat rate. There is a $10.00 minimum fare from the airport to any destination. Other fares are based on the meter. Entry (flag drop) is $2.70, and each mile or a portion thereof is $2.30. An additional $1.00 per passenger ($3.00 maximum) after the first passenger will be charged on flat rate trips between the airport and Center City for passengers over age 12. Credit cards are accepted as a form of payment for taxi service. Sedan, Limousine Services, and Shared Ride Van: Sedan and limousine services can be accessed at Zone 6 and shared ride van services can be accessed at Zone 7 on the Commercial Transportation Roadway. For 2010, ASPE is handing out the last of the specially designed 2008 padfolios. They were designed with the engineer in mind. First, pockets are everywhere, some zippered, on the outside and inside. A pocket for file folders is under the writing pad (quadrille, of course). A double-gusseted set of pockets in the center of the padfolio will also accept file folders. There are the mandatory slots for business cards and an ID pocket. There is even a "secret" pocket behind the small notepad under the calculator. Of course, the calculator is a scientific calculator. (Calculator instructions are in one of the pockets, and we've included batteries.) The main padfolio has double-opening zippers so it can be opened from either side. There also is a special zipper on the top of the padfolio that only goes halfway around. Open this zipper and fold back the flap and you have instant access to the calculator, the notepad, and a vertical row of slits where you can keep your plane ticket or passport for super-easy access. (Only one padfolio per paid registrant.) DISCOVER CHALLENGE BUILD 4 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE (See page 10) SPECIAL AIR TRAVEL AND CAR RENTAL DISCOUNTS FOR ASPE ATTENDEES ONLY PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL RAIL & RAIL TRANSIT MAP MARRIOTT AIRPORT The ASPE 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition Logo Pin When you register for the Convention, whether by mail, online, fax, or on site at the Convention, you will receive your special 2010 ASPE Logo Pin. This logo pin is VERY important. All registered paid attendees and their paid guests MUST wear this pin when they wish to enter the Hospitality area. Unless you are wearing this pin, you will not be permitted to utilize the Hospitality room. All sponsors and patrons will receive complimentary tickets to the Sunday Night Event at the National Constitution Center and will likewise receive a similar ratio of ASPE Logo Pins for their staff to access and use the ASPE Hospitality area. Bronze: Two tickets for your staff to attend the Sunday Night party. Silver: Three tickets for your staff to attend the Sunday Night party. Gold: Four tickets for your staff to attend the Sunday Night party. Platinum: Access to the ASPE hospitality suite, where members congregate for coffee and snacks. Plus: Five tickets for your staff to attend the Sunday Night party. Diamond: Access to the ASPE hospitality suite, where members congregate for coffee and snacks. Plus: Tickets for all staff to attend the Sunday Night party. So, What’s the BIG Deal? This year, the ASPE Hospitality area will have, as in most years, a regular supply of coffee and soft drinks available to anyone who is wearing the ASPE Logo Pin or ASPE Logo applique. The Hospitality Room will also be the place where the Host Committee members will be on hand to answer questions and help you find your way around the city of Philadelphia. In addition, there will be an area where you can find out about the best Philadelphia restaurants and peruse some of their menus, and the Philadelphia Convention Bureau will have a staff member on hand to help make restaurant reservations. This year, however, for the first time, the Hospitality Area will be located on the second floor of the Convention Center in what is known as the Wi-Fi Cafe. Everyone in the Hospitality Room should be able to get hooked up to the network at no charge. DISCOVER CHALLENGE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô5 BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE The ASPE Pavilion The ASPE Pavilion will be in the center of all the action in the Exposition hall, on the main level of the Pennsylvania Convention Center. The Pavilion is for everyone: ASPE members, nonmembers, and exhibitors. It is conveniently located just inside the main Exposition hall entrances. The Pavilion is open every day. Its schedule is: Sat Oct 30 Sun Oct 31 Mon Nov 1 Tues Nov 2 Wed Nov 3 10:00 am to 7:00 pm 8:00 am to 7:00 pm 8:00 am to 6:00 pm 8:00 am to 6:00 pm 8:00 am to 2:00 pm ASPE Bookstore Come browse the ASPE Bookstore. Every report, publication, actionwear item, and ASPE giftware item will be available for purchase. All of the ASPEWare will be available, including golf umbrellas, golf balls, coffee mugs, padfolios, carryall bags, and a few surprises. Don’t forget the tried and true: lapel pins, tie tacks, sweat shirts, golf shirts, T-shirts, hats, and lots more. Everything will be available for purchase. Look for the newest ASPE publications such as the Plumbing Engineering & Design Handbook of Tables, Plumbing Engineering Design Handbook Volume 1, the special design padfolio for engineers, and more. 20% ASPE Registration ASPE Message Center Inside the Pavilion will be a special booth where messages that come in through the message line will be posted. Attendees also can leave messages for other attendees. ASPE Banquet Ticket Exchange The Banquet Ticket Exchange booth is where you MUST take the banquet ticket you receive as part of your paid registration packet and exchange it for an entrance ticket into the banquet. Here you can reserve a table for a group. Purchase Additional ASPE Banquet Tickets The Banquet Ticket Exchange booth is where you will be able to purchase additional tickets to the Banquet. Need a Ticket or Extra Tickets to the Sunday Night Event at the National Constitution Center? You will be able to purchase additional tickets for this event in the ASPE Pavilion. Prize Winners There are special prize winner tables spread throughout the Exposition. Please go to one of those to claim your grand prize or poker prizes. There are no prizes being given out at the Pavilion this year. The ASPE Pavilion is for everyone! Come and take advantage of all ASPE has to offer. 20% 2010 ASPE Convention ASPE Pavilion Discount Coupon The ASPE Registration area, located on the main floor of the Pennsylvania Convention Center, is where all the action will start. It is here that you will receive your registration materials, including the final program book (which will guide you to all the technical programs and social events) and the first opportunity to win (immediate $50 discount on your registration and an extra ticket to the Laptop and Grand Prize drawings) by wearing your "Liberty Bell" pin. (The registration staff will check the number on the back of the pin and let you know if you are an instant winner.) This is also where you will pick up your Almanac game board. In your registration packet will be the tickets for any of the tours you signed up for, your banquet ticket, your Almanac game board exchange ticket, your all-important Convention and Exposition badge (your spouse's too, if appropriate), and appropriate leadership ribbons. You also will find the 2010 ASPE Convention newsletter. (Be sure to read it to see what programming or social event changes may have occurred since you registered.) In your registration packet you also might find any private event invitations, special opportunity coupons, and all the material that will guide you through the jam-packed program and event days ahead. If you are a delegate, the registration staff will direct you to a special delegate credentialing booth. All delegates MUST pick up their delegate credentials, or they will not be permitted into the delegates area of the ASPE Business Meeting. ASPE registration is open every day. The schedule is: Fri Oct 29 Sat Oct 30 Sun Oct 31 Mon Nov 1 Tues Nov 2 Wed Nov 3 4:00 pm 7:00 am to 7:00 pm 7:00 am to 7:00 pm 7:00 am to 6:00 pm 7:00 am to 6:00 pm 7:30 am to 1:00 pm to 8:00 pm Employers Benefit When Employees Come to the ASPE Convention and EPE 1. The Convention is an easy way to boost employee morale and show that you care. What benefits employees benefits the organization. 2. Make your clients and organization happy, as engineers find new ways to save money. 3. Employees are revitalized at personal development seminars designed especially for plumbing engineers. 4. This is the premier educational and professional development event for plumbing engineers and designers. 5. More than 40 technical, professional, and personal development programs are offered. 6. Representatives of more than 300 leading manufacturers gather under one roof. 7. The Convention is a milestone event, where your employees can meet thousands of their plumbing engineer contemporaries in one place. 8. The Exposition is the undisputed networking champion for plumbing engineering solutions. 9. Everyone takes back valuable information and supplemental handouts from firstrate technical presentations. 10. The Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition is an opportunity that only comes around once every two years. Good only October 30 through November 3, 2010 Good only for one complete purchase in the ASPE Pavilion. May not be combined with any other discounts or coupons. 20% Executive Director Stanley Wolfson Exposition National Trade Productions A Publication of American Society of Plumbing Engineers 2980 S, River Rd. Des Plaines, IL 60018 (847) 296-0002 Fax: (847) 296-2963 E-mail: [email protected] Internet: www.aspe.org © Copyright 2010, American Society of Plumbing Engineers 20% This is the preliminary program for the 2010 ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition. Program times, session contents, and speakers are all subject to change. The articles and program summaries published in this preliminary program promotion are intended to provide an information service and absolutely do imply and express an endorsement, commendation, and recommendation that the reader attends this year's Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition. This publication is published one time only, for the 2010 ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition. For more information, call (847) 296-0002 or go online at www.aspe.org. American Society of Plumbing Engineers Images and Photos: The images used in this brochure may not be duplicated. The selected images are for one time use only for travel promotion/publicity, editorial illustration and promotion of upcoming meetings and conventions. Use of these images to advertise or illustrate commercial goods and/or services is prohibited. The photos used in this brochure are to be credited to various Internet sites and the Philadelphia Convention & Visitors Bureau. (Some photos and images have been taken from advertisements on the Internet.) DISCOVER Special Chapter Thank You For the 2010 ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition, the Philadelphia Chapter has done the unexpected and unbelievable. This one chapter gathered its forces and put out an outstanding effort that will be directly responsible for the outstanding host services that will be provided to the 2010 ASPE Convention attendees. It is not easy to gather and employ all of the chapter members who are vital to foster and successfully host a major ASPE event. To the Philadelphia Chapter, a very special "Thank you!" is in order. If you see someone with a badge with a host chapter ribbon, please say "hello" and "thank you." To the Philadelphia Chapter, a special toast for its continued and unconditional support of the Society. CHALLENGE BUILD 6 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Daily Schedule This is the proposed schedule of programs and events for the 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition. Schedules, programs, and events are subject to change. Saturday October 30, 2010 Time 9:00 am to 12:00 pm 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm 2:00 pm to 5:00 pm The 2010 ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition General Sessions Excursions Time The Philadelphia Story 10:00 am Education Committee Legislative Committee Membership Committee Technical and Research Committee Long-range Planning Committee Design Standards Committees Lunch on Own Delegate Meeting and ASPE Business Meeting (Opening Session) Delegate and Candidate Reception Wine, Beer, Soft Drinks, Snacks 5:15 pm to 8:00 pm ASPE 3rd Grand Prix Wine, Beer, Soft Drinks, Snacks 8:00 pm to 11:00 pm Optional Dinner on Own Expo Attendance Limitation Attendees must be 18 years of age or older for entrance to the Exposition floor. Due to insurance and liability issues, all children under age 18 will be denied entrance to the Engineered Plumbing Exposition, during the show and during setup of the exhibitions. Sorry, there can be no exceptions. General Sessions Time 8:00 am to 9:30 am Monday to 8:30 am to 9:00 am 9:00 am to 10:00 am 10:00 am to 11:25 am 11:30 am 11:30 am to 6:00 pm 6:30 pm Excursions Time Colonial Philadelphia Experience 10:00 am Region 1 Chapter Presidents Meeting and Breakfast Region 2 Chapter Presidents Meeting and Breakfast Region 3 Chapter Presidents Meeting and Breakfast Region 4 Chapter Presidents Meeting and Breakfast Region 5 Chapter Presidents Meeting and Breakfast 8:00 am Past Presidents Meeting to 11:15 am 9:45 am to 11:15 am Joint Regional Meeting Delegate Meeting and ASPE Business Meeting 11:30 am to 12:30 pm (Box Lunches Provided) to 1:00 pm ASPE Business Meeting ASPE General Awards (continued) Convention Opening Welcome Party National Constitution Center Trolley Bus Shuttle Available 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm November 1, 2010 8:15 am Sunday October 31, 2010 12:45 pm to 5:00 pm 7:30 am to 1:00 pm 5:15 pm to 6:30 pm Time 1. Meet engineers, consultants, and representatives from every facet of plumbing engineering. 2. It’s the place to find educational training, professional development, and the latest technical information—all under one roof. 3. Participate in professional development seminars. 4. Learn ideas and innovations to take back to your organization. 5. See the debut of the newest products and technological advances. 6. Find out how to maximize limited resources using new ideas. 7. Network to get the latest technical information. 8. Join with other advocates on plumbing engineering issues. 9. Learn about the latest legislative issues. 10.Collect the newest equipment and product specifications. 11.Collaborate and interact with your colleagues. 12.Meet with proven problem solvers in plumbing engineering. General Sessions Excursions Time Special Breakfast with Vince Papale Tickets Will Be Distributed During Sunday ASPE Business Meeting Delegate Meeting ASPE Business Meeting 2010–2012 Board of Directors Elections ASPE Awards Opening General Session Jack Sim, Founder, World Toilet Organization Vince Papale Keynote Speaker The Simple Life: Pennsylvania’s Amish 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Grand Opening of Exposition Exposition Lunch on Expo Floor Snack/Drinks on Expo Floor Prize Drawings Exhibitor Hospitality Events DISCOVER CHALLENGE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô7 BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô How to Successfully Design Plumbing Systems for Commercial High-rise Installations TS 300-1-2 Globalization in Construction: An Overview of International Markets TS 300-1-1 Advanced and Emerging Technologies Social Networking: Is It For Me? TS 400-1-2 How to Network at the ASPE Convention TS 400-1-1 Social and Legal DISCOVER Overview of Radient Cooling TS 300-1-4 Potty Parity: What’s the Issue? TS 400-1-3 Global Guidelines of Practical Toilet Design TS 500-1-3 Practical Toiliet Design on a Global Level TS 600-1-3 CHALLENGE Gray Water System Design Part 2 TS 200-2-3 Medical Gas Sizing TS 300-2-3 Waterborne Pathogens TS 400-2-3 The Plumbing Engineer Goes to Arbitration TS 400-2-2 Does the Plumbing Engineer Have an Enforceable Contract or Swiss Cheese? TS 400-2-1 ASPE Board Meeting 11:30 am to 12:45 pm Fluid Comfort: Back to the Future TS 300-2-2 Effects of Water Quality on Residential Energy and Water Efficient Devices TS 300-2-4 Social and Legal 4:15 pm to 6:00 pm Special Hazard Fire Protection Design TS 100-2-6 Future Frontiers: Vacuum Plumbing Systems TS 100-2-3 10:00 am to 11:15 am Gray Water System Design Part 1 TS 200-2-2 TBD Life-cycle Assessment TS 300-2-1 Advanced and Emerging Technologies Joint Meeting: Chapter VP Technical and Research Council and Education Committee Chapter VP Legislative Council Chapter VP Membership Council Foam Extinguishing Systems TS 100-2-5 Highperformance Hot Water Systems Part 2 TS 100-2-2 8:30 am to 9:45 am ICC Green Construction Code vs. IAPMO Green Supplement TS 200-2-1 Green Systems 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm Fire Protection 101 TS 100-2-4 Practical Engineering High-performance Hot Water Systems Part 1 TS 100-2-1 Time General Sessions Rainwater Harvesting: A Sustainable Approach TS 500-2-3 Residential Fire Sprinkler Design, Installation and Inspection TS 500-2-2 Understanding Product Certification & Listing TS 500-2-1 ICC Codes and Standards Technical, Professional Development, Codes, and Special Sessions Wednesday November 3, 2010 2.6 Billion People Want Your Products TS 700-1-3 Sanitation & Creative Capitalism Part 2 TS 700-1-2 Sanitation & Creative Capitalism Part 1 TS 700-1-1 Proper Sanitation for Humanity TS 600-2-3 Channels that Advocate Sanitation TS 600-2-2 Potty Parity = Toilet Equality TS 600-2-1 Advocacy and Potty Parity Huge Opportunities for Suppliers TS 700-2-3 The 21st Century Janitor TS 700-2-2 World Toilet College: Sanitation Education is Key TS 700-2-1 Cleaning and Personal Care Services World Toilet Organization Summit ASPE Biennial Banquet, Officer Installation, World Toilet Organization Summit, and ICC Dinner Roof Drain Design Considerations TS 300-1-3 The Future of the Toilet TS 600-1-2 Innovative Green Provisions in the 2009 IPC IGCC TS 500-1-2 7:30 pm to 10:00 pm Federal Leadership in High Performance and Sustainable Buildings TS 200-1-4 Toilet Design for Many Uses TS 600-1-1 Protecting the Water Supply TS 500-1-1 Bottom of Pyramid Market and Micro Financing World Toilet Organization Summit Innovations in Global Toilet Design & Applications ASPE Biennial Banquet Reception and World Toilet Organization Summit Reception Green Opportunities for Medical Gases: A Small Contribution to a Big Topic TS 200-1-3 Engineered Plumbing Exposition F Lunch on Expo Floor F Prize Drawings Solar Engineering by the Numbers Part 2 TS 200-1-2 Solar Engineering by the Numbers Part 1 TS 200-1-1 Green Systems ICC Technical Track Technical, Professional Development, Codes, and Special Sessions Tour of Brandywine Valley, Longwood Gardens, Winterthur Excursions & Other Philadelphia Unique Mural Arts Tour Excursions 5:00 pm to 10:00 am Time 3:30 pm to 10:00 am Time This is the proposed schedule of programs and events for the 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition. Schedules, programs, and events are subject to change. Daily Schedule: 6:30 pm 3:45 pm to 5:00 pm Fire Sprinkler Shop Drawings Review TS 100-1-6 10:00 am to 11:15 am UL/FM Variable Speed Fire Pump TS 100-1-3 NSF 61 and Booster Systems TS 100-1-5 FOG Harvest: How, When and Why TS 100-1-2 11:30 am to 3:30 pm Philadelphia Single Stack TS 100-1-4 Practical Engineering Booster Pump Sizing TS 100-1-1 General Sessions 8:30 am to 9:45 am Time Tuesday November 2,2010 American Society of Plumbing Engineers RING IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE 2010 Convention and EPE BUILD 8 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Daily Schedule: Tuesday, November 2 8:30 am – 9:45 am Booster Pump Sizing Speakers: Richard Hanson and David Romaine We can’t seem to get away from Hunter’s Curve, so let’s find the best way to live with it. This session will highlight pump sizing updates and codes. It will review the most common errors and omissions plumbing engineers make and offer suggestions on how to avoid them. New technology also has influenced pump sizing. This session will discuss the latest innovations that improve efficiency and cost while maintaining or improving reliability and usability. Philadelphia Single Stack Speaker:Stephen Ziga Philadelphia has had its own plumbing code since 1961, and included in this code is a special drainage/venting system called “Single Stack.” In this session, you will learn about the Philadelphia Single Stack and why it does not require, nor depend on, any special type of drainage or vent fitting. Learn how it allows rather simple sizing of the sanitary stack system and its cost-effectiveness for single-story buildings. Through ASPE’s efforts and in part due to actions by the late Joseph Smaul, PE (a great Philadelphia plumbing engineer and ASPE member), this system has been included in the NSPC, UPC, and most recently the IPC (one final vote remaining). Since attendees may not be familiar with this system and considering the location of this Convention, this a perfect opportunity to learn more about the Philadelphia Single Stack. 2010 Convention and EPE Tuesday, November 2 (Continued) Solar Engineering by the Numbers—Part 2 Speaker: Rod Hyatt This session will teach the mathematical routes for arriving at a correctly sized solar hot water system. It also covers the performance and site applicability of flat plate panels vs. evacuated tube collectors, as well as the viability of drainback vs. pressure glycol systems. Other topics include computerized and online data collection, the SRCC’s Btu ratings of collectors, and sizing tanks, pumps, and expansion tanks. How to Successfully Design Plumbing Systems for Commercial High-rise Installations Speaker: John Watson Learn the challenges involved in designing high-rise plumbing systems. What are the possible issues that can occur years after the installation has been completed? How are green standards optimized in plumbing design? Globalization in Construction: An Overview of International Markets Speaker: Tes Garcia This session will discuss market trends in the international construction arena. Which countries are experiencing increases in new building construction? Which countries are seeing downturns? Is renovation on the upswing? What are the challenges facing developers in various countries? (Continued) be used in radiant cooling applications; an overview of using radiant cooling and heating to meet comfort and human factors that assist with ASHRAE Standard 55: Thermal Environmental Conditions for Human Occupancy compliance; and best practice application examples that can be used to install and control radiant floor cooling systems. Social Networking: Is It for Me? Speaker: TBD Gone are the days of a handwritten letter by snail mail and a plain old phone call. The reality of today is that social networking is not only for fun, but it also is a large part of doing business, getting the word out, and building your reputation. But you ask yourself, “How do I get started? Is this for me? What’s with all the friend requests and tweets?” This session is a crash course in social networking, best practices, and a basic overview of why you need to learn more to succeed today. 3:45 pm – 5:00 pm UL/FM Variable-speed Fire Pumps: Ready for Prime Time (Continued) defenses in contract actions, including statutes of limitation, statutes of repose, statute of frauds, excused performance, and mitigation of damages. After looking at contract claims and defenses using the hypothetical problem, attendees will see how the groundwork is laid for the parties to settle their dispute in mediation as a prerequisite to binding arbitration. Potty Parity: What’s the Issue? Speakers: TBD The federal “Potty Parity” Act is not as simple as equal toilets for men and women. State laws vary, codes vary, advisory laws vary, and professional opinions vary. Learn about the various viewpoints on this issue from our expert panel. Send in your comments to our blog and join the discussion on this issue, which has political ramifications. Wednesday, November 3 8:30 am – 9:45 am 10:00 am – 11:15 am Speaker: Gary Klein This session will present the results of research supported by the California Energy Commission and others on hot water distribution systems. Outside the recirculation loop, beyond the heat-traced line, or directly from a water heater, the flow of hot water to the fixtures is not a steady state condition; rather, it is very transient in nature. Flow rates and the duration of flow vary from zero to large depending on what fixtures are located on each runout. The timing and the duration of these events also vary substantially. Research has been conducted to characterize the waste of water, energy, and time for these transient conditions. Other research has been conducted on the operation of recirculation loops in multifamily and commercial buildings to determine how to improve the performance of this portion of the system. Speaker: Gary Klein This session will present the results of research supported by the California Energy Commission and others on hot water distribution systems. Outside the recirculation loop, beyond the heat-traced line, or directly from a water heater, the flow of hot water to the fixtures is not a steady state condition; rather, it is very transient in nature. Flow rates and the duration of flow vary from zero to large depending on what fixtures are located on each runout. The timing and the duration of these events also vary substantially. Research has been conducted to characterize the waste of water, energy, and time for these transient conditions. Other research has been conducted on the operation of recirculation loops in multifamily and commercial buildings to determine how to improve the performance of this portion of the system. Fire Protection 101 Speaker: Todd Stevens This presentation will give a basic overview of fire protection sprinklers and sprinkler system layout. Participants will develop a basic understanding of the components of a sprinkler and review the testing procedures involved with their listings. They will learn about the wide variety of applications and how to properly identify different sprinkler types. The presentation will continue with developing an idea of the proper selection process, looking at a typical design and determining the proper sprinklers and layout to be utilized. NFPA 13 rules for spacing and obstructions will be reviewed and put to practice. Foam Extinguishing Systems Green Versus Green—Code or Supplement Graywater System Design — Part 1 High-performance Hot Water Systems—Part 1 Solar Engineering by the Numbers—Part 1 Speaker: Rod Hyatt This session will teach the mathematical routes for arriving at a correctly sized solar hot water system. It also covers the performance and site applicability of flat plate panels vs. evacuated tube collectors, as well as the viability of drainback vs. pressure glycol systems. Other topics include computerized and online data collection, the SRCC’s Btu ratings of collectors, and sizing tanks, pumps, and expansion tanks. Tuesday, November 2 Wednesday, November 3 High-performance Hot Water Systems—Part 2 Speaker: Todd Stevens This presentation will explore the variety of challenges and design strategies for foam extinguishing systems. It will review the different NFPA standards for foam systems and different types of foam concentrate, as well as some basic design considerations and the types of systems available along with required equipment. The session will look at the variety of discharge nozzles and components to distribute the foam solution. Also, newer technologies with foam systems have emerged with compressed air foam, and the presentation will review the unique features of these systems. Speakers: James S. Peterkin, PE, and William Stelter Variable-speed fire pumps have been available since 2003 but are still an unknown to many in the design community as well as the sprinkler contractor industry. Variable-speed drives offer a costeffective and more reliable alternative to solving high pressure issues at low flow. This can include standpipe design in high-rise buildings, dual-use water supplies, campus loops, warehousing, and even foam systems. This session will discuss the applications where this technology can be useful and will review examples of how it was applied to recent projects. Fire Sprinkler Shop Drawings Review How to Network During the ASPE Convention Speaker: TBD This may be your first or fifteenth ASPE Convention, but as you know, to make the most out of the Convention, it is imperative that you utilize your conversational skills to make connections with the thousands of attendees, exhibitors, and presenters. This session will give you the confidence to approach any social or business situation while at the ASPE Convention and make connections that will last long after the ASPE Convention has ended. This session will include live networking scenarios, examples of appropriate networking techniques, and conversational cues to approach any situation. Speaker: Frank Murphy A complete sprinkler system shop drawing submittal includes a product data package, sprinkler piping layout drawings, and hydraulic calculations for pipe sizing. A thorough review of sprinkler system shop drawing submittals is an essential part of completing the design process, and it is up to the engineer of record to review and verify that the design is both code compliant and meets the project’s design intent. This session will help engineers know what to look for when reviewing the various parts of the sprinkler shop drawing submittal to attain the required level of competency a designer must possess to provide an effective submittal review. Green Opportunities for Medical Gases Speaker: Mark Allen Medical gas might not be the place you would think to start your LEED application, but even in this niche there are opportunities to do things a little better, a little less expensively, and a little greener. The areas where green thinking might improve your medical gas system designs and where opportunities exist to make the systems more green will be presented, including the opportunities and limitations of reduce, reuse, and recycle; reducing inputs and outputs; and medical air purification. Federal Leadership in High Performance and Sustainable Buildings 10:00 am – 11:15 am FOG Harvest: How, When, and Why Speaker: Max Weiss Pursuit of alternate energy sources has advanced refining techniques so that previously unusable or marginally useful hydrocarbons such as FOG are now considered feasible sources of energy. This session will offer a detailed description of how and when to harvest FOG for the greatest return as feedstock for innovative new energy conversion processes, three of which will be described. NSF - 61 and Booster Systems Speaker: WB “Skip” Roberts Where does the drinking water in your residence come from? How about the water in your hotel room when you are on business trips or vacation? Is it safe for you and your family to drink? Most authorities having jurisdiction now require NSF 61-certified products in potable water streams, whether they supply high-rise buildings, hospitals, hotels, or residences. In this session, participants will learn about NSF 61 and how to design booster systems that supply water to high-rise buildings to meet that standard. The presentation also will cover the Safe Drinking Water Act and its newest requirements adopted in 2010. Speaker: TBD Federal agencies are committed to a zero environmental footprint through design, construction, and maintenance of federal buildings following sustainable guiding principles, such as integrated design, energy performance, water conservation, indoor environmental quality, and building materials. Learn how these principles impact your plumbing design to meet federal objectives that reduce the total ownership cost of facilities, improve energy efficiency and water conservation, provide safe, healthy, and productive environments, and promote sustainable environmental stewardship. Research on Roof Drain Technology Speaker: Dr. Salimol Thomas ASPE Research Foundation investigated roof drains and evaluated the performance under various conditions. Factors researched include pipe diameter, pipe length, secondary drain height, and type of drain and their effect on operational performance. The evolution of multiphase flow prior to priming and its impact on the performance of drain systems will be examined using the experimental and simulation data. Experimental data and analysis will be presented. Overview of Radiant Cooling Speaker:Daniel Sullivan This session will provide an overview of radiant cooling, including education on radiant cooling trends and market drivers (LEED, sustainable integrated design, and energy efficiency benefits); a review of the fundamentals of radiant floor cooling load design strategies; radiant cooling ceiling applications; an introduction of new products that can DISCOVER Speakers: Shawn Martin and Julius Ballanco This presentation and roundtable discussion will compare and contrast the plumbing provisions of ICC’s International Green Construction Code and the IAPMO Green Supplement. It will examine the provisions of these two documents, including hot water distribution systems design, alternative water sources, nonpotable water use, outdoor water use, innovative water efficiency provisions, rationalization, life-cycle assessments, and efficient fixtures, fittings, and appliances. Life Cycle Assessment in the Building and Construction Industry Speaker: Steven R. Baer, LEED AP What is the environmental impact of a plumbing product? Is it green? Does it have a large carbon footprint? Life-cycle analysis can provide answers to these questions as well as critical ecological information. Manufacturers are increasingly using life-cycle analysis to provide ecological information for their customers and market their products. In this presentation, participants will learn about the various trade-offs among various life-cycle stages. Does the selection of the plumbing product material enable certain performance in the use phase? Does the design of a plumbing system impact the energy utilization of the building, of your community? What about end of life issues? Does a recycling infrastructure enhance the ability to reduce the environmental impacts of your selection? Fluid Comfort: Back to the Future Effects of Water Quality on Residential Energy and Water Efficient Devices The Plumbing Engineer Goes to Arbitration: The Costs, Perils, and Pitfalls of Construction Arbitration Speaker: Tanya Lubner Water heating is the second-highest source of energy consumption in a home. A recent study by the Battelle Memorial Institute examined the performance and energy efficiency of gas and electric storagetank and tankless-type residential water heaters on hard and softened water, extrapolating results over a 15-year period, and calculating a carbon footprint. This session will present the study’s results, review the study’s experimental parameters in detail, and provide an overview of the water softening process. Does the Plumbing Engineer Have an Enforceable Contract or Swiss Cheese? Avoiding Agreements that Are “Full of Holes” Speaker: Steven Nudelman This seminar will give the plumbing engineer a basic understanding about the elements of a construction contract, express and implied warranties, change orders and change order proposals, implied contracts, and unjust enrichment. Through the use of a hypothetical problem, seminar attendees will learn how contract-based claims are prosecuted (if the engineer is the aggrieved party) and defended (if the engineer is the accused wrongdoer). In addition to claims, seminar attendees will also learn about some of the more common CHALLENGE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô9 Speaker: Peter Cartwright As a consequence of the growing paradigm of water conservation and reuse, graywater recovery and reclamation of domestic, institutional, and commercial wastewater are garnering increased interest. This practice promises to help mitigate water shortage issues and reduces the volume of wastewater to POTW facilities or septic systems. This presentation will provide details on wastewater sources, qualities, and typical daily volumes from each. It will identify specific reuse opportunities and regulatory limitations impacting them. Treatment technologies and infrastructure requirements will be described in detail. The future direction of regulations will also be discussed. Speakers: Steve Clark and Dirk Rosenberg In the era of cheap energy in North America, the HVAC industry transitioned from hydronic systems to forced air. In Europe, where energy has always been more expensive, they have gone the opposite direction. Hydronic-based systems offer numerous advantages in terms of energy efficiency, energy flexibility, and comfort. This talk will focus on why the new trend in space comfort systems is the direction the mechanical design industry will have to go to deliver the ultra-efficient buildings of the future. Emphasis will be on engineering trends like low temperature heating, radiant cooling, and what design engineers need to do to be prepared to offer the services that are being demanded by LEED and green projects. Speaker: Steven Nudelman This seminar will build on the topics covered in the first session, providing the plumbing engineer with a “soup-to-nuts” understanding of the construction arbitration process using the American Arbitration Association Construction Industry Rules as a framework. Continuing with the hypothetical problem developed in the first session, attendees will learn about pre-arbitration procedures, the Demand for Arbitration, fees and expenses, preliminary teleconferences, arbitrator selection, the information exchange, expert reports, pre-hearing briefs and submissions, arbitration hearings and procedures, post-hearing submissions, arbitration award, and enforcement of the award. Notice: Not all sessions or events are listed or summarized. Listed programs and speakers are subject to change. The Convention program is subject to modification. Final programs, events, and speakers will only be listed in the on-site program book available during registration. Continued on 10 BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô Daily Schedule: Wednesday, November 3 (Continued) 11:30 am – 12:45 pm Future Frontiers for Plumbing Design: Vacuum Plumbing Systems Speaker: Tom Zinn Apart from significant environmental advantages in relation to reduced water consumption, vacuum plumbing systems can provide a range of benefits to designers and engineers, including enhanced flexibility in building design and layout without restriction due to architectural or site limitations; reduced construction or renovation costs; and opportunities for obtaining LEED credits. This session will provide a basic overview of vacuum plumbing system operation and the benefits for various types of facilities. It will review vacuum piping design and installation in detail, including sizing criteria, layout options, and piping materials for a variety of types of waste including sanitary, condensate, high temperature, grease, and laboratory biological waste. The program will address code compliance issues and will include case study overview of several unique applications and projects. Special Hazard Fire Protection Design Speaker: Todd Stevens This session will review special hazard applications and the opportunities for design of preaction and clean agent systems. It will look at these systems to develop an understanding of their design options and sequence of operations. It will review single and double interlock and the various releasing systems, as well as release control panels and how they fit into the entire fire alarm system. Unique detection and suppression technologies for use in data centers, telecommunication rooms, and other sensitive areas will also be reviewed. Graywater System Design —Part 2 Speaker: Peter Cartwright As a consequence of the growing paradigm of water conservation and reuse, graywater recovery and reclamation of domestic, institutional, and commercial wastewater are garnering increased interest. This practice promises to help mitigate water shortage issues and reduces the volume of wastewater to POTW facilities or septic systems. This presentation will provide details on wastewater sources, qualities, and typical daily volumes from each. It will identify specific reuse opportunities and regulatory limitations impacting them. Treatment technologies and infrastructure requirements will be described in detail. The future direction of regulations will also be discussed. Medical Gas Sizing Speaker: Mark Allen In this session, considerations regarding the layout of medical gas piping and common sizing techniques used in sizing pipelines and associated source equipment will be presented. Problems associated with sizing of air intakes and vacuum exhausts, an area often fraught with problems, will also be examined. Topics to be discussed will include sizing techniques for piping of any gas or vacuum piping; sizing considerations for air intakes and vacuum exhausts; sizing for low vacuum WAGD implementations; and sizing for selection of medical air plant, medical vacuum plant, medical instrument air, and WAGD plants. OF ASPE 2010 Convention and EPE Notice: Not all sessions or events are listed or summarized. Listed programs and speakers are subject to change. The Convention program is subject to modification. Final programs, events, and speakers will only be listed in the on-site program book available during registration. International Code Council Technical Program Tuesday, November 2 ICC Green Codes 8:30 am – 9:45 am Innovative Green Provisions of the 2009 IPC and IGCC 10:00 am – 11:15 am Protecting the Water Supply 3:45 pm – 5:00 pm Irrigation: A Sustainable Approach Wednesday, November 3 ICC Codes & Standards 8:30 am – 9:45 am Residential Fire Sprinkler:s Design, Installation & Inspection (certification exam offered after session) 10:00 am – 11:15 am Optimizing Pluming Plan Reviews 11:30 am – 12:45 pm Understanding Product Certification and Listings Special Discount Opportunities: American Airlines and Avis Cars As most everyone knows, you try to make your airline reservations as early as possible to get the best prices. Likewise, but not always the same, auto rental rates also change but sometimes in reverse order; that is, making them early may cost more than waiting. The world of airlines and auto rentals does not seem to have very much rhyme or reason to it, other than everyone wants to maximize profits. American Airlines Discount: In the world of meeting planning, it is often possible to have one or more airlines provide a special additional discount to attract a maximum amount of reservations on its planes. In this case, American Airlines has agreed to provide ASPE members attending the ASPE 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition with a special additional 5% discount off their airline reservation. After making your reservation through the American Airlines online reservation site (aa.com), just before or when you get to payment, there will be a place for a discount code. For ASPE, use the code 79H0AT (number 7, number 9, letter cap H, number 0, letter cap A, letter cap T). This should get you an additional 5% discount off your final amount. (The discount will work virtually all of the time. However, once in a while the airlines run a super-special discount one-time rate for which no additional discounts are permitted.) Immediately after making your airline reservation, the online site will usually ask you or just direct you to one of the “partner” auto car rental companies. In this case, those companies are Alamo and Hertz. We highly recommend that you do a little price shopping before making any auto rental decisions. Avis Rental Car Discount: Just as with airlines, auto rental companies often also will offer a special additional discount rate to get business directed their way. For this year, Avis Rental Cars has provided a discount code for ASPE attendees to the 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition. Just as with the airline reservations described above, the use of the code is typically put in near the end of the reservation process — but not always. Some rental companies will ask at the very beginning of the process if you have a special discount or company code. For ASPE attendees the AVIS code is G027999. (capital letter G, followed by the numbers 0, 2, 7, 9, 9, 9). Depending on when you make your reservation and the type of car you decide to rent, the discount will range from a low of 5% all the way up to a high of 25%, again depending on when you make your reservation and the type of automobile in which you would like to be driving. 2010 World Toilet Summit Tuesday, November 2 ôôôôôôôôôôô Special Opportunity: Receive an Early-Bird 5% Discount on ASPE Registration Innovations in Global Toilet Design & Applications 8:30 am – 9:45 am Practical Toilet Design on a Global Level 10:00 am – 11:15 am Toilet Design for Many Uses 3:45 pm – 5:00 pm Toilet Economics and Marketing to the Poor Bottom of the Pyramid Market and Micro Financing Waterborne Pathogens: Why are we still talking about Legionella? Speaker: Stacey Wesselink This session will teach participants what they need to know about the latest research surrounding waterborne pathogens and why secondary disinfection is the only solution that can reduce the risk of waterborne contamination and infections. It will review the various guidance documents that are available to help shape new best practices for mechanical and plumbing designs. Attendees will leave this session understanding how to eliminate Legionella and other waterborne pathogens once and for all. 8:30 am – 9:45 am 2.6 Billion People Want Your Products 10:00 am – 11:15 am Bottom of the Pyramid: Potential in the Billions SPECIAL NOTICE U LIMITED TIME U NO EXCEPTIONS DISCOUNT COUPON USE COUPON NUMBER: ASPE8132010 GOOD ONLY UNTIL AUGUST 13, 2010 FOR ONLINE CONVENTION REGISTRATIONS ONLY 3:45 pm – 5:00 pm Sanitation and Creative Capitalism EXPIRES: AUGUST 13, 2010 Wednesday, November 3 DISCOUNT COUPON — USE COUPON NUMBER: GOOD ONLY UNTIL AUGUST 13, 2010 FOR CONVENTION REGISTRATIONS ONLINE Advocacy & Potty Parity 8:30 am – 9:45 am Ringing In The Future of ASPE Potty Parity = Toilet Equality 10:00 am – 11:15 am Channels that Advocate Sanitation 5% Discount 11:30 am – 12:45 pm Proper Sanitation for Humanity Cleaning and Personal Care Services & Supplies 5% Discount SPECIAL DISCOUNT CODE: ASPE8132010 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition October 30 to November 3, 2010 Pennsylvania Convention Center Philadelphia, PA Discover 8:30 am – 9:45 am 10:00 am – 11:15 am 11:30 am – 12:45 pm Huge Opportunities for Suppliers DISCOVER Challenge 5% Discount 5% Discount Build DISCOUNT COUPON GOOD FOR DISCOUNT OFF OF ONE PAID REGISTRATION World Toilet College: Sanitation Education Is Key Professional Janitorial Services American Society of Plumbing Engineers May not be used or combined with any other promotion THIS SPECIAL DISCOUNT MAY NOT BE USED OR COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER PROMOTION OR DISCOUNTS (SUCH AS MULTIPLE ATTENDEE DISCOUNTS). CHALLENGE BUILD 10 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Do You Remember the Last Time You Fell Asleep Watching Football? And How You Made The Winning Touchdown? Remember How Real It All Seemed? Well, it doesn’t happen often in real life, in fact, almost never. But, sometimes lightening does strike. If you haven’t had a chance to see the movie Invincible, rent it before coming to the 2010 Convention, because at the Convention, on Monday, November 1, 2010, the real Vince Papale will be the keynote speaker at the Opening General Session. . Come hear the Vince Papale keynote address at the 2010 ASPE Convention, Monday, November 1, 2010, at 10:00 a.m. Have the opportunity to meet Vince and perhaps you will be one of the lucky winners who will have breakfast with him prior to the Monday Opening Program. Watch for details. The Real Vince Papale Story Papale’s words, the games were much more “rough” than “touch” (Herald News Online). In In the summer of 1976, Vince Papale was invited to an open tryout along with a few other an interview, Papale said that an ambulance was always present at the bar league games, former Philadelphia Bell players. It was not exactly on a whim. To get ready, he did train a detail that was left out of the movie. strenuously. It is also true that the tryout attracted an odd assortment of characters, as What made Dick Vermeil decide to give Vince a spot on the team? “When it came then Eagles coach Dick Vermeil remembered in a recent interview with the Philadelphia down even between him and another receiver/special-teams player (at the final cut) we Inquirer. “All kinds of people turned out (800 total). We had a doctor, guys with big bellies, kept him because of his charisma, and his appeal to the South Philly fans where the stakids right out of high school.” As shown in the film, on the day of the tryout, Dick Vermeil dium is, and then to his talent as well,” says Dick Vermeil, who would a few years later win did take note of Papale, especially Papale’s ability to run a 40-yard dash in an impressive a Super Bowl with the St. Louis Rams. 4.5 seconds. Vince Papale’s first-year salary as a Philadelphia Eagle was $21,000, which was almost In his senior year of high school, Vince Papale was a letter winner for football, basketdouble what his last teaching job had paid. In his final year with the Eagles, he made ball, and track. He received a full track scholarship to St. Josephs College. At St. Josephs, $45,000. Papale was the track team captain his senior Papale’s greatest memory of playyear, and he also won the most outstanding Hold Fast to Dreams ing on the coverage team unit for the Philaathlete award. delphia Eagles was in his rookie season. He Vince Papale did not play football in came down the field so hard that he made college. At age 18 when he graduated from Going from being called a loser with no two Giants players collide with the punt rehigh school, he was only 5-foot-7 and 160 pedigree and no college football expeturner who ended up fumbling the ball, and pounds. Colleges were not coming after him rience to captain of an NFL team is the Vince recovered it. “Our offense would score with football scholarships. Instead, he acstuff from which dreams and movies are a touchdown on the ensuing series, and we cepted a full track scholarship to St. Josephs. made. Using video clips from Invincible, defeated them, 20–7, giving Dick Vermeil his By the time he was ready to graduate from Disney, and ESPN, Vince, a tremendous first win as an NFL coach,” Papale recalls. college, Papale had grown tremendously to storyteller, shares his tips on seizing op Papale stopped playing professional 6-foot-2, 185 pounds. He never tried out for portunities, overcoming odds, fulfilling football due to a shoulder injury in the 1979 the football team in college because St. Jopotential, and taking it to the highest preseason, which permanently ended his sephs did not have a team. level. His energy, passion, and humor NFL career. Although the movie Invincible truthwill keep the audience on the edge of After spending three years playing fully emphasizes that Vince Papale played their seats. He made second effort a part professional football with the Philadelphia no football on the college level, the movie of his personality and got the ultimate Eagles, Papale moved on from the NFL to fails to mention that Papale did play in the last laugh on those who doubted him. He become a TV and radio broadcaster, a job short-lived World Football League (WFL) for will bring people from tears of sadness to which he held for eight years. He then went two years starting in 1974. Making a little bit tears of joy and bring them to their feet as into commercial mortgage banking, which of money in the league as a wide receiver they feel his journey is their trip as well. led to his position as a Marketing Executive for the Philadelphia Bell, Papale eventuand Special Projects Director for Sallie Mae, ally found himself in debt when the league the student financial aid company. Currently, folded in 1975. “You do some stupid things he mainly works as a motivational speaker for education and the Sallie Mae Program. because the first time in your life you have some money,” Papale says. “Then all of a sudden In addition to his various occupations, he has battled and beat colorectal cancer, a there you are: You don’t have those bucks that are coming in all the time.” topic on which he also speaks and for which he holds the title of national spokesperson After his two-year career with the Philadelphia Bell of the World Football League, (premierespeakers.com). Papale has served as chairman or co-chairman for numerous asVince tended bar to make ends meet. Before joining the Bell, Papale had been a beloved sociations, including the Philadelphia Vietnam Veterans, Spina Bifida Association, Multiple middle-school business education teacher for the Interboro School District for six years Sclerosis Society, and the American Heart Association. As a cancer survivor, he and his from 1968 to 1974. Papale left teaching in the spring of 1974 to try out for the Bell. family also donate a lot of their time to the Eagle’s Fly for Leukemia charity. Vince Papale’s first wife did leave him as shown in the film, and he did in fact use the Vince Papale’s favorite scene from the movie Invincible is the one where he and his nasty note she left him (“You’ll never go anywhere, never make a name for yourself, and friends play rough-touch football in the mud. “It just showed the pure innocence and joy never make any money”) as motivation. But it happened in 1971, five years before the of playing,” says Papale. “And to me, it was a bunch of guys who are over the hill, but they events of the film. became kids again, and it just transcended time.” Papale really played fierce games of “rough touch” football in Philadelphia’s bar leagues for years, despite breaking his nose and some ribs and getting a few teeth jarred loose. In Engineers/Designers/Contractors/Architects Invest in Yourself The 2010 ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition is the premier education and professional development event for plumbing engineers and designers. With 40+ program choices, the technical and professional development programs meet not only the plumbing engineering, designer, and contractor professional’s needs, but those of spouses and guests as well. DISCOVER Today, more than ever, a professional needs to be flexible to meet workplace and lifestyle challenges. To help, there are programs on workplace issues, technical innovations, code and legal updates, CHALLENGE finances, economics, management trends, and leadership development. Invest in yourself. Don't miss this unique educational and professional development experience! BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô11 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Discovering Philadelphia History Come live 200 years of our country’s history. It’s Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and you will have the opportunity to visit the visions of our past, re-live history, and visit the history you’ve only read about. Philadelphia has a diversity of fun and adventure waiting to be discovered by the 2010 Convention attendees and their guests, and Philadelphia is perfectly situated—it is right in the middle of where the majority of the Society’s membership is located. There’s easy access from virtually anywhere in North America, and once here you will be in the doorway to America’s history. There are numerous adventurous and exciting tours and events planned from Saturday all the way through Wednesday that will allow you to enjoy and share the widest possible charm and magic of the city and its vistas. Please note, all tours have maximum limits. A special post-Convention tour to New York City has also been arranged. The Philadelphia Story Saturday, October 30 10:00 am to 1:00 pm The most comprehensive full-city tour available, The Philadelphia Story is a fully guided tour via deluxe transportation through four centuries of art, architecture, and Philadelphia’s growth to the secondlargest city on the East Coast. Beginning before 1776, you will hear stories of the people, places, and things that made Colonial Philadelphia the seat of government for the young nation and one of the largest English-speaking cities in the world. In 1681, King Charles II granted 45,000 square miles of land on the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers to William Penn as payment for a debt owed to Penn’s father. Here, the Quaker gentleman founded Philadelphia, a a Greek term translated as “City of Brotherly Love,” as part of his “Holy Experiment” of religious freedom in the New World. His fellow Quakers settled here, as well as people of many other religious backgrounds, giving Philadelphia the diverse ethnic flavor residents still savor today. Penn’s chief surveyor, Captain Thomas Holmes, used a grid pattern for the city that included five public squares, all of which remain today, to realize Penn’s vision of a “greene countrie towne.” Primarily due to its excellent location on the Atlantic Coast and accessible port facilities, Philadelphia grew rapidly in the 18th century. It was appropriately named the “Athens of the Americas” and was the cultural center of the New World. See such sites as the Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, Congress Hall, First and Second Bank of the U.S., Betsy Ross House, Franklin’s grave, Christ Church, Elfreth’s Alley, and the neighborhood of Society Hill. Embracing the modern day, you will visit neighborhoods where the Founding Fathers lived and see how contemporary Philadelphians have made them their own. Going beyond the colonial period, you will visit the bustling business district, Museum Mile of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, the famous Rocky steps, Philadelphia’s vibrant theater district, Antique Row, the captivating French-inspired Rittenhouse Square, and much more. During the 19th century, the city grew, annexing parts of the countryside and consolidating with the county in 1854. The annexation included Fairmount Park, now the world’s largest municipal park, spanning nearly 9,000 acres. In 1987, One Liberty Place was the first building to break the early 20th-century gentlemen’s agreement that no building be taller than William Penn’s statue atop City Hall (about 41 stories). Now, the Liberty Place complex is one of many buildings that rise above the city’s founder, including the Mellon Bank Building and Bell Atlantic Tower and the new Comcast Center, the tallest building between New York City and Chicago. A progressive spirit continues as new skyscrapers light up the skyline of the second largest city on the East Coast. Off-coach photo opportunities will occur throughout the tour. Tour Benefits: u This tour is recommended for one of the first days as it gives guests a full city overview and allows them to get a “lay of the land” and determine what they’d like to go back and explore in more depth. u This comprehensive tour will take guests to both the historic area and the modern city to get to know Philadelphia first-hand. u Minimal walking is required for those guests who prefer to enjoy a fulllength tour without a lot of walking. Colonial Philadelphia Experience Sunday, October 31 10:00 am to 1:00 pm The Colonial Philadelphia Experience is a fully guided tour both on coach and on foot through America’s Birthplace, the heart of Philadelphia’s historic district. Step out to Philadelphia’s modern-day Market Street and learn how it got its name from the colonial market stalls that bustled with life in the 1700s as you stroll around Independence National Historical Park. Hear the stories of the people, places, and things that made Colonial Philadelphia the seat of government for the young nation. Philadelphia served as the nation’s temporary capital from 1790 to 1800. The City’s history from 1774 to 1800 is closely linked to that of the American Revolution and the newborn nation. Thus, it is often referred to as “America’s birthplace.” Learn more about that fight for freedom in “America’s Most Historic Square Mile,” Independence National Historical Park, home to two of the nation’s most precious monuments to freedom: the Liberty Bell, an international symbol of freedom, and Independence Hall. The First Continental Congress met at Carpenters’ Hall in 1774, and in 1776, Independence Hall served as the site where the colonists adopted the Declaration of Independence. Later, in 1787, 55 delegates to a federal convention envisioned a strong government for our new nation with the creation of the Constitution of the United States. A few blocks away is Old City, the first commercial area of Philadelphia and one of America’s oldest business districts. Although most of the buildings now date from the latter part of the 19th century, the area still features the following attractions: Elfreth’s Alley: The oldest continually occupied residential street in the country. The Betsy Ross House: Legend has it the seamstress sewed the first American Flag there. Christ Church: Services are still held today as they were when George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and other colonial leaders worshiped there. This tour will visit neighborhoods where the Founding Fathers lived and see how contemporary Philadelphians have made them their own. See the same tiny courtyards and by-ways of colonial Philadelphians, only seen while on foot! Tour Price: $42.00 Includes experienced guides and tour personnel and refreshments. Approximately a three-hour tour. Maximum tour number is 28. ★★★ DISCOVER CHALLENGE Sites visited include: Liberty Bell Center, Independence Hall (ticketed interior tour), Congress Hall, First and Second Bank of the U.S., Benjamin Franklin’s print shop, Betsy Ross House, Franklin’s grave, Elfreth’s Alley, Christ Church, a seldom-visited Quaker Meetinghouse, and others. Tour Benefits: u This tour is recommended for one of the first days as it gives guests the opportunity to see Philadelphia’s top tourism sites. u This tour includes a pre-paid advance reservation to tour inside Independence Hall (tickets are often not available if not pre-reserved). u This tour provides an in-depth experience through the historic area with a trained historian. The sites and buildings are tied together in a cohesive and chronological story of the early days of our struggle toward independency. Tour Price: $45.00 Includes experienced guides and tour personnel and refreshments. Wear comfortable shoes and sun screen. All-weather tour. Approximately a three-hour tour. Maximum tour number is 28. ★★★ The Simple Life: Pennsylvania’s Amish Monday, November 1 9:00 am to 5:00 pm The Simple Life: Pennsylvania’s Amish is a full-day tour to the beautiful countryside of nearby Lancaster County, home to America’s oldest Amish settlement, where thousands still live a centuries-old “Plain” lifestyle. It’s a place where visitors can step back in time to enjoy a slower, more peaceful pace, where the horse and buggy remains a primary form of transportation, and where windmills dot the landscape, providing a nature-harnessed power source. A vital part of Lancaster County, the Amish are involved in agriculture and an array of cottage industries. The s t o r y of the Amish community dates back to the 16th century Reformation in Europe, when the Anabaptist movement spurred the creation of three “plain” communities. Although these spiritual groups have similarities, the Old Order Amish are the most conservative, emphasizing humility, family, community, and separation from the modern world. There are three families, or Anabaptist-related groups, found in Lancaster County: the Amish, Mennonites, and Brethren. All three groups share the Anabaptist belief that calls for making a conscious choice to accept God (accordingly, only adults are baptized). The three groups also share the same basic values BUILD 12 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Discovering Philadelphia History concerning the all-encompassing authority of the Bible, a philosophy of brotherhood and non-resistance, and the importance of family and community. Wear comfortable shoes and sun screen. All-weather tour. Approximately an eight-hour tour. Lunch included at Plain & Fancy Farm. Maximum tour number is 28. ★★★ The groups differ primarily in matters of dress, language, forms of worship, and the extent to which they allow modern technology and the forces of the “outside world” to impact their lives. Most Brethren and Mennonites dress much like their “English” neighbors. Other Mennonites, Brethren, and Amish Mennonites wear distinctive Amish clothing but may make use of “worldly” conveniences, such as cars, electricity, and telephones. On the other hand, Old Order Mennonite and Old Order Amish groups are more restrictive in their views of modern technology, with the Old Order Amish being the most conservative of Lancaster County’s “plain” groups. Upon arrival guests will embark on a three-hour guided country tour, featuring the unspoiled back road beauty of Amish farmlands, one-room schools, and cottage industries such as a general store, bakery, farm, and quilt shop (stops vary based on shopkeepers’ operating schedules). Amish foods are part of the experience! Lunch will be a sumptuous Pennsylvania Dutch meal featuring “pass-the-platter” style dining. Dig into delicious golden fried chicken, sausage, old-fashioned chicken pot pie with handmade noodles, real mashed potatoes with gravy, bakeryfresh shoo-fly pie, apple dumplings a la mode, and vanilla ice cream. Escape to a simpler way of life with this “turn back the hands of the clock” tour. It’s a day of delights for your eyes, your taste buds, and your mind! Tour Benefits: u An organized tour is the only way individual guests can get to Amish country from Philadelphia. u This tour allows for three hours of shopping in Amish businesses: quilts, country stores, food products, candles, and crafts. u No one g o e s hungry with our passthe-platter dining, with plentiful food and multiple choices. u Experience a culture and way of life different from most Americans. Tour Price: $105.00 Includes experienced guides and tour personnel and refreshments. Philadelphia Unique Mural Arts Tour Tuesday, November 2 10:00 am to 3:30 pm Tour Philadelphia’s super-sized works of art with this behind-the-scenes look at how murals are made. Filled with anecdotes and rich with history, the tour will leave guests with an understanding of the complexities of mural-making and an appreciation of Philadelphia as the world’s largest outdoor art gallery. Glimpse into the world of local Philadelphia artists, many of whom are amateur and not formally trained and some of whom were former graffiti artists who have turned their once destructive work into meaningful and celebrated art. The City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program unites artists and communities through a collaborative process, rooted in the traditions of mural-making, to create art that transforms public spaces and individual lives. The Philadelphia Inquirer described the Mural Arts Program as, “by far, the most important, prolific, and successful public art project in the nation.” The Mural Arts Program has created more than 3,000 murals that are an integral part of the civic landscape and a source of inspiration to the thousands of residents and visitors who encounter them each year, earning Philadelphia international recognition as the “City of Murals.” W h e n you see a finished mural on a wall, you are looking at the result of a very long process. There are many steps between the moment a mural is conceived and the day it is dedicated. These steps can vary somewhat, depending on how a mural is funded and where it is located. Most murals are created through the same general sequence, which usually takes from three to six months. I ncluded in this unique tour is a stop at Philadelphia artist Isaiah Zagar’s Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens where DISCOVER you’ll see how he uses ceramic tile, mirrors, and found objects to create colorful and unusual mosaic murals. Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens is a folk art environment and gallery space that showcases the work of mosaicist Isaiah Zagar. Located at the site of Zagar’s largest public mosaic installation, the Magic Gardens includes a fully mosaiced indoor gallery and a massive outdoor labyrinthine mosaic sculpture. The installation, primarily consisting of found objects and contributions from the community, covers half a city block with myriad tiles, textures, and colors. A walk through the labyrinth will reveal sculptures from Latin America and Asia, bicycle wheels from local South Street shop Via Bicycles, Zagar’s hand-made tiles, and mirrors of every shape and size. Zagar started working on the Magic Gardens in 1994 in the vacant lot nearby his studio. He began by constructing a massive fence to protect the area from harm and then spent the next 14 years excavating tunnels and grottoes, sculpting multi-layered walls, and tiling and grouting the 3,000-square-foot space. The installation pays tribute to Zagar’s many artistic influences, as well as the events and experiences of his life. Enveloped in visual anecdotes, the mosaiced walls refer to his wife Julia and sons Ezekiel and Jeremiah through playful images and words, but also reference important elements of the wider world—Las Pozas and Day of the Dead, the dance community of Philadelphia, and even the airplanes of the nationwide 9/11 tragedy. It’s a once-in-a-Philadelphia-visit opportunity to get up close and personal with the city’s public art! Tour Benefits: u This tour offers guests a hands-on project to help make a part of a Philadelphia mural or mosaic mural (subject to availability). u This tour will visit neighborhoods beyond the traditional “central city” boundaries. u Great photo opportunities. Most murals are several stories tall. u A memorable day with the immersive hands-on project. Guests get a chance to leave behind a permanent legacy to Philadelphia’s art community. Tour Price: $105.00 Includes experienced guides and tour personnel and refreshments. Wear comfortable shoes and sun screen. All-weather tour. Approximately a sixhour tour with lunch included. Maximum tour number is 28. CHALLENGE ★★★ Tour of Brandywine Valley, Longwood Gardens, Winterthur Wednesday, November 3 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Picture Perfect Countryside is a full-day tour through the rolling hills of Philadelphia’s spectacular countryside. Less than an hour’s drive from Philadelphia lays the beautiful Brandywine Valley, immortalized on canvas by many artists, including the Wyeth family. The deluxe transportation first takes you to the world-renowned Longwood Gardens. America’s premier horticultural center captivates with 1,050 acres of majestic gardens, natural woodlands, colorful meadows, 11,000 types of plants, and more fountains than any other garden in the U.S. In 1906, Pierre S. du Pont purchased the Pierce Arboretum to save its trees from being cut for lumber. Over the next nearly half century, Mr. du Pont developed Longwood Gardens into what it is today, a magnificent horticultural showplace. When visiting Longwood Gardens, guests are immersed not only in the breathtaking surroundings, but in the rich history as well. The traditions and elegance of the gardens have evolved over time and resulted in the magnificence that is seen today. Guests will have more than 2½ hours to wander at their own pace the 20 spectacular outdoor gardens and four acres of indoor heated greenhouses, eat lunch (on own) and visit the gift shop. On the return trip, you visit Winterthur, an American country estate, the former home of Henry Francis du Pont (1880-1969), an avid antiques collector and horticulturist. In the early 20th century, H. F. du Pont and his father, Henry Algernon du Pont, designed Winterthur in the spirit of 18th- and19th-century European country houses. Your visit to Winterthur will immerse you in another time and place where you will have several hours to rediscover America’s heritage through an unparalleled collection of antiques and Americana and/or venture out over the fields and farmland to learn about the workings of a great American country estate and the breathtaking beauty of its 60acre naturalistic Winterthur Garden. The permanent exhibitions in the Galleries at Winterthur invite exploration and discovery. From a collection of more than 85,000 objects made or used in America between 1640 and 1860, Winterthur curators have crafted displays that focus on specific media. Themes in each gallery are built around such questions as: How were these objects made? How were they used? How do we know what they are? Objects selected range from historic clothing and craftsmen’s tools to exquisite metalworks, ceramics, and paintings. BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô13 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Discovering Philadelphia History Super Special Optional Tour To New York City Tour Benefits: u An organized tour is the only way individual guests can get to the Brandywine Valley from Philadelphia. u Great photo opportunities at Longwood Gardens. Tour Price: $87.00 Includes experienced guides and tour personnel and refreshments. Wear comfortable shoes and sun screen. All-weather tour. Approximately a seven-hour tour. (Will be on own for lunch.) Maximum tour number is 28. ★★★ Big Apple Tour Thursday, November 4 8:00 am to 6:00 pm Only 90 miles away awaits New York City! Unmatched for world-famous shopping, dining, and sightseeing, you’ll travel via deluxe transportation for a full-day visit to The Big Apple with plenty of free time to take it all in—what you want to see—at your own pace. A leading global city, New York exerts a powerful influence over global commerce, finance, media, culture, art, fashion, research, education, and entertainment. As host of the Unit- ed Nations Headquarters, it is also an important center for international affairs. Traveling via deluxe transportation, guests will arrive in New York City—the world’s capital. First stop: the Top of the Rock at Rockefeller Center. Discover New York in all its forms from 70 stories up at Top of the Rock Observation Deck. Enjoy dazzling multimedia history exhibits and the city’s only crystal-clear, 360° experience of New York. After seeing it all from above, next it will be free time to “conquer.” From here, guests will have approximately five hours to enjoy New York on their own before the return trip to Philadelphia. Our transportation will pick us up at in Rockefeller Center (the same as our drop-off locations) in the afternoon to return to Philadelphia in time for dinner on your own. Tour Benefits: ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô BE SURE TO SAY “HI!” WELCOME TO ALL OUR INTERNATIONAL VISITORS ASPE is very pleased to be able to partner with the ICC to bring for the first time the 2010 World Toilet Organization Summit to the United States. ASPE is pleased that we were able to help with the logistics and provide the necessary space. We are especially pleased that this is the first of what we expect will be many such mutual areas that will come from the recently signed Memorandum of Understanding between ASPE and the ICC. With the 2010 World Toilet Organization Summit will come a plethora of media—something we expect to help expand the visibility and credibility of the Society. BUT MORE IMPORTANT: PLEASE BE SURE TO STOP AND MAKE WELCOME TO THE UNITED STATES AND TO THE ASPE CONVENTION AND EPE OUR MANY INTERNATIONAL GUESTS. We are expecting more than 1,000 international visitors, so you will be busy shaking hands, but especially making new friends and building up your peer network. u An organized tour is the most costeffective way for guests to get to New York City from Philadelphia. u Personal tour host for shopping and sightseeing tips. u On-site contact available for emergencies. u Unstructured day to allow for flexibility for everyone’s unique interests Tour Price: $125.00 Includes experienced guides and tour personnel and refreshments. Wear comfortable shoes. All-weather tour. Approximately a 10- hour tour. (Lunch on own.) Maximum tour number is 21. SPECIAL SPOUSE GIFT LIMITED QUANTITY! FIRST 90 TO REGISTER The 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition will be held in Philadelphia, October 30 to November 3. Being an East Coast city, Philadelphia’s weather at that time of the year is impossible to predict or even to guess. So, for paid attendee spouses, the Society has arranged a special Philly “Weather Guess” bag. The bag will be a carryall that you can use to hold all of the gifts and presents that you are sure to purchase on your trip. It will be made from a totally recyclable material such as bamboo. Inside the bag you will find a large, square silk or cashmere scarf that will double for both warmth and dress up. A pair of gloves will be a must depending on the weather. A weather “repeller,” that is, an umbrella also will be included, as will a quick slip-on poncho (just in case). If there is space, we also will include a warm wool or cashmere shoulder wrap for a chilly day or night. Don’t miss out on the ASPE Spouse Gift. As one spouse remarked: “This is the nicest thing that ASPE has ever done for the spouses, and it was nice that they went first class all the way.” Wherever You Are Coming From, Rent a Bus or Do Some Share Riding and $ave , $ave, $ave Drive to the 2010 Convention and Save For all full paid registrants to the 2010 Convention who are also registered to be staying at the Convention headquarters hotel for a minimum of a three-night stay (if individuals are staying at other than the headquarters hotel, but still at one of the Convention Hotels, a special percentage reduction of the total will be applied depending on the hotels being utilized), the Society is offering the following travel stipend offset: 1. $150 per vehicle toward gas for those driving their own vehicle carrying no less than 4 people from their area. 2. $200 per vehicle toward gas for those driving their own vehicle carrying no less than 6 people from their area. 3.$300 per vehicle toward gas for those driving their own vehicle carrying 10 or more people from their area. 4.Up to $500 toward a vehicle rental that must be able to hold 6 persons or more, plus $300 per vehicle toward gas for those who carry a minimum of 6 people from their area. 5.Up to $1,000 toward a vehicle rental that must be able to hold 10 persons or more, plus $300 per vehicle toward gas for those who carry 10 people or more from their area. [The number of people counted in the vehicle includes the driver.] 6.Up to $1.00 per mile (one-way) for a chartered bus that must be able to hold 20 persons or more, plus $500 per vehicle towards gas for those who carry 15 or more from their area. This vehicle transportation stipend is available to all attendees, no matter how close you live to the Philadelphia area. To receive the stipend, bring the names and signatures of those in the vehicle to the ASPE office in the Convention Center (bring proof of the rental, if applicable, or vehicle ownership). After verification of registration at the Convention, ASPE will have a check made out to you at the ASPE office at the end of the Convention. DISCOVER CHALLENGE BUILD 14 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Saturday Night: Beer, Racing, and Politics — A Great Way To Enjoy the Evening! Beer and Politics! A Great Mix! Saturday night, immediately following the ASPE Business Meeting, the candidates for the 2010–2012 ASPE board of directors should be known. This is a great time to have some wine, beer, and pretzels while mingling with the candidates to not only get to know them better, but also to ask them those questions you are dying to ask but didn’t have time to during the Business Meeting. This is a great opportunity for delegates to intermingle with the candidates in a large, comfortable space. The current Society president cannot rerun for that office, so clearly a new president will be elected for the 2010–2012 ASPE board. Some interesting new candidates have emerged, so this special event will give everyone a chance to personally meet all of those who are running. It will be a perfect time to question candidates on their plans for ASPE in the coming years so delegates can make an informed decision during the elections on Monday. The delegates meeting will be held in the Great Meeting Hall just above the Train Shed as you enter the Convention Center from the Marriott Hotel. Right in the pre-function space will be plenty of wine and beer and soft drinks and even a snack or two where you will have time to “corner the candidates.” ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô rd ASPE Chapter-to-Chapter Grand Prix How Fast Can It Go? — The 3 Now, nothing mixes better with wine, beer, soft drinks, snacks, and politics than some good ol’ horse racing. Well, we don’t have the horse racing, but down in the main hall area, we are planning to have the “How Fast Can It Go?” contest. For those of you who have no idea what we are talking about, it is the 3rd ASPE Grand Prix. This is the event where chapters compete against each other to design and build a vehicle that represents a device or item used in plumbing engineering or the plumbing industry—and then to see what it can do on the track. Be sure to make time to cheer on your fellow chapter members as they compete. The last time this race was held was at the 2006 ASPE Convention, and there were 31 initial chapter entries. In order to get everyone an equal chance, we have a little bit of an ASPE shortened version of double elimination races that will start on Saturday, October 30, 2010, at about 5:30 pm. The final eliminations will be on Monday at about 6:15 pm or following the last technical program sessions, in the same place. If necessary there will be final runoffs on Tuesday, November 2, 2010, that will start following the technical programs on Tuesday and end no later than one hour later so everyone can get ready for the Tuesday night banquet. We’re just getting started on the logistics, so it’s not to late for any chapter to get involved. Remember, THIS IS JUST FOR THE FUN OF IT! (Actual race times may change, and types of races may be adjusted to account for Convention and Exposition hours and programs.) Yes, there will be prizes, four of them. There will be two BIG prizes: one for chapters with 100 or less members and one for chapters with more than 100 members. The chapter will have its choice of an appropriate prize valued at about $1,500, such as a digital projector or technical program speaker for a chapter meeting or other educational program (ASPE will pay travel and honoraria of speaker for a total not to exceed $1,500 for one event only) or another prize that will benefit the whole chapter. There will also be prizes for the craftsmanship of the vehicles. The vehicles will be put on display on Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, and all attendees will have a chance to vote for their choice for originality, craftsmanship, and appearance. (So remember to vote, often.) The winning craftsmen or team of the winning vehicle will receive a $150 gift certificate to Home Depot (or equivalent if not available in winner’s area). All You Have to Do Is Turn Something Like This: Central Florida Entry 2004 Grand Prix Winner and Best in Show Into Something Like This: SOME OF THE OTHER ENTRIES Remember, it’s all for FUN! Contact Richard Albrecht at ASPE for more information. The 2006 Overall Winner: St. Louis Get official rules, policies, procedures and a Grand Prix Parts Kit. Contact Richard Albrecht, official race timer: E-mail: [email protected]; Fax: (847) 296-2963; Telephone: (847) 296-0002. Also, see the ASPE website, 2010 Convention for more information. The race track is approximately 100 feet long and starts about 12 feet off the ground. Starter volunteers are welcome! ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô FOR 2010 — A GREEN EVENT For the 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition, we would like to emphasize GREEN initiatives. Throughout the duration of this event, we would like to minimize the impact the Convention and Exposition will have on the environment. Everything from maximizing the use of green materials such as recyclable paper to separating recyclable materials into the bins provided for paper, glass, cans, plastic, etc. will be utilized. Although we have not yet found a sponsor, we continue to seek a manufacturer who will provide the monetary support (with the accompanying promotional and marketing visibility, including company logo) for a small, relatively inexpensive tablet computer to give to each attendee to the Convention. Rather than using paper, every document, all materials, every program, and all handouts would be integrated into this small tablet that would be handed out at registration. (Although not a powerful computer, the tablet would allow connection to the Internet and the ability to conduct some business.) Lacking a tablet computer, everything that can be done to make the 2010 Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition as green as possible will be done. Obviously, we will use recyclable paper when we must print something. We also will place recyclable containers throughout the Convention Center for the proper disposal of various materials. To the extent we are able, we also will be reducing the amount of material, paper or otherwise, that gets handed out at the Convention and Exposition. We highly recommend attendees to bring their laptop because all program session material will be provided on a thumb drive. If you notify us prior to the event, we will send you a special indexed PDF file that will have everything from the Convention program to the delegate material to the Exposition floor guide on it. ABSOLUTELY NO PAPER. HELP US MAKE 2010 GREEN! DISCOVER CHALLENGE BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô15 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô American Society of Plumbing Engineers RING IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE 2010 ENGINEERED PLUMBING EXPOSITION DISCOVER CHALLENGE BUILD 16 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE The Tuesday Night Banquet The closing biennial Banquet will be held the evening of Tuesday, November 2, 2010, starting with a reception in the foyer to the Marriott Hotel Grand Ballroom starting at 6:30 p.m. (Please be sure to check the final prog r a m b o o k t h a t y o u will r e ceive when y o u register for actual location. Location is s u b j e c t to change due to final Convention attendance.) All attendees registered for the Convention have a ticket to the Banquet included as part of the registration fee.* Additional tickets are available for sale in the ASPE Pavilion. Every attendee is encouraged to attend. The banquet is the last social event to meet, greet, network, and enjoy the special Convention camaraderie and friendships of the ASPE delegates, members, and exhibitors. The Banquet night is a formal event (black-tie or business attire). The Banquet will mark the transition of the Society’s board of directors, saying good-bye to the previous board and introducing the new, 2010–2012 board of directors who must officially take the oath of office. This night is also very special for the Society and its members. It is the time for the bestowing of the highest ASPE awards, including the Distinguished Service Award, Industry Award, and the Runkle Award. In addition, the new inductees to the Kenneth Wentink College of Fellows will be introduced, a special honor that requires your peers to nominate you and the Fellows to accept the candidates. Dinner with wine will be served, and an orchestra will play music throughout. T h i s year, after all the festivities have ended, please, t a k e a moment as we invite you to sit back, re lax with a good drink, talk to friends, and take the opportunity for some good old-fashioned fun dancing. *Every paid attendee to the ASPE Convention receives an entrance exchange ticket to the Banquet. If you plan to attend the Banquet, you MUST bring this exchange ticket to the ASPE Pavilion prior to Tuesday, November 2, 2010. In the Pavilion is a special banquet ticket exchange booth. Here you will be able to pick your table location for the Banquet relative to the entertainment stage and the head table. You will receive an entrance ticket with your table number and a meal ticket that will be collected by the servers prior to the meal service. ôôôôôôôôô Earn CEUs All of the Technical and Professional Development Program Sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday American Society of Plumbing Engineers will offer Continuing Education Units (CEUs) or Certificate Of Completion Awarded to PDHs at no additional registration cost. Joe B. Engineer, CPD In addition, due to the nature of the ASPE EngiFor 2008 ASPE Convention neered Plumbing Exposition—the fact that it is Domestic Water Piping Workshop only an educational and technical event without .35 any sales or buyer opportunities—each continuous hour spent on the Exposition floor will earn one CEU/PDH contact hour of education credits for educational time spent on the Engineered Plumbing Exposition floor. CEUs and PDHs are nationally recognized units of achievement that may be used as evidence of increased performance capabilities and job advancement. (ASPE is an approved provider in all 50 states for its technical programs.) The Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition offer the opportunity to earn 1.75 CEUs, representing more than 17 hours of educational contact. (Note: While all ASPE technical and educational programs have been approved in advance for acceptance in each state requiring credit units for recertification, re-licensing, or re-registration, not all states will recognize the credits earned on the Exposition floor. It is left to the participant to decide whether to use such credit hours.) HOW ABOUT A GAME OF POKER? This is the easiest game ever for an ASPE Engineered Plumbing Exposition. Not only is it easy, but every attendee gets to play. Everyone can have fun. Best of all? EVERYONE WINS! And you can play this game on both Monday and Tuesday—except, you can only play ONCE per day. For anyone who has never played good-old regular poker, the rules are pretty simple. You get to draw five cards, and based on the value of the hand, such as a pair, three of a kind, a full house, a straight, or a straight flush, you win. (You will have to brush up on which cards make up what hands for the highest ranking winning hand. For example, a royal flush pretty much beats everything, except perhaps if you have “wild” cards.) For the ASPE version of the game, you actually get to draw (or start) with six cards. You get to use the best five-card hand you can create from the six cards. Pretty simple so far, right? You will get your first card when you pick up your registration material. Everyone attending the Convention or the Exposition gets to play. When you get your first card, you will note that it is a little bit “funny” looking. It has some directions on one side that clearly state: DO NOT SCRATCH OFF THE SILVER COATING. So don’t. Because if you do, that card becomes void, null and useless, a waste, trash. (See card on right.) The card instructions at the top of the card are: Keeping the Future of ASPE Strong; Play ASPE Poker; Collect Five Playing Cards By Visiting Sponsors and Patrons; To Win, You Must NOT Scratch Off the Covering or Expose Any Part of the Playing Card. HOW DO YOU GET MORE CARDS? As the card states, as you go around to each Sponsor or Patron booth you can collect a card. But remember, you cannot scratch off any of the silver part of any card or it will no longer be valid. When you think you are ready, you can go to any of the redemption desks that you will find throughout the Exhibit Hall. (There will be at least six desks.) When you get to the redemption desk, you get to chose any six cards at random. Do Not Scratch Off Any of the Silver Part of the Card! For the sake of being green, please turn in any of the cards you do not choose to the redemption desk staff. They will then have them recycled for the rest of both Monday and Tuesday. Also, your badge number will be noted. NOW YOU SCRATCH After you have chosen your six cards, then, in front of the redemption desk staff, you may now scratch off the silver coating. Under the silver coating you will see regular playing cards: numbers and pictures. You get to make the best five-card hand out of the six cards you picked and scratched off. EVERYONE WINS SOMETHING. At the redemption desk will be a placard and a brochure that provides the winning stakes and lists what you have won based on the type of hand you wind up showing. WHAT DO/CAN YOU WIN? The worst possible hand is called a “bust” hand. That’s where no two cards are the same and make up a pair. You will still win a certificate with a dollar value that may be exchanged at the ASPE Pavilion for anything you want to purchase. (It has no other cash value.) As in the game of poker, each hand will have a value based on its rank of poker winning hands, such as a pair, two pair, three of a kind, a flush (all five cards are the same suit), a straight (five cards with numbers in order, etc.). Poker hands will be available as information at the redemption booths. How much each poker hand will win will depend on typical poker hand values. For instance, a pair may be worth $5 or $10 or more depending on the total final “pot” (the amount of money put aside for the whole game). There is also a very quick way to win. There will be INSTANT WINNER CARDS mixed in with all the other cards. If you get an Instant Winner, you have a choice: You can take the Instant Winner amount or finish scratching off all of your cards and still make the best hand out of the remaining five cards. If the winning hand is worth more than the Instant Winner Card, you will win the higher amount. HOW MUCH IS HOW MUCH? The highest amount anyone will be able to win on one hand of poker will be $1,000. There will be Instant Winner cards for $1,000 as well as for amounts such as $500, $250, $200, $150, $100, $50, etc. Likewise, there will be poker hands that will have similar values. Enjoy the game. AND GOOD LUCK! Continuing Education Units Issued President Executive Director DISCOVER CHALLENGE BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô17 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE 2010 ENGINEERED PLUMBING EXPOSITION Exhibitors as of June 2010 (See final program for complete list) A.O. Smith Water Products Co. A.Y. McDonald Mfg. Co. AB&I Foundry ABT, Inc. Accor Technology, Inc. Acorn Engineering Company Advance Products & Systems Advance Tabco Advanced Mechanical Technologies Advanced Modern Technologies Corp. (AMTC) Aero Mfg Co Inc. AGF Manufacturing, Inc. AIRGENERATE Ajax Boiler Alberta Custom Tee (2006) Ltd. Allied Tecnical Services (ATS) American Standard Brands American Valve Inc. Amico Corp Amtekco Industries Inc. Anaco/Husky Anvil International Inc. Aqua Bath Aquatherm Inc. Aquatic ARCOM-MasterSpec Specifications Arkema Inc. Armstrong Hot Water Group Armstrong Pumps Inc. Asahi/America, Inc. Asco Power Technologies Auroia Pump Auroia Pump BeaconMedaes Bemis Manufacturing Company Big Dipper - Thermaco Bio-Microbics, Inc. BJM Pumps Blue Angel Pumps Bootz Industries Bradford White Corporation Bradley Corporation Brimar Industries, Inc. Burt Process Equipment Busch LLC Canariis Corp Canplas Caroma USA, Inc. Cash Acme, Division of Reliance Worldwide Cast Iron Soil Pipe Institute Cemline Corporation Cerro Flow Products, Inc. Charlotte Pipe & Foundry Co. CHG Chicago Faucets Cimberio Valve Co. Clarion Bathware Clarke Fire Protection Products, Inc. Cla-Val Company Conbraco Industries Inc. Containment Solutions Contractor Magazine Copper Development Assn. Copper Development Assn. Crane Pumps & Systems Croker, Division of Fire-end & Croker Corp. 1301 1554 511 1256 937 1501 950 1241 201 449 1609 1617 1326 1632 1459 1225 701 1534 1255 339 521 1708 1444 415 1649 1351 302 301 739 1745 933 233 549 601 205 1212 748 1833 1754 333 501 709 447 1726 1539 433 1154 456 749 855 1427 1718 949 1355 841 1716 1633 1149 1508 1437 754 649 651 654 419 1651 CSA International Cullen Associates, Inc. Dae Hung Precision Co., Ltd. Dahl Brothers Canada Limited DecoShield Systems Inc. Dekker Vacuum Technologies, Inc. Delany Products Delta Faucet Company Delta P Systems, Inc. Digital Analysis Corp Double Trac by Omega Flex Drain-Net Eemax Inc. Elkhart Brass Mfg. Elkhart Products Corp. Engineered Systems FBC Building Solutions Fike Corporation FireFlex Systems Inc. FlexHead Industries, Inc. Flushtech Corp. Franke Kindred Canada Limited Froet Industries Gastite Division Genstar Technologies Co., Inc. Gerber Plumbing Fixtures LLC GF Piping Systems Global Vision, Inc. G-O-N LLC Gorman-Rupp Co. Grease Removal Systems, Inc. Green Turtle Americas Ltd. Grundfos Pumps Corporation Guardian Fire Equipment, Inc. Halsey Taylor Halsey Taylor / Elkay Harvel Plastics Haws Corporation Heat-Timer Corporation Highland Tank Hoeptner Perfected Products Hot Box HRS Systems, Inc. Hubbard Enterprises / HOLDRITE Hubbell Electric Heater Co. Hubbell Industrial Controls Hydronic Modules Corporation IAPMO ICC IDC Fluid Control Co., Ltd. IDEAL Clamp Products Insul-tect Products Intersan IPEX USA LLC IPS Corporation Isimet ITT Jay R. Smith Manufacturing Co. John Guest USA Jomar International Josam Company Joslyn Clark Controls Judo Water Treatment Just Mfg. Co. KBI, King Bros. Industries KIMEX Imports, Inc. 1324 322 756 209 1045 1455 1032 401 946 849 1751 360 1520 344 409 1748 1837 355 958 1714 232 1347 954 340 955 611 733 1801 1538 1036 223 248 639 227 508 815 200 1115 226 320 1235 633 1034 1443 1345 859 1233 317 TBD 1249 202 560 1319 761 1755 1817 1449 1601 218 1109 833 1433 1111 414 1643 245 Kitz Corporation of America Kohler Co. Kusel Equipment Co. Lawler Manufacturing Co., Inc. Legend Valve Leonard Valve Company Liberty Pumps Link - Tech (Tianjin) Little Giant Lochinvar Corporation Mainline Backflow Products Inc. Mansfield Plumbing Products, LLC MAPA Products Marlo, Inc. Masco Bath Master Control Systems McGuire Manufacturing Co., Inc. Medical Gas Professional Healthcare Org. Metcraft Industries, Inc. Metraflex Company MIFAB, Inc. MIL'S SAS Milwaukee/Hammond Valve Minnesota Rubber & Plastics Miro Industries Mission Rubber Company Moen Inc. MR Direct International MTH Pumps Mueller Industries MWI Import Products National Craft Industries, Inc. Navien America Inc. NEOPERL, Inc. NIBCO Inc. Niles Steel Tank Nomaco Insulation Noritz America Corp. NSF International NTS Solar OASIS / Sunroc (Tripalm International) Oatey SCS Ohio Medical Corporation OmegaFlex, Inc. Park Environmental Equipment, Ltd. PASCO Secciality & Mfg, Inc. Patterson Pump Company Patton's Medical Peerless Pump Company PF Waterworks PHD Manufacturing, Inc. PHOENIX Process Equipment Company Plumberex Specialty Products Plumbing & Drainage Institute PM Engineer Potter Electric Signal Co. Powerex Praxis Companies, LLC Precision Plumbing Products Prier Products, Inc. ProSet Systems, Inc. PSI Thunderline / Link-Seal PVI Industries, Inc. QuantumFlo Raypak Inc. RBI Water Heaters 1710 1201 1548 1043 214 1101 1139 210 1711 610 1460 557 1815 1524 524 514 1413 1254 1514 1361 1733 1844 221 315 445 1421 1325 1823 1259 220 1247 1750 215 515 1509 207 518 1746 1425 758 1333 543 544 304 1346 1556 1033 1401 425 550 454 1350 1619 1055 1237 939 1336 206 725 1641 1133 1058 625 1555 1533 1248 Reelcraft Industries Inc. Reliable Automatic Sprinkler Rinnai Corporation Rockford Separators Roof Top Blox Rostra Tool Company Sani-Floor Schier Products Co. SCHOTT North America, Inc. See Water, Inc. Simpson Dura-Vent Simtech, Inc. Sioux Chief Manufacturing SJE-Rhombus Controls Sloan Valve Company Solar-Trac by OmegaFlex Sovent / Walter Cornwall, LLC Speakman Company, The Spears Manufacturing Company Stancor Inc. Star Pipe Products Stern-Williams Co. Stiebel Eltron Inc. Stockham Valves Strahman Valves, Inc. Symmons Industries Inc. SyncroFlo System Sensor T & S Brass & Bronze Works Taco, Inc. The Cope Company Salt The Rectorseal Corporation Tiger Flow Systems Inc. Topp Industries, Inc. Tornatech Inc. Toto USA Town & Country Plastics, Inc. Tramco Pump Company Tsurumi Pump Tyco Fire Suppression & Building Products Tyco Thermal Controls Tyler Pipe Co. Tyler Pipe Co. Tyler Pipe Co. Union Brass Manufacturing Company Uponor VC Systems & Controls Victaulic Viega Viking Group Walrus America Inc. Ward Manufacturing, Inc. Water Control Corporation Water Quality Association Water Saver Faucet/Guardian Equipment Watts Water Technologies Weil Pump Co. Inc. Wendland Mfg. Corp. Wessels Co. Willoughby Industries, Inc. Woodford Mfg. Co. WTO Xerxes Corporation Z-Flex US Inc. Zoeller Pump Company Zurn Engineered Water Solutions 857 1512 1155 1742 1740 1647 308 448 922 1448 1251 1054 823 326 1311 1749 824 832 746 1354 1655 1532 1454 655 1615 300 923 1510 1215 1809 519 1845 1049 1525 241 1723 1409 555 1625 1701 1208 616 619 620 1724 349 559 1332 307 1113 1661 647 1358 342 1232 1014 826 847 520 1023 1142 TBD 1805 1638 525 533 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô Special Thank You to Our Sponsors and Patrons AB&I Foundry Patron Advanced Mechanical Technologies Patron Aquatherm Inc. Patron BeaconMedaes Bronze Bradford White Corporation Platinum Bradley Corporation Patron Charlotte Pipe & Foundry Co. Gold Chicago Faucets Patron Copper Development Assn. Platinum/Patron Crane Pumps & Systems Patron Dekker Vacuum Technologies, Inc. Patron Delany Products Patron Delta Faucet Company Patron Eemax Inc. Patron Elkhart Brass Mfg Froet Industries GF Piping Systems Hubbard Enterprises / HOLDRITE Hubbell Electric Heater Co. Intersan Isimet ITT Judo Water Treatment Kohler Co. Kusel Equipment Co. MAPA Products Masco Bath McGuire Manufacturing Co., Inc. Metcraft Industries, Inc. Metraflex Company DISCOVER Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron Patron MIFAB, Inc. Patron Moen Inc. Platinum/Patron Mueller Industries Bronze OmegaFlex, Inc. Patron Park Environmental Equipment, Ltd. Patron Patterson Pump Company Patron Patton's Medical Patron PF Waterworks Patron Precision Plumbing Products Patron Prier Products, Inc. Patron QuantumFlo Patron Sioux Chief Manufacturing Patron Sloan Valve Co. Bronze & Bags/Patron Stern-Williams Co. Patron SyncroFlo Bronze/Patron CHALLENGE The Cope Company Salt Patron Town & Country Plastics, Inc. Patron Tramco Pump Company Patron Watts Water Technologies Lanyards Weil Pump Co. Inc. Patron Wendland Mfg. Corp. Patron Woodford Mfg. Co. Patron Zurn Engineered Water Solutions Gold *List as of June 21, 2010 BUILD 18 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE An Insider’s Look at Philadelphia Coming to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania? There are going to be lots of pamphlets, books, brochures, magazines, and people on the street who are ready to tell you what to do and see. There are also the concierge desks in hotels that will set you up for a tour, or you can just pick one up on a street corner. There is indeed a wealth of things to do and see in Philadelphia. Most of what there is to see and do is covered in the many “Things to Do in Philadelphia” magazines. They are the basic places tourists should visit to get a good feel and understanding of the city. On the other hand, there are a few places that while they qualify as great tourist stops, they are often easy to miss unless you get out your walking shoes and convince yourself to see the city. First and foremost, you need to get with the language. Philly, like lots of other cities, has some expressions and words that are all its own. A few that will help you when asking for directions or trying to interpret what someone has just told you are: *All sentences MUST be punctuated with “you know” at least twice; *You realize that your favorite dessert is “wooder ice;” *“Youse guys” is a perfectly acceptable reference to a group of men and women; *You know how to spell AND pronounce Narberth, Bryn Mawr, Bryn Athyn, Wilkes-Barre, Schuylkill, Bala Cynwyd, Conshohocken, and Monongahela; *You pronounce ACME “ACK-A-ME;” *You call sprinkles on top of your ice cream cone “jimmies;” *You don’t think Wawa sounds funny; *You don’t go to the beach in New Jersey, you go “down the shore” or, if you’re really from Philly, you go “daunashoore” (to be honest, we all know that the shore is the only good thing about Jersey); You know where to find the Rocky statue; *You know what and where “Boathouse Row” is; *You will buy a pretzel from anyone, anywhere without even thinking of where it was or where his hands have been; *You don’t know what a sub is, but you think they are trying to describe an imitation hoagie; *You refer to something as “a whole nother,” as in “That’s a whole nother issue;” *You can eat cold pizza (even for breakfast) and everyone you know does the same; *You know the difference between a cheese steak and a pizza steak and know that you can’t get a really good one outside Philly; *You live for summer, when street and county fairs signal the beginning of funnel cake season; *You know what a township, borough, and commonwealth are; *You know what a “Mummer” is and are disappointed if you can’t catch at least highlights of the parade; *You know how to respond to the questions “Djeetyet?” and “Wid o widout?”; *You say things like, “Outen the lights,”“I’m calling off today,” and “They’re calling for snow;” *You know that Yuengling is pronounced “Ying-ling” and believe that it really is a premium beer. So, for awla youse who don’t know about Philly, come on ova. We’ll pick you up at da airport, jump on da Schuylkill (Skoo-kull), or maybe craws da Benny to go to Lantic Ciddy. We can catch an Iggles game and have some wooder ice, if ya want. And we’ll be shoore to take lotsa pitchers cuz Philly is bee-yood-ee-ful! So whaddaya figger? Wen youse comin’? to continually lose championships after ascending to the finals. Shortly after a statuette of Penn was placed on top of the Comcast Center, the Philadelphia Phillies won the 2008 World Series, ending the curse. Old Pine Street Church: A Revolutionary History The Old Pine Street Church sets the tone for modern-day Pine Street. Its stately and classic style marks a deliberate and distinguished presence in Old City Philadelphia. As the first (still-standing) Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, Old Pine Street Church has earned a significantly revolutionary reputation in terms of America’s history. Envisioned by famed architect Robert Smith, this church stood through a split in contemporary Protestantism during the Great Awakening. Many who worshiped at the church camped with General George Washington in Valley Forge during the harsh 1776–77 winter. Pastor George Duffield was among those who camped there, also presiding as the First Continental Congress’ chaplain. During the war, British troops occupied the Old Pine Street Church. They sold any items as value and used the church as both a stable and hospital while a nearby church was used to conduct prayers for the English king. The Irish Memorial: Famine and heritage commemorated in Philadelphia So, here’s where to go: While many have learned about the trials of Irish immigrants escaping famine and political oppression, a lesser-known fact indicates that Philadelphia was a port city for many of these immigrants. Today, some 13 percent of Philadelphia’s residents claim Irish heritage—many are descendants of the exiting Irish famine population. Located just over the foot bridge at Front and Chestnut Streets, the Irish Memorial at Penn’s Landing overlooks the Delaware River, gateway for thousands of immigrants. From the street side, dolmen-like pillars explain about An Gorta Mor (The Great Hunger or The Irish Starvation), an event that propelled many Irish to immigrate to the United States. Historically, the famine occurred as a result of two things: a potato blight that destroyed the staple food of Ireland and the exporting of edible food by the occupying British government. This national monument focuses on the idea of experiencing triumph after tragedy. The Gallery at Market East: Philadelphia’s shopping hub Old St. Mary’s Church: Philadelphia’s second-oldest Catholic church The Gallery at Market East is a one-stop urban shopping center. The Gallery features a mall level (below ground), a street level, and two upper levels. Many choose to shop at The Gallery for convenience as it’s located near most of the city’s major transportation services. Those who reside in the city find The Gallery convenient—after shopping, they can easily get their purchases home without a car due to the close proximity of public transit. Commuters often shop at The Gallery while waiting for trains or to relax after work. Located near a major convention center, The Gallery also provides shopping and food convenience for those attending expos and conventions. The Gallery’s food court is expansive, featuring upscale bakeries and pubs as well as chain fast food retailers and coffee shops. The Gallery features a balance of stores that can be found in most malls and specialty stores such as Ubiq, targeted towards the urban consumer. City Hall: The heart of the City of Brotherly Love At the very center of Philadelphia sits City Hall, the seat of the city’s government. City Hall sits at the heavily trafficked intersection of Broad and Market Streets, connecting the city’s two large thoroughfares of arts and commerce. An imposing, impressive structure, City Hall took over three decades to construct and consists largely of natural stone—not a stone façade like other buildings in this style. At the height of the building sits William Penn, the benevolent entrepreneur responsible for planning the City of Philadelphia. Penn was noted for influencing and exhibiting the values of tolerance and liberty associated with the city to this day. With Penn depicted in bronze atop the building, a general rule existed for some time that no building should stand higher than Billy Penn’s hat. When one building eclipsed this height in the 1980s, some believed that the “Curse of Billy Penn” was enacted, causing Philadelphia’s sports teams DISCOVER This church is Philadelphia’s first cathedral. Inside, you’ll find a spectacle of rich colors and objects, including a starry ceiling, several stained glass windows, and a full organ. Founded in 1763, Old St. Mary’s is Philadelphia’s second-oldest Catholic church. The church also hosts a chandelier originally positioned in Independence Hall. This church served as a significant part of the everyday lives of many American revolutionaries. To the right of Barry’s plaque rests another indicating the church’s importance in the American Revolution, noting that the church was the site of “the first public-religious commemoration of the Declaration of Independence” in 1779. Also the site of a post-revolutionary mass, the church hosted American and French revolutionaries and “the conquered flags of Britain were laid upon the altar steps of this church.” Polish American Cultural Center The Polish American Cultural Center exists to examine and present ethnic Polish traditions in America. The center helps to link the Polish American community with legal counsel, genealogy help, cultural activism, news, music, and religion. Located on Walnut Street, the Polish American Cultural center features a museum and educational segment and also provides space for meetings. The Polish American Cultural Center was born out of a focus on maintaining and improving the Polish American community. The center was established in the 1980s as a means of promoting and displaying Polish American culture and pride. Prior to that, Polish American activities centered largely around supporting Polish Americans via social services and similar assistance. The cultural center focuses largely on history and heritage. Christ Church Burial Ground: Franklin’s final resting place The atmosphere of Christ Church Burial Ground is more peaceful than that of most cemeteries. Perhaps this is due to the fact that those interred here have been at rest for centuries, having lived through the realization of a shared revolutionary dream. Despite the fact that the burial ground rests near several other tourists sites (including the Philadelphia U.S. Mint), the burial ground is less frequently toured by visitors. Visitation to this cemetery is hardly a macabre event. In fact, it’s considered good luck to toss a penny on one particular grave here—that CHALLENGE BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô19 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô American Society of Plumbing Engineers RING IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE An Insiders’s Look at Philadelphia (Continued) of Benjamin Franklin, interred beside his wife. You can even toss a penny on the grave in passing; Franklin’s grave is visible and slightly accessible through the gates on the corner of 5th and Arch Streets. His grave is marked by a colonial American Betsy Ross flag and the “Join, or Die” flag based on a political cartoon of his own creation. Fireman’s Hall Museum of Philadelphia: Lessons in bravery Firefighting has an illustrious history in Philadelphia. To commemorate it, the Philadelphia Fire Department runs and maintains the Fireman’s Hall Museum of Philadelphia. The museum documents the history of firefighters and their lives in Philadelphia from year 1731 to contemporary times. Constructed in a former fire station used in the first half of the twentieth century, the museum encompasses two floors. Most notable is the descending pole connecting the floors of the former fire house. In its present time, the Philadelphia Fire Department still uses the hall to honor achievements, awards, and medals to its finest and bravest. The centerpiece of the museum is an original stained glass window displayed prominently on the second floor. This window depicts a firefighter extinguishing a fire, depicted behind and around him in the stained glass form. Philly’s Merchant’s Exchange: A designer’s dream The Merchant’s Exchange is an exquisite piece of architecture and a must-see for any architecture enthusiast. A prime example of Greek revivalist architecture, only a small part of the building is actually open to visitors. For this reason, it is a suggested stop en route to larger attractions and neighborhoods such as the nearby South Street. The Merchant’s Exchange is ubiquitous—not only for its round-to-rectangular shape, but for its plot. In a city designed with a checkerboard in mind, the Merchant’s Exchange sits on a triangular property. Designed by William Strickland in the 1830s, the impressive building often garners questions like “what’s that?” as visitors walk by and snap photos, many wondering if the site is public or private. It’s not unusual to see tourists (even those who have stumbled upon the landmark randomly) walk around the building at least once to examine its shape. Ride the Ducks Philadelphia: It’s “Quackerific” When it comes to guided tours in Philadelphia, Ride the Ducks takes the award for the most creative. An amphibious vehicle takes passengers around the city streets of Philly, showcasing historical sites like Independence Hall and Benjamin Franklin’s grave. The amphibious vehicles, which are specifically built for the tour, are referred to as “ducks” because of their ability to move directly from the land to the water. Ride the Ducks claims that it is the best tour in Philadelphia because their vehicles can “go where no others can:” the streets of Philly into the cool Delaware River. Passengers are given a duck-bill-shaped whistle to blow during the course of the tour, so kids love the ducks as much as adults. Each tour lasts approximately one hour. Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts: Home of the Philadelphia Orchestra Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts is located on the Avenue of the Arts and is home to the city’s world-renowned Philadelphia Orchestra—one of the top five orchestras in the world. The Center is comprised of two main venues: Verizon Hall, which seats 2,500, and the Perelman Theater, which seats 650. In addition, a rooftop garden and several smaller performance rooms are also located on site. In addition to the Philadelphia Orchestra, Kimmel Center hosts hundreds of musical acts each year as well as many plays and live shows, some of which are free. Philadelphia Zoo: America’s First Zoo Philadelphia’s U.S. Mint: The history of America’s coin production Through the vicissitudes of the economy, have you ever wondered exactly how the economy works? You can learn about the history of currency in the United States at the United States Mint in Philadelphia. If you’ve ever looked closely at the letters and numbers that comprise serial numbers on coins, you’ve likely noticed some “P” letters or coins lacking mint marks. That “P” stands for Philadelphia—America’s first mint. At the mint, you can see actual coins in production and learn about the history of coin production in the United States. The mint also provides a fair amount of information on how the Federal Reserve regulates the economy using currency production level and interest rates. The imposing structure of the mint is intimidating to some visitors, especially in contrast with the other more welcome attractions in immediate vicinity, such as the National Constitution Center. The mint’s exterior is designed with security in mind, this being the fourth incarnation of the building and the world’s largest mint. There are no grandeur windows on this building as there are on nearby attractions. When you enter the building, you must pass through a security system similar to what you would experience at an airport. National Constitution Center: Exploring the Constitution in its hometown The National Constitution Center is an innovative history experience located in Old City, Philadelphia. Overlooking Independence Hall, it exudes a serene and protective presence over the historical attractions. A versatile facility, the National Constitution Center houses permanent installments, rotating exhibits and space for private theater events and parties. The second floor of the center allows visitors to look out over the historical attractions in the city with a view centered directly on Independence Hall. The center focuses on presenting the history of the United States Constitution and the principles of the revolutionary era in a manner immediately relevant to today’s America. The highly acclaimed centerpiece of the National Constitution Center is the Signers’ Hall (located on the second floor). This area features sculptures of the signers of the historical document as well as a table especially for visitors. Under George Washington’s supervision, visitors can sign their own names to the Constitution. The detailed sculptures reveal the size and height of each actual signer as well as specific detail in manner of dress. Knowledgeable docents are available to provide additional information about each signer. DISCOVER Please Touch Museum The Philadelphia Zoo is considered to be America’s first and oldest zoo. Located on the west bank of the Schuylkill River, this popular tourist attraction was founded in 1859 is home to more than 1,300 animals and is situated on 42 acres of land. Popular attractions at the Philadelphia Zoo include a large children’s zoo, paddleboat lake and a hot air balloon ride. In addition, the zoo features dozens of fun exhibits designed to educate patrons on wildlife and wildlife conservation throughout the world. Now, taking kids to the Museum is better than ever. The nation’s premier children’s museum—has a new home in Fairmount Park in the Memorial Hall—a National Historic Landmark built in 1876 for the Centennial Exhibition celebrating the country’s 100th birthday—it boasts three times more space for exhibitions and programs. Just outside the museum, kids and adults will also delight in riding the meticulously restored 1908 Woodside Park Dentzel Carousel. The city’s award-winning children’s museum is fun-filled, totally hands-on, and so delightful that adults are entertained, too. Each nook and cranny has a different theme—from the fantastic to the practical. In Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, kids can play croquet with the Queen and sip tea with the Mad Hatter; nearby, oversized props bring Maurice Sendak’s classics to life. Kids can take the wheel of a real bus and sail a boat on a mini-Delaware River; in “Nature’s Pond,” the youngest visitors (age 3 and under) can discover animals nestled among high grass and a lily pond, or enjoy stories and nursery rhymes in “Fairytale Garden.” Please Touch is also a first live theater experience for young children—Please Touch Playhouse performances are original and interactive and take place daily! The Rocky Statue One of Philadelphia’s most famous pieces of public art is a bigger-than-life boxer—literally. Originally created for the movie Rocky III, the sculpture is now a real-life monument to a celluloid hero. The fictional Rocky Balboa of Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky movies was immortalized in bronze in 1980. After filming for the movie completed, Stallone donated the statue to the City of Philadelphia. The statue is located at the bottom of the stairs at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, so be sure to get a photo with Rocky Balboa himself. As famous than the statue itself are the stairs leading to the East Entrance of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, aka “The Rocky Steps.” Making the iconic trip up the steps is regarded as a symbol of perseverance and determination. Each year, thousands of people, young and old, recreate the scene from the legendary movie and make the trek up the steps. So remember to pack running shoes before you make the trip! Once you reach the top and mimic Rocky’s triumphant celebration, turn around for a breathtaking view of the scenic Benjamin Franklin Parkway and the Center City skyline. CHALLENGE BUILD 20 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Sunday Night: Sure to Be Your Most Memorable of All in Philadelphia As you exit the exhibit hall you will enter "Signers Hall," easily one of the highlights of the NCC. Here you can walk amidst life-size bronze statues of the 42 delegates to the Constitutional Convention as they may have been seated or standing in Independence Hall. This is a prime photo spot where visitors can have their picture taken standing next to statues of men such as Benjamin Franklin or George Washington. But, be forewarned: For special events many of the “statues” have been known to give a little wink, or even a “pinch” or two if the opportunity presents itself. Just outside of "Signers Hall" is one of the few 1787 newspaper printings of the Constitution of the United States. As you exit "Signers Hall" you once again enter the public area of the hall where there is an Internet cafe where you can e-mail government officials and watch government proceedings on a large video wall. Look out the huge glass windows and you will have a stunning view of Independence Mall and Independence Hall, three blocks to the south. The NCC includes a 225-seat ground-level indoor restaurant with outdoor terrace seating above. It also is home to the Annenberg Center for Education and Outreach, which includes the large Kirby Auditorium. The NCC is high on the day-trip itinerary for most schools in the Mid-Atlantic region of the country. The NCC was designed by the architectural firm of Pei Cobb Freed & Partners. The firm is responsible for the expansion of the Louvre in Paris and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland. Ralph Appelbaum Associates designed the NCC's visitor experiences and exhibition hall. Appelbaum has created the visitor experiences and exhibition halls at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. and the Rose Planetarium in New York City. As you wander throughout the Constitution Center, you will find plenty of food and drink stations, as well as lots of good entertainment to keep you satiated during this special opportunity for your private exploration of the Constitution Center. And, as you wander, remember that everyone there is part of the ASPE family of members, friends, and relatives. Be sure to stop and say hello; network; make some new friends; get reacquainted with old friends—but most important of all, relax, enjoy, and remember that the Constitution Center is a reminder of the vital role Philadelphia played in the birth and early development of the United States and our freedoms and systems of government. Be Sure to Save Sunday night, October 31, 2010, from 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm. The National Constitution Center will be reserved exclusively for this private exploration of the Constitution Center just for attendees to the ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition. Attendees will have exclusive attendance and can walk the Center and see all the exhibitions at their leisure. Enjoy an evening of fun, food, dancing, and music. (Dinner will be served buffet style, and a base variety of wine, beer, and soft drinks will be available throughout the event. Liquor and related drinks, specialty beers, and premium wines will be at extra cost to attendees.) The Constitution Center is located just a short walk from all of the Convention Hotels. However, special trolley buses will be on a continuous shuttle from the hotels to the Center. Celebrating its third anniversary in 2006, the National Constitution Center (NCC) has become one of Philadelphia’s most popular attractions. With major exhibits scheduled every year, attendance continues to increase dramatically as more locals and visitors discover this attraction, equal to those along the Mall in Washington, D.C. The National Constitution Center's location, near the Independence Visitor Center, Independence Hall, and the new Liberty Bell Center, is a keen reminder of the important role that Philadelphia played in the birth and early development of the United States and our system of government. As you walk into the NCC you can't help but feel a sense of awe at the size of the building and its feeling of openness. The NCC contains 160,000 square feet of public space, including the galleries. It also includes 67,785 square feet of exhibit space, which will be in heavy use during the next year. As you look high above you, notice the flags of each of the states and U.S. territories, along with a huge, 12' x 18' American flag that has flown above each state and territorial capitol, as well as over the John A. Wilson building in Washington D.C. For this evening, there will be special additional shows of the 17-minute multimedia and live action presentation called “Freedom Rising,” combining film, a live actor, and video projection on a 360-degree screen. There will be no waiting to purchase tickets. However, you will have to be sure to go the ticket desk to get your timed ticket for your seat in the 336-seat Kimmel Theater The multimedia presentation “Freedom Rising” is often the first exploration. However, you have the whole night in Constitution Center just for the American Society of Plumbing Engineers. As you wait for the show, you can wander through a circular pre-theater exhibit "Philadelphia 1787," which depicts Philadelphia at the time of the writing of the Constitution. At the end of the presentation you will exit at the top of the theater where you enter the large DeVos Exhibit Hall, where you will find numerous multimedia interactive exhibits telling the story of the Constitution and of the many civic responsibilities derived from it. Numerous exhibits of period artifacts are also on display as well as 10 walk-in period environments. Circling the hall on the wall above is the entire text of the U.S. Constitution and all amendments. Also on this level is the "Family Theater," which contains a fun and humorous look at the Bill of Rights through a "Top Ten List" of the first 10 Amendments. All attendees and their paid guests to the Convention will have a special patch on their badges that will be their Entrance Tickets for Attending the Sunday Night Event at the National Constitution Center. (PLEASE NOTE: The ASPE Convention requires a paid registration fee Separate from the Engineered Plumbing Exposition.) IN ADDITION: All Sponsors and Patrons will receive from the Exposition Hall Staff an allotted number of complimentary tickets and/or special badge patches based on the size of the sponsorship and patron amount — the tickets will be brought to your booth. NOTICE: Everyone in attendance at the Convention and the Engineered Plumbing Exposition is welcome to attend this and all other networking and social events. HOWEVER, if you do not have Separate Entrance Tickets in your registration packet, or the special Patch on your badge, there is an additional separate fee you will need to pay to attend this event. (See Convention Registration Form or talk with the Exposition Hall Staff.) EVERYONE AT THE CONVENTION AND THE EXPOSITION IS WELCOME TO ALL THE NETWORKING AND SOCIAL EVENTS. HOWEVER, THE COSTS FOR THE SOCIAL AND NETWORKING EVENTS ARE INCLUDED AS PART OF THE CONVENTION REGISTRATION FEE OR ARE SUPPLEMENTED BY THE SPONSORS AND SOME PATRONS. ALL EXHIBITORS WHO ARE NOT PAID CONVENTION ATTENDEES, EXPOSITION SPONSORS, OR PATRONS SHOULD CHECK WITH THE EXPOSITION HALL STAFF TO PURCHASE TICKETS TO THIS OR ANY OTHER NETWORKING OR SOCIALIZING EVENT. DISCOVER CHALLENGE BUILD ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô21 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE WIN A BRAND-NAME LAP- TOP EVERY 15 MNINUTES Every Paid Registrant or Attendee to the EPE Receives Tickets T U M oInNG E i t n O RvAeW e on 010 it in th S IZE0beCD r 2, 2 dropping G N Y PNRov0em ore 1 A ef N b D I et S DD TUE Tuesde isay,on th2isptiocksition Hall. 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ONE MAJOR-BRAND LAPTOP COMPUTER WILL BE GIVEN AWAY EVERY 15 MINUTES. YOU HAVE JUST 15 MINUTES TO GO TO THE PRIZE DRAWING ROOM AND CLAIM YOU LAPTOP. IDENTIFICATION WILL BE REQUIRED. IN ACCORDANCE TO FEDERAL REGULATIONS, YOU WILL ALSO BE REQUIRED TO FILL OUT AN ASPE GIFT FORM. ALL UNCLAIMED PRIZES WILL BE PUT BACK INTO THE DRAWING POT UNTIL ALL PRIZES ARE GIVEN AWAY. WIN A 65” LARGE SCREEN TELEVISION* 4 GRAND PRIZES/DAY (*In lieu of the actual television set, you will receive a BEST BUY GIFT CARD) Every Paid Registrant or Attendee to the EPE Receives Tickets FOUR 65” HD LCD TELEVISION WILL BE GIVEN AWAY EVERY DAY, ONE APPROXIMATELY EVERY 1½ HOURS. YOU WILL HAVE JUST 15 MINUTES TO GO TO THE PRIZE DRAWING ROOM AND CLAIM YOUR BEST BUY GIFT CERTIFICATE. IDENTIFICATION WILL BE REQUIRED. IN ACCORDANCE TO FEDERAL REGULATIONS, YOU WILL ALSO BE REQUIRED TO FILL OUT AN ASPE GIFT FORM. ALL UNCLAIMED PRIZES WILL BE PUT BACK INTO THE DRAWING POT UNTIL ALL PRIZES ARE GIVEN AWAY. First Step: Be sure that you drop your prize-drawing ticket into the correct box on the Exposition Floor. Boxes are clearly marked and have a large sample copy of the ticket you should put in the box. Remember: 1. Put the right ticket in the right box. 2. Be sure your name is PRINTED on the ticket if it hasn’t already been printed by the computer. (Tickets with no names just don’t win anything.) 3. Be sure that you are putting the right ticket for the the correct prize in the correct box. Remember: Laptop computers are given away every 15 minutes. 2 010 2 0 Conven tion 10 GG RRAANN Co DD PR M nv PRIZE D en tio O R IZ n E D AWING RA NT W IN U G D Engi Octobneered Pl & um er Phila 30 th Nov bing Expo Be embe En delp sit sur Oc gine hia, Penn r 3 rd, 20ion to ere sylvan 10 Bmeasu rkeree you MTo ia Ph ber 3 d Plu & ila 0 th m u r a uensdday, N marke d cyo delp N bin ove g ntar nnam mee is ay h o d coon v ia m E tain ineerrs is oon, th Oc tiember 1, , Pennbser 3xrdpositio s inin thn t is ck y , hisp tobeet befo 2 010 lvania2010n the e Ex Exp toicsik tiorn2H8 re dropp ing it Yo , 2l. osit et b al um in th e 0 ion for e 08 Pu ust e H t Yo all. dro The thisu mbue p pp its ve purcha ing tic st breesepnre ndo ser anP To rs an d/orut thke W se it in To IN d ag bear is t ck t in tnht in W th ents er of th tiin The pu t e IN he beot in b e h h rch is tic its ven aseforrand x ox aolln all when yo beaket dors an any/or d agpenersonreragofreesthis tick on wlyh on ur nam ts for al inan to ind et agrees ly en Mon juyrypersoemnan to indo e is em y , loss lifinj y , los nnifT an ud hold hayormulesr n day; at an called. or o anury ther d hold s or othere liasbild y ti ityaarisin s theaAm liab harm me. can So ility less y; ag frommthieries eve aris the ing Am t an is nt.caciellty of Plumbing En from eric gineers y tim ed. this an So and even ciet y t. of P lum bing e. Eng inee Y rs an D A EA SY d $2,500 Value USE THE CORRECT COLOR TICKET WITH THE PRINTED DAY ON IT FOR THE GRAND PRIZE DRAWING BINS (BE SURE TO PRINT YOUR NAME!) ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô The ASPE Almanac: Get Extra Tickets to Win a Laptop or a Grand Prize HOW TO USE THE ASPE ALMANAC The 2010 ASPE Almanac is a customized book to use at the 2010 ASPE Engineered Plumbing Exposition. The Almanac is simple. Inside, beside some of the wit and aphorisms of the 1700s, each page has a sample logo outline of each Sponsor or Patron in sizes representational to their sponsorship level: Diamond, Platinum, Gold, Silver, and Bronze. All you need to do, as you walk around the floor, is stop by to see each Sponsor and Patron and ask them for one of their logo stickers. You need to fill only one book to get tickets for the laptops and the grand prizes for both Monday and Tuesday. There are about 300 exhibitors and perhaps as many as 100 sponsors; therefore, you will have the two days of the EPE to fill in the Almanac. You must fill in every spot in the Almanac with the correct company's logo sticker. When you complete your Almanac, take it to one of the many ASPE redemption desks around the Exposition Floor. They will exchange a completed Almanac for the extra laptop and grand prize drawing tickets. Don’t forget to clearly print your name on the tickets before dropping them into the prize drawing boxes, and be sure you drop the right ticket into the right collection box on the right day. Please take the time to talk with the exhibitor about their product and thank them for being a Sponsor or a Patron. Without them, there would be no laptops, no grand prizes, and no lunches and snacks on the Exposition Floor. ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô 2008-2010 ASPE Board Members President Julius A. Ballanco, P.E., CPD, FASPE JB Engineering and Code Consulting, P.C. Munster, IN Vice President, Technical William F. Hughes, Jr., LEED AP, CPD Robinson Green Beretta, Providence, RI Vice President, Education Diane M. Wingard, CPD KTD Consulting Engineers, Altamonte Springs, FL Vice President, Legislative Gregory A. Farmer, P.E. Hodge Associates, Knoxville, TN Vice President, Membership Jeffrey L. Ingertson, CPD Titeflex Corporation-Gastite Division, Sierra Vista, AZ Vice President, Affiliate William M. Smith Jay R. Smith Mfg. Co., Montgomery, AL Secretary Gregory L. Mahoney, CPD, FASPE Treasurer Gregory L. Mahoney, CPD, FASPE Region 1 Director R. Paul Silvestre B.J. Terroni Company, Inc., Bensalem, PA Region 2 Director Mitchell J. Clemente, CPD Westlake Reed Leskosky, Cleveland, OH Region 3 Director David H. Anelli Heery Design, Orlando, FL Region 4 Director Matthew R. Bell, CPD Plumbing Systems Design, Santee, CA Region 5 Director Timothy A. Smith, CPD Engineered Building Solutions LLC, Algonquin, IL ASPE Education Committee Commitee Chairs Diane M. Wingard, CPD KTD Consutling Engineers, Altamonte, FL Scott Steindler, CPD Huntersville, NC Committee Members Haig Demergian, P.E., CPD Los Angeles, CA Ethan Grossman, CPD Symmes Maini & McKee Associates, Inc., Cambridge, MA Forrest A. Flanagan, CPD McGrath, Inc, Denver, CO Julius E. Miller, SET, CPD Fratto Engineering, Inc., Arlington, TX DISCOVER Joseph V. Messina, CPD CUH2A, Inc., Atlanta, GA James E. Stenqvist, CPD DTC, North Haven, CT Michael D. Danielson, CPD Reed, Wells, Benson & Co., Dallas, TX Harold L. Olsen, P.E. University of Wisconsin Madison, Madison, WI Stephen E. Howe, P.E. New York State Education Dept., Albany, NY Sherry Petrin Host Committee Vice-Chair W. Kenneth Clark Chicago Faucets, Des Plaines, IL Delta Faucets, West Vancouver, BC Zurn Industries, Erie, PA John Bertella Ernie Rink Halsey Taylor, Birmingham, AL Ronald Grabski Gerber Plumbing Fixtures Corp., Lincolnwood, IL Kevin Jones Jay R. Smith Mfg. Co, Montgomery, AL Furlow Associates, Claymont, DE Host Committee Treasurer Dave Holst Bala Consulting Engineers, King of Prussia, PA Host Committee Secretary Dawn Bishop David Lewis Robert Quasius Timothy Allinson Brian Suriner Host Committee Members R. Paul Silvestre, Region 1 Chair United Engineering Group, Charlotte, NC Murray Company, Rancho Dominquez, CA 2010 Convention Committee Kohler Co., Kohler, WI McGuire Manufacturing Co., Cheshire, CT Jennifer Hoff National Trade Productions, Alexandria, VA Convention Co-Chairs Frank M. Heine, CPD, FASPE Thomas Assocs. Arch. & Eng., Ithaca, NY Scott Steindler, CPD Huntersville, NC William O’Donnell, CPD, FASPE PWI Engineering, Philadelphia, PA Brian Henry Exhibitors Advisory Committee Richard Lewis Chair William M. Smith Jay R. Smith Mfg. Co., Montgomery, AL American Standard, Piscataway, NJ Members Rachid Kaina Patterson Pump Co., Toccoa, GA, Jeff Henscheid PVI Industires, Inc., Fort Worth, TX Donald Yurkovich Sloan Valve Co., Franklin Park, IL Marvin Yoder Tiger Flow Systems, Inc., Dallas, TX Willoughby Industries, Inc., Indianapolis, IN Sargent & Lundy, Wilmington, DE B.J. Terroni Co., Bensalem, PA Steve Ziga, CPD, SET, CFPS hpeGROUP, Fountainville, PA Jerry Oflazian AKF Engineers, Burlington Township, NJ Michael Panco Furlow Associates, Claymont, DE Bruce Miller Tyler Pipe/ Wade Drains Matthew Martin James Martin Company Philadelphia Host Committee Host Committee Chair William T. O’Donnell, CPD, FASPE PWI Engineering, Philadelphia, PA Patrick Kimener CHALLENGE BUILD 22 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô23 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô Name: First Name Postal Code: Arrival Date: __________ / __________ M.I. DISCOVER $159 sngl/dbl $147 sngl/dbl $129 sngl/dbl $119 sngl/dbl the Tuesday Banquet (TBA). CHALLENGE BUILD For fastest processing, make your reservation using the internet at housing.aspe.org If you have questions e-mail the Housing Bureau at [email protected] (If you do not receive e-mail acknowledgement in 3 days or so, be sure to check you spam box before contacting the housing bureau.) DO NOT SEND THIS HOUSING FORM OR PAYMENT TO THE ASPE OFFICE. Return Hotel Reservation Form By Fax or E-Mail to: ASPE 2010 Housing Bureau Fax: (847)635-3360 u E-mail: [email protected] The housing bureau will send confirmation via E-mail. v u w x ** Headquarters hotel. This is where the Board of Directors will be housed, is the location of a majority of Exhibitor Hospitality and uDowntown Marriott Hotel**— (1201 Market Street) vMarriott Courtyard Hotel— (21 N. Juniper Street) wLowes Hotel— (1200 Market Street) xHampton Inn— (1301 Race Street) Note: Room rates do not include 15.2% room taxes (state, local and assessment). Hotel parking additional cost. Map # Hotel Name & Address Room Rates Sngl/Dbl Convention Hotels and Rates (see map below): r r CET r CPD rFASPE r LEED Single (1 person) Double (2 pers; 1 bed) r King r Queen Dbl/Dbl (2 pers, 2 beds) Triple (3 persons, 2 beds) Quad (4 persons, 2 beds) Other: _______________ Type of Room MAKE A COPY OF THIS HOTEL REGISTRATION FORM FOR YOUR FILES For Fastest Hotel Reservations . . . Go Online at housing.aspe.org Don't delay. Get your reservation in as quickly as possible. All room reservation requests will be processed and given priority in the order received by the ASPE Housing Bureau. Acknowledgement or Confirmation. An acknowledgement or a confirmation will be sent after each reservation booking, modification and/or cancellation. Review the acknowledgement/confirmation carefully for accuracy. If you do not receive an acknowledgement or a confirmation via e-mail, fax or mail within 14 days after any transaction, please contact the ASPE Housing Bureau by Fax: (847) 635-3360 or E-mail to: aspehousing@ aspe.org. All changes, new reservations or cancellations MUST be made by e-mail, fax, or online. Modification/Cancellation. Reservation requests, modifications and/or cancellations must be made via e-mail, fax, or online, to the ASPE Housing Bureau by September 24, 2010 at 5:00 pm Central Standard Time — with no penalty. After this date, direct all changes to the designated hotel. Any cancellations made within 72 hours of scheduled arrival date are subject to forfeiture of one night's room and tax that will be charged to your credit card. Do not contact your hotel until September 25th or until the hotel has sent you its own confirmation, as they will not have a record of your reservation until then. Convention Room Rates. To take advantage of the special ASPE Conference room rates, book your reservation by September 24, 2010. ASPE cannot guarantee convention room rates and availability at the convention hotels after September 24, 2010. After this date, the official ASPE room blocks will be released and the hotels may charge significantly higher rates. Reservation requests, cancellations or changes must be sent directly to the ASPE Housing Bureau up to September 24, 2010. Reservation Deadline is September 24, 2010. After this date the ASPE Housing Bureau will no longer be able to process reservations or changes. Individuals will be required to contact the hotels directly — be sure you have a hotel confirmation letter or form. Name: (as on card: pls. print): Cardholder's Signature: Card Number: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| r VISA rMasterCard rAMEX r Discover Exp. Date: ______ / ______ Notice: Your credit card is used to guarantee the required hotel deposit amount. CVV stands for credit card verification value. The CVV is a 3 or 4 digit code embossed or without a valid credit card number will be returned and will not be processed. Please fill out the credit card information including expiration date. Credit cards must be valid through November 2010 in order to be considered a proper guarantee. Guarantee Information: A credit card must be provided with each reservation request. Requests received If your preferences are not available, you will be assigned to the next available hotel. If no option is specified, the next hotel will be assigned based on availability. Bed type preferences will be on a first- come first-assigned basis. Smoking Room Preference: Most hotels are now non-smoking hotels. You may provide a preference; however, there is little chance of finding a smoking room. r Smoking r Non–Smoking * For suite information and availability at any of the hotels, please contact ASPE's Jinnie Yoo, Meeting Coordinator at (847) 296-0002 who will help arrange for a suite. All Hospitality Suite requests require approval from the ASPE office and are first provided for Exhibitors. Hotels will contact you directly regarding any additional deposit. Hotel Preference (See hotels and map on left) 1st Choice _________________________ r 2nd Choice _________________________ r 3rd Choice _________________________ Special Room Types r r One Bedroom Suite * r r Two Bedroom Suite* r r Hospitality Suite* r Please list your choices of hotels, in order of preference, and the preferred type of room. All room requests are processed on a first–come, first–reserved basis and cannot be guaranteed. While every effort will be made to provide you with your Bed-type room preference, hotels assign room based on the availability during actual check-in. Hotel and Room Preferences: am pm Zip: |___|___|___|___|___|–|___|___|___|___| P.E. am pm Departure Date: __________ / __________ Time: __________ Fax Number: E-Mail (Required): Last Name State/Province: Are you Physically Challenged or need other Special Room Requirements? r YES Please describe requirements: ________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ Time: ___________ Daytime Phone Number: Country: City: Billing Address: Organization: FUTURE OF ASPE First Name M.I. Last Name First Name M.I. $______ $______ $______ $______ One-Day Registration (Available as On-site Registration Only) Tuesday, 11/2 ** 09 _____ $495 Wednesday, 11/3 ** 10 _____ $350 ➙ q Check here and attach a second registration form. Bring your boss with you at no additional charge. Special Complimentary Attendance for the BOSS! SUB–TOTAL: $ Two to Four Paid Convention Attendees from the same firm 10% Discount on Convention Registration Five or more Paid Convention Attendees from the same firm 15% Discount on Convention Registration NOTE: Discount applies to each paid registration. Requirements: All registration forms MUST be submitted together and with only one payment provided. **Special Discounts for Multiple Attendees from Same Firm (Included in prices above) Requirements: Boss may not be a member of ASPE or if Boss is a member of ASPE, may not have been to an ASPE Convention since 2004. Spouse Special: “Green” Carry all Bag; ASPE Pashmina’s (colors); Stretch Gloves; Cardigan Sweater; Scarf. Spouse/Guest/Companion (Special offer — First 250 spouses registered by 9/17 will receive a complimentary ASPE Spouse Love Philly Bag at registration; perfect for a chilly night in Philadelphia) Full Registration By Sept. 17, 2010 15 _____ $ 125 $______ After Sept. 17 16 _____ $150 $______ $______ $______ 07 _____ $880 08 _____ $930 Full Registration without ASPE Membership By Sept. 17, 2010 After Sept. 17 Full Registration with 1–year ASPE Membership (Download membership form at www.aspe.org) (a completed membership application must be included with your registration) By Sept. 17, 2010 05 _____ $880 $______ 2-4 From same firm** 05 _____ $790 ea $______ 5 or more from same firm** 05 _____ $750 ea $______ After Sept. 17 06 _____ $930 $______ 2-4 From same firm** 06 _____ $840 ea $______ 5 or more from same firm** 06 _____ $790 ea $______ Non–Member: One-Day Registration (Available as On-site Registration Only) Tuesday, 11/2 ** 03 _____ $400 Wednesday, 11/3 ** 04 _____ $295 All full registrations include: Entrance into the exposition; Attendance at all program sessions; Saturday Welcome Reception; Sunday Opening Reception; and Tuesday Banquet. In addition, a spouse/companion registration provides access to the spouse social activities and the hospitality room during the Convention. All paid registrants are also eligible for all prize drawings on the Exposition floor. Total Member: No. Fee Fee Full Registration By Sept. 17, 2010 01 _____ $695 $______ 2-4 From same firm** 01 _____ $625 ea $______ 5 or more from same firm** 01 _____ $590 ea $______ After Sept. 17 02 _____ $745 $______ 2-4 From same firm** 02 _____ $670 ea $______ 5 or more from same firm** 02 _____ $635 ea $______ Registration Fees: Last Name No. Total $90 $______ $105 $______ $105 $______ $90 $______ $45 $______ $25 $______ $42 $______ Fee 43 _____ $125 $______ 44 _____ $125 $______ For Fast Processing, FAX Orders to: (847) 296–2963 For Fastest Processing, go to www.aspe.org 2980 S. River Rd., Des Plaines, IL 60018–4203 (847) 296–0002 • E-mail: [email protected] American Society of Plumbing Engineers Return Registration Form With Payment to: ASPE is hereby authorized to charge my Convention Registration Fees to my credit card. $ r VISA rMasterCard rAMEX r Discover Name: (as on card-pls. print clearly) ____________________________________________ Card #: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Exp Date: ___ / ___ Cardholder's Signature ____________________________ TOTAL: GET SUPER SPECIAL EARLY BIRD DISCOUNT: 5%: SEE COUPON IN THIS TABLOID FOR CODE. MUST REGISTER ONLINE AND ENTER CODE. GOOD ONLY UNTIL AUGUST 13, 2010 Big Apple Tour, 8:00 am to 6:00 pm (Limit 21) Children (age 3-9) Special Post Conv Tour— Thursday (November 4) Brandywine, Longwood, Winterthur, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm(Limit 28)42 _____ $87 $______ Wednesday (November 3) Saturday (October 30) The Philadelphia Story, 10:00 am to 1:00 pm (Limit 28) 30 _____ Meet the Candidates Reception at CC Grand Ballroom (Included with each paid registration) Grand Prix Race Tickets (Included with each paid registration) Grand Prix Race Tickets — Additional Tickets 31 _____ Sunday (October 31) Colonial Philadelphia Experience, 10:00 am to 1:00 pm (Limit 28) 32 _____ Opening Reception: National Convention Center (Included with each paid registration) Opening Reception — Additional tickets 33 _____ Monday (November 1) Simple Life: Pennsylvania’s Amish, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm (Limit 28) 34 _____ Tuesday (November 2) Philadelphia Mural Arts Tour, 10:00 am to 3:30 pm(Limit 28) 40 _____ ASPE Banquet 6:30 pm (Included with each paid registration) Additional Banquet Tickets 6:30 pm 41 _____ Special See Philadelphia Program and Events: Tours and Special Events: ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙CARRY FORWARD SUB–TOTAL: $ 1. Quick, easy, simple registration at www.aspe.org. 2. This form must be completed and returned with full payment before your registration can be processed. 3. Please complete a separate registration form for each Convention Registrant. 4. Fees are in U.S. funds. 5. Cancellations and requests for refunds must be in writing. A full refund, less a $85 administration fee, will be made if written notice is postmarked by September 17, 2010. Sorry, no refunds on registration fees or tickets issued after September 17, 2010 or ordered with special discount code. 6. Refunds will be made no later than thirty days after the Convention. About Registration Badge Nickname: (e.g., Dave, Bob, Mary, Sue, "Doc," "Smiley," etc.): |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Name: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| |___| |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Badge Nickname: (e.g., Dave, Bob, Mary, Sue, "Doc," "Smiley," etc.): |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Name: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| |___| |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Registered & Paid Youth Badge Nickname: (e.g., Dave, Bob, Mary, Sue, "Doc," "Smiley," etc.): |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Name: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| |___| |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| First Name M.I. Last Name q P.E. q CET q CPD q FASPE q LEED Spouse/Guest/Companion Registration Daytime Phone Number: |__|__|__|–|__|__|__|–|__|__|__|__| E-mail Address (Required): __________________________________ Is this your first ASPE Convention? q YES q NO Badge Nickname: (e.g., Dave, Bob, Mary, Sue, "Doc," "Smiley," etc.): |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Name: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| |___| |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| First Name M.I. Last Name q P.E. q CET q CPD q FASPE q LEED Check One: q Engineer/Designer q Architect q Contractor q Manufacturer q Mfr. Rep q Wholesaler q Code Official q Press q Educator q Other:_________________ Organization: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Title: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Billing Address: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| City: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| State/Province:|___|___| Zip: |___|___|___|___|___|–|___|___|___|___| Country: |___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___| Postal Code: |___|___|___|___|___|___| Fax Number: |__|__|__|–|__|__|__|–|__|__|__|__| Registration InformationMUST Supply ASPE or other Organization Member Number: ___________ Membership Discount Applies to Following Organizations (Check one): q ASPE q ASSE q ASHRAE q ICC q IAPMO q MCAA q NFPA q PCA q SFPE q WTO óôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô Philadelphia, PA October 30 - November 3, 2010 FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE Title: Philadelphia, PA October 30 - November 3, 2010 RING 2010 ASPE Convention & registration IN THE Engineered Plumbing Exposition FORM óôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô Hotel Registration & Confirmation Information FUTURE OF ASPE HOUSING FORM IN THE ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙ ➙➙➙➙➙➙➙➙➙➙ RING 2010 ASPE Convention & IN THE Engineered Plumbing Exposition RING 2010 ASPE Convention & Engineered Plumbing Exposition RING American Society of Plumbing Engineers IN THE FUTURE ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô OF ASPE The 2010 ASPE Convention (Continued from front page) With more than six educational and technical programming hours, a participant may easily earn 7½ educational contact hours (0.75 CEU or 7.5 PDHs). Due to the nature of the ASPE Engineered Plumbing Exposition—the fact that it is only an educational and technical event without any sales or buyer opportunities—each continuous hour spent on the Exposition floor will earn one contact hour of education credits (0.1 CEU or 1.0 PDH). With the potential for 10 total hours of One main thing about an ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition is the number of opportunities you have for meeting with friends, making new ones, and just having plain-old fun. ASPE Hospitality Room with Complimentary Wi-Fi Every paid attendee to the Convention gets automatic entry into the Hospitality area, a relaxed gathering place where you will find continental breakfasts, morning and afternoon snacks, and plenty of coffee and cold drinks, along with tables and chairs. The Hospitality area is open every day of the Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition (Saturday, October 30 through Wednesday, November 3). This is also the place to visit with the host chapter and find out the places to go and the things to do. For ever yone with access to the Hospitality area, all paid registrants to the Convention, Special Guests of the Society, and our good friends, the Sponsors and Patrons of the Exposition, the Hospitality Room has something very special. You will find that the hospitality room is especially equipped and will provide you with complimentary Wi-Fi connection. American Society of Plumbing Engineers Certificate Of Completion Awarded to Joe B. Engineer, CPD For 2008 ASPE Convention Domestic Water Piping Workshop .35 Continuing Education Units Issued President Executive Director exclusive Exposition time, this will provide an additional 10 contact hours (1.0 CEU or 10 PDHs). The Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition offer the opportunity to earn 1.75 CEUs, representing more than 17 hours of educational contact. (Note: While all ASPE technical and educational programs have been approved in advance for acceptance in each state requiring credit units for recertification, relicensing, or re-registration, not all states will recognize the credits earned on the Exposition floor. It is left to the participant to decide whether to use such credit hours.) The Only One of Its Kind The Engineered Plumbing Exposition continues to be the largest and premier plumbing products-only show in North America. More than 300 exhibitors will be displaying their products in over 650 booths. Booth personnel who are from the engineering side of manufacturing will present new products and cutaways. The emphasis is pointed directly at you—the plumbing engineer, designer, and contractor professional. Philadelphia in 2010 will be the ONLY place to be if you want to see not only the latest, but also virtually every plumbingrelated technology, product, and service for the plumbing industry. Enjoy the Area Throughout this brochure you will find information on what there is to do in and around Philadelphia. If this is your first time to the city, be sure to check out the ASPE get-acquainted tours being offered. If you can take the time to come a day or two early or stay for a few days after the Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition, you are urged to do so and take additional advantage of all there is to do throughout the northeast corridor of the United States. National Constitution Center It’s not All Work Meet the Candidates On Saturday we will hold the Delegate Meet the Candidates Reception. This year we will meet just outside the Delegate and ASPE Business Meeting room so all the delegates will have some time to talk to and discuss issues with the candidates for the 2010–2012 board of directors, while being able to enjoy a glass of wine and some cheese. This will provide an unbelievable opportunity to have exclusive access to the candidates during the hours of the reception. The Grand Prix Also on Saturday, for those of you who have decided on whom you will be voting for, we will have the 3rd How Fast Can It Go? Chapter Grand Prix. The Grand Prix will be held just down the escalators from the delegate meeting room on the floor of the Train Station. It will be a sight to behold, and if anything like past Grand Prix, a fantastic time will be had by all. Remember, this is just for the enjoyment and fun. Don’t get carried away with the competition. Beer, soft drinks, and pretzels will be the food of choice. When you are finished talking with the candidates and are all yelled out from the race, there are plenty of restaurants located within a three-block radius of the Pennsylvania Convention Center and Marriott Hotel to satisfy any taste. DISCOVER On Sunday night we have got your evening eating and entertainment plans covered. ASPE will have the National Constitution Center on an exclusive basis for three hours (no crowds, no lines). Here you will find a buffet dinner, music and dance opportunities, and exclusive use of everything in the Center. The walk from the hotels to the National Constitution Center is a comfortable six blocks, but if needed, there will be special trolley buses to help you get around. Be sure that you don’t miss out on the multimedia presentation “Freedom Rising.” The Society has bought out the entire hall and there will be extra shows just for our group. You also don’t want to miss out on visiting with all of our forefathers, the signers of the Constitution, of whom you will find lifelike figures in the Hall of Signers. Along with the special exhibitions and “feeling” of being in the middle of where over 200 years of history has been made, you will never again have this special opportunity to explore our freedoms and our country in this personalized setting. Getting in Gear Monday, as on the other days, you won’t want to miss out on the Hospitality area. This is the place to be seen, to see everyone, to meet up and make plans, and to get a drink and a snack. This morning will also have the special keynote speaker Vince Papale, the personification of every man’s dream of walking onto a football field for a tryout and getting to play as a pro. Don’t miss one minute of his inspirational, never give up, talk. Following the Keynote will be the opening of the Exposition. Here is where every attendee gets a sandwich lunch and drinks on the Exposition floor as well as a snack and cold beverage break in the afternoon. Exhibitor Hospitality Monday night is also Exhibitor Hospitality night. As you make the rounds of the exhibits, check with the booth personnel regarding any private parties, receptions, or dinners they have planned for engineers and designers. There are literally dozens and dozens of hospitality suites and special parties and receptions. This is not the time to be shy. Stop by an exhibitor’s booth, talk about the product and then ask where the party is that night. (Don’t forget: Talk about the PRODUCT!) Welcome to the EPE and the Technical Programs Tuesday morning it’s time to wake up and begin to take in the educational programs. From 8:00 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. you will have one of the hardest choices ever to make: CHALLENGE What technical program to attend? With 12 or more programs in each technical program block, it is often hard to figure out which one to choose. But, whichever you pick, get there early as many rooms have been known to be filled to overflowing for popular topics. In the early afternoon the EPE reopens, and once again you have the Hospitality area and lunch and an afternoon snack on the Exposition floor. In the afternoon, you will have the opportunity to attend some additional technical programs. Again, there will be hard choices to make with some very technical and interesting programs. Banquet On Tuesday night is the closing banquet. Be sure to attend, enjoy the food, drink, and festivities, and help honor your peers as the highest honors and awards the Society can bestow are announced, and members are welcomed into the Kenneth Wentink College of Fellows. This is the last opportunity many of you will have to see old friends and continue to network. At the banquet, the new board is introduced and sworn in, followed by an evening of relaxation, entertainment, music, and dancing. The banquet is billed as a black-tie event, so be sure to dress appropriately. This is your event to recognize the leaders of the Society. Don’t miss out “just” because you need to put on a tie and jacket! It’s a lot more than just a plain-old place to get a meal. It’s the place where your visibility is noted and shows that you care about your fellow members, you care about the Society, and you want to show your appreciation for all those who worked so hard to earn the top honors that the Society has to offer. Wednesday Let’s not forget Wednesday. Blear y-eyed or not, there are still some top technical programs available. Don’t miss your last chance to learn. It Only Happens Once Every Two Years! The ASPE Convention and Engineered Plumbing Exposition is only available every two years, in even years. This year it’s in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, October 30–November 3, 2010. Put it on your calendar. Register NOW! ★★★ BUILD 24 ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô ôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôôô