Concrete Canoe

History

Since the 1970’s, The University of Maine has been building and racing concrete canoes. The basic idea was to start with some kind of reinforcement, mold it into the shape of a canoe, place concrete over it, let the concrete cure, remove the mold, and if we’re lucky, the result is a canoe that floats! In the beginning, the canoes weighed over 500 pounds and were raced at the Kenduskeag Stream Canoe Race in Bangor. In 1974, UMaine held the first annual Whitewater Concrete Canoe Race. Eighteen schools participated, making the competition the third largest in the world! Over the past four decades the race has become a national event sponsored by ASCE and Master Builders. The canoes have become lighter and faster, and are raced on flat water. Nationally competitive canoes weigh in at less than 150 pounds. The competition involves men’s, women’s, and co-ed races (200 meter and 600 meter), a design paper, visual display, and an oral presentation. Each year, the University of Maine team continues to improve its technology and applications to become more competitive on the national level.

2016 Team

concrete canoe team

working on a concrete canoe   canoe coming along    working on the canoe

masked students working on canoe    Concrete canoe creation   canoe almost done

Contact

Erik Farnsworth
Devon Logie

Official ASCE Concrete Canoe Contest Page
University of Alabama at Huntsville US Concrete Canoe Page