Shops aid amphibian display

Aug 06, 2019

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F&S crafts and trades services help handle thousands of projects each year across the Urbana campus, but this one is older and rarer than usual: the plaster cast of a 300-million-year old amphibian species called eryops.

The installation of the eryops at the Natural History Building required the capabilities of multiple F&S shops: the painters, mill workers, ironworkers, and machinists. Painters worked on the surrounding gallery walls, while the mill workers designed and built custom wooden exhibit furniture and casework, and the ironworkers designed mounting solutions and assisted with the moving of large and heavy display artifacts. The machinists made adjustable mounts designed to brace various points of the plaster creature. 

“Our shop does such a wide variety of things here at the university that we come to expect this sort of thing,” said Stuart De Haro, machinists foreman. De Haro oversaw a team of Jerry Donaldson, Rocky Atwood, Chris McCoy to help make new easily adjustable supports for the skull and spine of the eryops. “One day we might be rebuilding a pump, the next we could be on a roof, the next we might be making lab equipment. It is different every day, and that’s how we like it. It was a fun project and one that I talk about often now when people ask about the type of work we do here in the machine shop.”

Mill shop foreman Andy Burnett assigned the work to millworker Scott Schmidt, who helped make the custom wood display case.

“Honestly, this is the type of work we do a lot of,” said Burnett. “Custom display cases sized to fit different objects or certificates are what we do. We have done displays for Olympic medals, Illini baseball memorabilia, rare books, and numerous sports trophy cases, to name a few.”

Ironworker Ron Cler acknowledged the attention to detailed needed in helping complete the project, adding, “It was a very interesting project! Extreme care had to be used. I was comfortable, maybe a little nervous, but not too bad. It was fun working on this project and it’s a good conversation topic to discuss at family gatherings.”

Gavin Robinson, collections storage coordinator at Spurlock Museum of World Cultures said, “We advised F&S on ideal mounting methods for a plaster cast. Specifically, that it be easily adjustable and minimally visible. They were very responsive to our suggestions and critiques throughout the design process and also assisted with mount installation.

“We have an excellent working relationship with the many talented F&S staff from various shops.