Four Wake Forest University engineering students say a nine-month senior project they will present Saturday has allowed them to apply some of what they’ve learned over the past four years while establishing a connection with a part of Winston-Salem they otherwise wouldn’t have made.
Their work centers on the plight of residents living along Brushy Fork Creek who have blamed a 250-acre timber-clearing project at Smith Reynolds Airport in 2015 for severe erosion that has damaged their property.
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