Olivia Plumb
Brooke Owens Fellow, Class of 2020
Georgia Institute of Technology, Mechanical Engineering, ‘21
Host Institution: SpaceX
Mentor: Laura Seward Forczyk
Olivia Plumb is a third-year Mechanical Engineering major at Georgia Institute of Technology with minors in French and Aerospace. She first found an interest in space after reading a Stephen Hawking book for a 5th-grade project, which was quickly followed by a visit to Space Camp. Ever since then, her love for space has only grown. Her time spent abroad and love of engineering has inspired her goal to pursue a career in international aerospace which will help under-served communities and have a positive global impact.
Olivia’s road to pursuing engineering has not always been a straight line. Her senior year of high school, she realized that her path to university was not necessarily one that she had chosen, but rather one that she had accepted as a necessary continuation. She decided that in order to be sure about the direction of her future, she needed to take time to reflect on what really mattered to her, and thus decided to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail. On July 4th of 2017, she summited Mount Katahdin with a renewed passion for learning and for engineering and gladly accepted an undergraduate spot at Georgia Tech.
During her time at Georgia Tech, Olivia has sought to gain a global perspective on her degree and to find her path within the aerospace industry. She spent a summer learning French in Paris, a semester as an exchange student at EPFL in Switzerland where she took engineering coursework in French and has made it a goal to undertake globally-oriented coursework wherever she goes. Following her semester in Switzerland, she spent two months in Paris where she searched for a way to augment her aerospace knowledge outside of her university. She walked daily to the National Library of France to read various textbooks and literature about aerospace engineering and the history of space exploration, which inspired her to undertake a minor in aerospace engineering and to ultimately apply to the Brooke Owens Fellowship. She has spent time contributing to her university’s Martian Renewable Systems Research to investigate the use of in-situ resources in the Mars habitat. She contributed to the CO2-activated concrete team to work towards creating a 3D-printable, habitable structure on Mars and is looking forward to discovering new roles within the aerospace sector.
During the Spring of 2020, Olivia will be working at NASA Langley before interning at SpaceX as a Brooke Owens Fellow. She is excited to gain further experience within the aerospace industry and to put her new knowledge towards a Masters in Aerospace Engineering.