TUSCUMBIA — Northwest-Shoals Community College’s (NW-SCC) officially opens the new Automotive Service Technology Center (building 129) Wednesday, April 30, 2014, at 1:30 p.m. with a brief press conference followed by an open house.
The opening of the 10,450 square-foot facility which now houses the Automotive Service Technology program was originallyconstructed in 2005 as the Peoples Tires Brakes and Alignment Center. The floor space contains eight training bays (four for oil change and tire rotation and four for automotive mechanical training), classroom and office area, along with ample storage.
The new facility is an upgrade from the previous aging facility of approximately 6,200 square feet which was constructed in the mid 1960s. The new facility offers students the opportunity to train in an environment which is comparable to current industry standards. The new facility also provided an upgrade in needed tools and equipment for the program.
According to NW-SCC President Humphrey Lee, the Automotive Service Technology Center located directly off Avalon Avenue provides needed visibility to the Shoals campus. “The added visibility and expansion the new Auto(motive) ServiceTechnology Center offers the College is tremendous,” said Lee. “Obviously, we are landlocked on the Shoals campus with limited visibility by major highways. This was a fantastic opportunity we could not afford to pass up.”
Since 2007, the Automotive Service Technology program has more than doubled in enrollment and the new facility will hopefully help the program reach new heights. “With the addition of our new training center, we hope we not only train more students on industry standard equipment but also provide our industry partners with highly qualified and ATEF certified technicians in the Shoals and Northwest Alabama region,” stated Rose Jones, Associate Dean of Workforce Development. “The Auto Service program includes associate degree, short and long-term certifications and could potentially lend itself to future certifications such as diesel engine certification.”
The expansion of the Automotive Service Technology program into the new facility is the latest on the Shoals campus since the opening and expansion of the new Applied Engineering and Machining Center (building 111) in October of 2010 and the new Industrial Systems Technology program (building 105) shortly thereafter. The acquisition of the building, a venture that cost the College $615,000, included approximately $50,000 in tools and equipment.
MEDIARELEASE/Trent Randolph/NW-SCC Public Information Officer