HQ USACE NEWS RELEASES

A Soldier and three other civilian men document events in an airfield tower.
USACE Black Start Exercise Brings Light to Readiness
Nov. 20, 2025 | 
News
Increased installation readiness is the goal of the Black Start Exercise Program, a joint U.S. Army Corps of Engineers-led initiative, to test and...
Read More
Army Executes POTUS Directive on Ambler Road Project
Oct. 23, 2025 | 
News Release
President Donald J. Trump has approved the appeal of the Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority (AIDEA), directing the U.S. Army Corps of...
Read More
USACE introduces new Regulatory Request System module
Sep. 22, 2025 | 
News Release
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced today the launch of a new “No Permit Required” module on its Regulatory Request System (RRS), an innovative...
Read More
Army Corps of Engineers begins implementing policy to increase America’s energy generation efficiency
Sep. 22, 2025 | 
News Release
Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works Adam Telle today directed the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to weigh whether energy projects that might...
Read More
park ranger in foreground looks out toward blue lake from the shore.
Army Corps of Engineers waives fees and invites volunteers to participate in National Public Lands Day, Sept. 27
Sep. 15, 2025 | 
News Release
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced today that it will waive day use fees normally charged at boat launch ramps and swimming beaches at its...
Read More
A group of men and women pose for a picture in a conference room.
USACE Value Engineering Team Recognized on Global Stage
Sep. 09, 2025 | 
News
For the first time in its 250-year history, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers earned a Top 20 finish for its innovative approach to project delivery...
Read More

HQ USACE News

Hololens 2: The future of Engineering and Design

Published Aug. 21, 2020

 

Virtual reality has become a very real tool in the field of engineering.

The Augmented Reality/Virtual Reality (AR/VR) HoloLens 2 is a device used for casting 3D design models into real space via holograms, which engineers can view and interact with using the AR/VR headset.

The HoloLens 2 also allows real-time video chat where people can see precisely what the headset-wearer sees. It has been proven to save both time and money during the design and inspection process and can collect real-time data for immediate use in the field or back home.

“We were able to do a proof of concept and see that it could work. We were able to teleconference from hundreds of miles apart, and they could see everything I was seeing and even draw on the walls, and I could see them pointing arrows and [writing],” Caleb Willard, Mechanical Engineer for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) Walla Walla District, said.

Using this technology, one person can go out on inspections and have a whole team viewing and collaborating in real time with them. At the dams, the HoloLens 2 can help engineers verify designs.

“The device also has capabilities of photographing and recording video of the holograms, so that can be used too for site verification,” Willard said.

The Corps began using HoloLens technology after Dwayne Weston, Chief of Engineering and Construction for the Corps, went to the USACE Innovation Summit in 2019, where the Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) introduced him to the HoloLens 1.

The Corps has since performed proof of concept tests at Lower Monumental and McNary dams, using the AR/VR headset to view 3D design castings of a compressed air system and a newly designed crane.

“The ultimate goal is that it keeps us from having costly and time-consuming design changes because of different site conditions. You can see it; you can almost touch it. You can really accelerate design times,” Willard said.


News/News Release Search

@USACEHQ

Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
X
46,779
Follow Us

News Releases

Hololens 2: The future of Engineering and Design

Published Aug. 21, 2020

 

Virtual reality has become a very real tool in the field of engineering.

The Augmented Reality/Virtual Reality (AR/VR) HoloLens 2 is a device used for casting 3D design models into real space via holograms, which engineers can view and interact with using the AR/VR headset.

The HoloLens 2 also allows real-time video chat where people can see precisely what the headset-wearer sees. It has been proven to save both time and money during the design and inspection process and can collect real-time data for immediate use in the field or back home.

“We were able to do a proof of concept and see that it could work. We were able to teleconference from hundreds of miles apart, and they could see everything I was seeing and even draw on the walls, and I could see them pointing arrows and [writing],” Caleb Willard, Mechanical Engineer for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) Walla Walla District, said.

Using this technology, one person can go out on inspections and have a whole team viewing and collaborating in real time with them. At the dams, the HoloLens 2 can help engineers verify designs.

“The device also has capabilities of photographing and recording video of the holograms, so that can be used too for site verification,” Willard said.

The Corps began using HoloLens technology after Dwayne Weston, Chief of Engineering and Construction for the Corps, went to the USACE Innovation Summit in 2019, where the Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) introduced him to the HoloLens 1.

The Corps has since performed proof of concept tests at Lower Monumental and McNary dams, using the AR/VR headset to view 3D design castings of a compressed air system and a newly designed crane.

“The ultimate goal is that it keeps us from having costly and time-consuming design changes because of different site conditions. You can see it; you can almost touch it. You can really accelerate design times,” Willard said.


Mississippi Valley Division