Music City Grand Prix CEO and MTSU alumnus Matt Crews, left in white shirt, observes Monday, Nov. 9, as MTSU Concrete Industry Management senior and Missouri native Cody Gange, center left, and lab assistant and senior T.J. Paul of Readyville, Tenn., right, assist concrete industry professor Heather Brown, center, with making an eco-friendly concrete mix inside a lab in the Voorhees Engineering Technology Building on the Murfreesboro, Tenn., campus. The mix will be tested for use in race barriers for the August 2021 race in downtown Nashville. In the background, from left, are alumnus Denny Lind of Master Builders Solutions, and MTSU senior Concrete Industry Management majors Austin Gaydosh of Rockvale, Tenn., and Autumn Gates of Murfreesboro. MTSU and the Grand Prix signed a memorandum of understanding Monday formalizing their partnership in support of the event. (MTSU photo by Andy Heidt)
MURFREESBORO Tenn. — Officials from MTSU and the new Music City Grand Prix
signed a partnership Monday, Nov. 9, allowing the university’s acclaimed concrete
program and its students to create special environmentally conscious mixes for
barriers and pit row for the August 2021 open-wheel race in downtown Nashville,
Tennessee.

University Provost Mark Byrnes and Music City Grand Prix CEO and MTSU alumnus
Matt Crews signed the memorandum of understanding in the Jeff Hendrix Stadium
Club at Floyd Stadium, with MTSU School of Concrete and Construction Management
and Music City Grand Prix representatives present.

Music City Grand Prix is working with MTSU to create safer and lighter blends of
concrete using recycled materials and better molds long-term for racing barriers
and pit row use in the upcoming IndyCar Series event. The partnership will also
create hands-on learning experiences for students through internships and
manufacturing relationships for the material science program.

Following the MOU signing, in a Concrete Industry Management laboratory in the
Voorhies Engineering Technology Building, Byrnes, Crews and others watched as
MTSU concrete professor Heather Brown guided students as they demonstrated
concrete mold pouring, as part of required testing in the coming months. The eco-
friendly concrete mix could potentially help reduce cost of putting on the event.
“By connecting our School of Concrete and Construction Management with the
Music City Grand Prix, we bring the expertise of our faculty and the bright young
minds of our students together with the deep knowledge and skills that prompted
Grand Prix CEO Matt Crews and his top-notch team to create the infrastructure
needed for a spectacular international festival, unlike any that Nashville has ever
experienced,” Byrnes said.

The inaugural event will be held Aug. 6-8, featuring an open-wheel race in
Nashville’s downtown corridor, food and music, and expected to attract more than
100,000 spectators.

Crews, an MTSU alumnus, record-setting kicker and Lawrenceburg native, said the
racing event has been five years in the making and will now capitalize on the
exposure from IndyCar’s 30 broadcast partners in 160 countries. He’s said he’s
thrilled to see such an innovative academic program from his alma mater benefit
from that exposure.

“I’m more excited about showing 160 countries what MTSU has accomplished on a
daily basis,” Crews said. “I think it’s time for us to go racing Blue Raiders and look
forward to carrying the MTSU mantle to the world.”

Brown, the former CIM and School of Concrete and Construction Management chair,
helped align the partnership from the beginning, with Crews noting legendary
racing owner Roger Penske, chairman and owner of NTT IndyCar Series, was greatly
impressed by Brown’s presentation several weeks ago about MTSU’s work on race
barricade technology and how that work could help the racing industry going
forward. The MOU calls for MTSU to provide Music City Grand Prix with future
guidance on barrier construction and suppliers and vendors.

“We are working to create environmentally conscious concrete mixes while not
sacrificing durability and strength for the race barriers and pit lane,” said Brown,
noting that the more eco-friendly mixes could reduce energy and landfill impacts.
“This partnership will create advanced learning experiences for students and
expand our manufacturing relationships. Experiential learning is what MTSU works
hard to bring to their students and it wouldn’t be possible without Music City Grand
Prix’s commitment to local institutions as well as STEM education and the trades.”

MTSU Concrete Industry Management senior Chase Magerison, an Alaska native,
was among several students assisting Monday with the mold pouring at the concrete
lab. Scheduled to graduate in December, Magerison is appreciative of the unique
opportunity the Music City Grand Prix is providing MTSU students.

“It’s an awesome opportunity for us as students to get some real hands-on
experience in making more advanced mixes for a pre-cast company, which is not
something we typically do” he said. “And the concrete program in general … (does) a
great job of getting us out there for getting experiences and jobs.”

Joining Brown and Byrnes at the signing were Bud Fischer, dean of the College of
Basic and Applied Sciences, which houses the concrete school, and Kelly Strong,
first-year director of the School of Concrete and Construction Management.

The Music City Grand Prix has agreed to offer a minimum of two internships to
qualified and approved MTSU undergraduate students per year, helping them gain
experience in the areas of track design and construction project management and
event operations, and provide MTSU with significant branding and promotion
before and during each race weekend.
Brown will be on the Music City Grand Prix Advisory Board. The Music City Grand
Prix will offer an MTSU School of Concrete and Construction Management Day at the
race for students and faculty, and provide an allotment of general admission tickets
each year.

The agreement calls for MTSU to provide specific industry guidance, insight and
consulting in the areas of concrete barricade forms, barricade manufacturing,
emerging concrete technologies and more, helping reduce the Grand Prix’s
manufacturing, construction, transportation or event set-up costs.
MTSU also agrees to assist the Music City Grand Prix in the review and selection
appropriate and qualified area track suppliers and vendors for the necessary track
alterations and construction; help them pursue applicable grants, subsidies and
other corporate incentives relative to their concrete construction needs; promote
the race and partnership to industry trade groups and facilitate a group ticket
offering to the event for all MTSU alumni and families.