BKM recently welcomed a new hire and two summer interns to the firm. A recent University of Maryland Baltimore graduate, Justin Tunzi joins the Mechanical Engineering Department as a designer. A rising senior at Johns Hopkins University, Conor Reynolds joins our team with a mechanical focus during his summer internship. Brian Fogelson, a rising sophomore at Johns Hopkins University, comes on board with an electrical focus during his summer internship.

Justin Tunzi majored in Mechanical Engineering at UMBC. He was always interested in building things and how things worked, so mechanical engineering combined both these interests. He learned about BKM from a job fair at UMBC. Justin is most looking forward to working with other engineers on projects. He is excited to apply his education in STEM towards his new career path and contribute to the building process. In his spare time, Justin enjoys woodworking/carpentry, golfing, and cheering on the orioles and ravens.

Conor Reynolds plans on graduating in the spring with a degree in Mechanical Engineering from JHU. He has always loved math and science so when it came time to choose a major, combining those things with engineering seemed like an obvious choice. Mechanical engineering particularly appealed to him because it is versatile, allowing him to learn the most about a wide variety of applications. He first heard about BKM through Rick Miller, who encouraged him to apply in order to try to start finding an avenue within mechanical engineering to pursue. Conor’s ultimate goal is to gain as much knowledge as he can about engineering and learn more about what the engineering profession is like. Most of his free time is spent playing baseball at Hopkins as well as attending Orioles games.

Brian Fogelson recently finished his freshman year at JHU. He is pursuing a degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering. He felt a calling to become an engineer since his fourth grade science fair. He had learned about BKM from a friend and is looking forward to using this internship as a means to gain new skills. For fun, Brian plays tennis and ultimate frisbee, builds computers, reads, and watches movies.