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JBSA-Camp Bullis
Joint Base San Antonio-Camp Bullis sits astride the Southern Edwards Plateau on the Northwest edge of San Antonio.
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Wright-Patterson AFB
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, gate. (U.S. Air Force photo)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
Air Force Civil Engineer Center's Capt. Kyle Imhoff runs a trail during a 52 km race which includes reaching the top of Mt. Umunhum, the fourth highest peak in California’s Santa Cruz Mountains. The captain earned first place in his under 30 age group. Imhoff, one of a growing number of ultramarathon athletes, took part in the race on his day off during a temporary duty assignment to California in support of an airfield pavement evaluation. (Photo courtesy of Capt. Kyle Imhoff.)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
Air Force Civil Engineer Center's Lt. Col. Jeff Klein takes a quick break at an aid station during his San Diego 100 Mile Endurance Run, at Lake Cuyamaca, California, June 7, 2019. The race is 85 percent single track technical trails, which are approximately the width of a bike, through the Cuyamaca Mountains, in Eastern San Diego, California. (Photo Courtesy of Lt. Col. Jeff Klein.)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
Air Force Civil Engineer Center's Lt. Col. Jeff Klein runs the Red Eye 50K on New Year’s Day 2018. It was the ultramarathoners second time at Prince William Forest Park, Virginia. The park’s 37 miles of trails include many streams and small waterfalls. (Photo Courtesy of Lt. Col. Jeff Klein)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
Air Force Civil Engineer Center’s Lt. Col. Jeff Klein completes the Border to Badlands Ultramarathon through the Chihauhaun Desert at Seminole Canyon State Park, in Texas, Feb. 29, 2020. (Photo Courtesy of Lt. Col. Jeff Klein.)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
Air Force Civil Engineer Center’s Lt. Col. Jeff Klein runs an ultramarathon through one of North America’s largest deserts, the Chihauhaun Desert, at Seminole Canyon State Park, in Texas. During runs through the prehistoric area, ultramarathoners like Klein could see the Seminole Canyon meeting the Rio Grande River and pictographs left by indigenous people in caves and surrounding the area. (Photo Courtesy of Lt. Col. Jeff Klein)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
About a quarter of the way through his first 100-mile ultramarathon, the Cloudsplitter 100 in Norton, Virginia, Air Force Civil Engineer Center's Capt. Kyle Imhoff takes a few minutes to rejuvenate with the encouragement of his daughter. Imhoff is part of a growing group of runners who take on ultramarathoning. (Photo courtesy of Capt. Kyle Imhoff)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
Air Force Civil Engineer Center’s Capt. Kyle Imhoff and his crew pose for a photo at the finish line after reaching his goal to complete his first 100-mile ultramarathon, the Cloudspliitter 100 in Norton, Virginia, for his 30th birthday. (Photo courtesy of Capt. Kyle Imhoff.)
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AFCEC ultramarathoners
Just past the halfway point of the Cloudsplitter 100, in Norton, Virginia, ultramarathoner and Air Force Civil Engineer Center team member Capt. Kyle Imhoff stops to grab an additional waist light from his family. The light was needed to help him make his way along the path of the rugged, rocky trails of High Knob – the highest point in the Cumberland Mountains. (Photo courtesy of Capt. Kyle Imhoff)
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Sixth Annual Spread the Joy
Despite the limitations of COVID-19, Air Force Civil Engineer Center Detachment 1 volunteers were determined to continue the six-year tradition of “Spread the Joy,” using a drive-thru system at Lucille Moore Elementary School Dec. 17, 2020, to hand out gifts to more than 100 children and families. The event, sponsored by AFCEC’s Detachment 1 at Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida, involved many hours before hand, purchasing gifts and wrapping them to ensure children at the school had a joyous Christmas. (U.S. Air Force photo by David Ford)
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Sixth Annual Spread the Joy
Santa Claus makes a surprise visit to Lucille Moore Elementary School in Panama City, Florida, Dec. 17, 2020, as part of the Sixth Annual Air Force Civil Engineer Center-sponsored “Spread the Joy” holiday event. While Santa greeted every vehicles filled with excited children, his elves put presents in to the vehicles. Normally held in the school with a hot meal and the happy sounds of gasps and squeals after opening presents, this year’s event had to be amended to keep children and Santa safe from COVID-19. Not only did AFCEC volunteers help hand out the gifts, they’d also spent hours previously purchasing and wrapping gifts to ensure more than 100 children would have a joyous Christmas. (U.S. Air Force photo by David Ford)
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Sixth Annual Spread the Joy
Despite the limitations of COVID-19, Air Force Civil Engineer Center Detachment 1 volunteers were determined to continue the six-year tradition of “Spread the Joy,” using a drive-thru system at Lucille Moore Elementary School Dec. 17, 2020, to hand out gifts to more than 100 children and families. The event, sponsored by AFCEC’s Detachment 1 at Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida, involved many hours before hand, purchasing gifts and wrapping them to ensure children at the school had a joyous Christmas. (U.S. Air Force photo by David Ford)
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Sixth Annual Spread the Joy
Santa Claus makes a surprise visit to Lucille Moore Elementary School in Panama City, Florida, Dec. 17, 2020, as part of the Sixth Annual Air Force Civil Engineer Center-sponsored “Spread the Joy” holiday event. While Santa greeted every vehicles filled with excited children, his elves put presents in to the vehicles. Normally held in the school with a hot meal and the happy sounds of gasps and squeals after opening presents, this year’s event had to be amended to keep children and Santa safe from COVID-19. Not only did AFCEC volunteers help hand out the gifts, they’d also spent hours previously purchasing and wrapping gifts to ensure more than 100 children would have a joyous Christmas. (U.S. Air Force photo by David Ford)
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Tyndall gets first x-ray system for gate vehicle checks
Senior Airmen Qwuantez Harris and Norman Shoemake, 325th Security Forces Squadron search specialists, deploy the Air Force’s first Mobile Vehicle Access Control Inspection System, or VACIS M6500, at the Tyndall AFB Cleveland gate. The state-of-the-art x-ray machine rapidly scans incoming vehicles carrying building materials and other cargo as part of the five to seven year rebuild, conducting searches in under two minutes – a process that normally takes up to 15 minutes – to help process four times the number of vehicles an hour. (U.S. Air Force photo by Taylor Koopman)
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Tyndall gets first x-ray system for gate vehicle checks
Senior Airman Norman Shoemake, 325th Security Forces Squadron search specialist, reviews x-ray images of commercial vehicles seeking access to Tyndall AFB. The scans provide an in-depth analysis and allow search specialists to quickly and efficiently scan for anomalies, ensure the correct number of passengers are in the vehicle, and confirm there is nothing in the cargo that should not be there. (U.S. Air Force photo by Taylor Koopman)
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Tyndall gets first x-ray system for gate vehicle checks
Senior Airman Norman Shoemake, 325th Security Forces Squadron search specialist, gives the all-clear to an incoming commercial vehicle after reviewing an x-ray of the vehicle and its cargo. With the VACIS M6500 at Tyndall AFB, commercial vehicle searches can be conducted in under two minutes – a process that normally takes up to 15 minutes – to help process four times the number of vehicles an hour. (U.S. Air Force photo by Taylor Koopman)
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Tyndall gets first x-ray system for gate vehicle checks
Senior Airman Qwuantez Harris, 325th Security Forces Squadron search specialist, readies Tyndall AFB’s new Mobile Vehicle Access Control Inspection System, or VACIS M6500, for incoming commercial vehicles. The state-of-the-art x-ray machine eliminates the need for hands-on, high stress searches and increases performance, both in number of vehicles searched and time efficiency. (U.S. Air Force photo by Taylor Koopman)
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Tyndall gets first x-ray system for gate vehicle checks
Senior Airmen Qwuantez Harris and Norman Shoemake, 325th Security Forces Squadron search specialists, deploy the Air Force’s first Mobile Vehicle Access Control Inspection System, or VACIS M6500, at the Tyndall AFB Cleveland gate. The state-of-the-art x-ray machine rapidly scans incoming vehicles carrying building materials and other cargo as part of the five to seven year rebuild, conducting searches in under two minutes – a process that normally takes up to 15 minutes – to help process four times the number of vehicles an hour. (U.S. Air Force photo by Taylor Koopman)
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2020 Design and Construction Partnering Symposium
From left, Continental U.S. Military Construction Division Chief Thomas Brown, AFCEC Commander Brig. Gen. John Allen and AFCEC Facility Engineering Director Col. Dave Norton participate in the 2020 Design and Construction Partnering Symposium Dec. 16-17. More than 250 military members and civilians met in a virtual setting during the event to discuss new policies, initiatives and procedures affecting military construction execution around the globe. (U.S. Air Force photo by Mila Cisneros)
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