A Lifetime of Casting: Cal Poly Pomona’s “Metalcasting Guy” Inspires Tomorrow’s Metal Workers

About 1,500 miles south of Cal Poly Pomona, in Guadalajara, Mexico, Dr. Victor Okhuysen learned his family’s trade: metalcasting. Today, Okhuysen, the interim associate dean for the College of Engineering and a professor in industrial and manufacturing engineering, shares the timeless craft with college students, local K-12 schools and career seekers in his community with METAL.

For more than 125 years, Okhuysen’s family foundry, Corporación POK, was an industry staple. Founded by Okhuysen’s ancestor Francisco Okhuysen, the steel manufacturer produced large castings for sugar mills and the power industry. Sugar mills rely on massive metal rollers and shafts, shredders and bearings to grind sugarcane. Meanwhile, electric power requires cast turbine rotors, generator parts and steel transformer components to keep the lights on. Okhuysen grew up watching his father manage metallurgy setups and production designs on the foundry floor. With curiosity sparked by a love of invention, he followed his father’s and grandfather’s footsteps into a metal manufacturing career.  

 Dr. Victor Okhuysen, Interim Associate Dean for the College of Engineering and a professor in industrial and manufacturing engineering

“It’s just legal pyrotechnics, what’s not to love?” Okhuysen joked about metalcasting. “There’s fire all over the place, so it’s fun. But you also get a sense of excitement from students that you don’t get with other things.”

Known as Cal Poly Pomona’s “metalcasting guy,” Okhuysen is determined to impart his enthusiasm for manufacturing to students of all ages — overcoming outdated stigmas and inspiring the metal industry’s next generation of innovators. 

“In the past, metals manufacturing got a dirty name because people saw smoke and hot, uncomfortable environments. There was a perception that it was the kind of thing people do because they didn’t have many choices,” Okhuysen said. “METAL allows us to showcase that this is really a high-tech industry with modern tools and fascinating challenges.”

Now, at a critical time for American manufacturing, Okhuysen and his colleagues at Cal Poly Pomona are helping rebuild the nation’s metal workforce.  

Become By Doing

Foundries from California to New York need one thing: people. 

Since the COVID-19 pandemic, manufacturing employment has faced an uphill climb. Nearly 29 million Baby Boomers retired in the U.S. in 2020, taking decades of experience with them. In one survey, more than 65% of manufacturers said attracting and retaining talent is their top business challenge. While employment has rebounded to pre-pandemic numbers, thousands more manufacturing workers left the industry last fall.

The nation’s skill gap is now a national priority. Beyond the artistry of shaping metal from sparks and flames, metallurgy is foundational to America’s defense and supply chains. By 2033, almost 4 million manufacturing jobs could be available without the trained workers to fill them. 

“A strong national defense depends on a robust economy and price stability, a resilient manufacturing and defense industrial base, and secure domestic supply chains,” President Donald Trump wrote in an executive order last year.

METAL, led by IACMI – The Composites Institute®, with funding from the Department of War’s IBAS Program, partners with professional metallurgists and universities to build the skilled, adaptive metal workforce the nation needs. Through hands-on K-12 workshops, metallurgical bootcamps and apprenticeships, METAL is reintroducing metalcasting and forging to communities across the country — igniting curiosity to build fighter jets, power life-saving technologies and shape the 21st century.

High school students from Orange County, California learn how to press sand molds, prepare for a molten metal pour and clean a finished casting at METAL’s Cal Poly Pomona K-12 workshop.

Dr. Winny Dong, director for student projects and research through industry engagement in the College of Engineering and a professor in chemical and materials engineering, believes students learn best when education mirrors real-world industry needs. 

“We are focused on making sure our students are career-ready from day one,” Dong said. “We want to develop well-rounded citizens and a workforce that’s ready to contribute.”

At METAL’s Cal Poly Pomona bootcamp, engineering students and career seekers learn hands-on casting and forging not from textbooks, but in a foundry. Participants start with a self-paced, online training that covers casting design, additive manufacturing and melting processes. Then, for almost a week, the metallurgists-in-training get experience in front of the furnace, practicing the entire casting process: from simulations and heat treatments to carefully pouring lava-like metal into 3D-printed molds and machining or forging finished products.  

Dong, who’s a ceramics manufacturing expert, couldn’t wait to try metalcasting for the first time. 

“I was super excited,” she said. “It’s always exciting to make something yourself, not just watch somebody else make it or read about how it’s made. I think that’s the same feeling our METAL participants get.” 

By the end of the bootcamp, participants leave with an aluminum stein, a brass medallion, and an aluminum sand casting they personally create — all solid metal shaped and poured by their own hands. 

“We’re very student-centered and hands-on,” Okhuysen said. “Our motto is you ‘become by doing,’ with an emphasis on experiential learning.” 

And it’s never too early to start exploring the foundry.

Making Sand Molds and Casting Fun

Next door to Cal Poly Pomona is International Polytechnic High School (IPoly), where students are immersed in project-based learning to solve complex problems. They’re also encouraged to begin exploring career paths through college-level courses. 

Principal Dr. William Wallace said METAL’s hands-on K-12 workshop is exactly the type of skills-based program he encourages students to attend. 

“Public education in America forgets how important real-world experience is,” Wallace said. “When you’re engaging with the theoretical, kids don’t understand how fun a career could be. But when they get to play in a foundry and get their hands in the sand and see how those principles apply, it becomes worthwhile.”

With METAL, Cal Poly Pomona has expanded its K-12 community outreach, showing students of all ages what’s possible with metalcasting. From Girl Scout troops to local high schools, participants have the opportunity to pack sand into molds and transform molten tin into their own cast medallions. The workshop offers a glimpse of what students can later create in METAL bootcamps — and accomplish in manufacturing careers.  

With support from METAL, Cal Poly Pomona is reintroducing metalcasting to local communities, including Girl Scout troops who rolled up their sleeves and learned how to cast metal medallions from start to finish.

“I love seeing how excited participants get,” Dong said. “Most kids probably don’t know anyone who works in the metals industry and never considered it as something they could do. You don’t need a PhD to develop a fulfilling career.”

Wallace said he hasn’t found another program where high school students can learn hands-on manufacturing skills from college professors — and IPoly’s students are eager for more.

“What I heard from almost all of the students was, ‘when do we get to do another class like this?’” Wallace said. “The kids loved it.”

After a lifetime of casting metal, Okhuysen said he would do it all over again. 

“When I was in industry, I would hire interns and tell them, ‘you will never be bored.’ Sometimes they were very frustrated, but they weren’t bored,” he laughed. “These careers are fun and incredibly rewarding.”

Ready to turn curiosity into a career? Start METAL’s free online training and visit our events page to attend the next METAL bootcamp or workshop near you. 

California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Joins METAL to Expand Metallurgical Workforce Training on the West Coast

POMONA, California, July 29, 2025 – The Metallurgical Engineering Trades Apprenticeship & Learning (METAL) program, led by IACMI – The Composites Institute®, is proud to announce a new partnership with California State Polytechnic University, Pomona (CPP) to establish a West Coast hub for advanced workforce training in metalworking and manufacturing. Funded by the Department of Defense’s Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment Program, METAL strengthens and diversifies the U.S. metal manufacturing workforce, focusing on casting, forging and plate rolling.

As the newest METAL hub operator, CPP will serve as a regional training and coordination center, integrating METAL training across educational institutions.

“This new hub in Southern California marks an exciting expansion of our national training footprint,” said Lucinda Curry, METAL National Workforce Manager at IACMI. “CPP brings strong regional connections, a commitment to innovation in engineering education, and a proven track record of engaging learners. Through this partnership, we will ensure that current and future professionals in the West Coast have access to critical metallurgical skills training.”

CPP will implement METAL’s nationally recognized curriculum, beginning with a combination of online training and immersive, in-person boot camps held at CPP’s state-of-the-art manufacturing labs, which are equipped for melting, machining and heat treatment. 

Participants will gain practical experience in foundational processes, with access to advanced training in automation and specialized industry needs as they progress through the METAL curriculum.

In addition to adult training, CPP will lead outreach efforts for K–12 students by offering half-day workshops and partnering with high schools, technical schools and community colleges to spark early interest in metallurgical careers. 

“We are proud to join the METAL program and help shape the future of manufacturing talent in California and beyond,” said Winny Dong, the chemical and materials engineering professor leading the CPP METAL program. “This program aligns with our polytechnic mission to provide hands-on, industry-relevant education and reinforces our commitment to workforce readiness in advanced manufacturing.”

CPP’s addition to the METAL network strengthens a growing national network of METAL hubs, including the University of Alabama at Birmingham, The Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, Tennessee Tech and Michigan Technological University. Together, these institutions are revitalizing American manufacturing by delivering responsive, scalable and sustainable workforce development programs.

For more information about METAL at Cal Poly Pomona, please contact:

Sarah Pope
Email: Sarah@piper-communications.com
Phone: 865-329-0553

About METAL
Metallurgical Engineering Trades Apprenticeship & Learning (METAL), led by IACMI, is an industry-driven initiative aimed at providing high-quality, hands-on training in the metalworking and manufacturing sectors. The program is designed to address workforce development needs by offering comprehensive curricula in casting, forging and metallurgy, with an emphasis on automation and modern manufacturing technologies.

About IACMI
IACMI – The Composites Institute® is a national public-private partnership focused on advancing composite materials and process technologies. Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and the Department of Defense, IACMI brings together over 170 members from industry, academia, and government to drive manufacturing innovation and workforce development.

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