News
- Justin Whiteley (PhDMechEngr’16), co-founder and CTO of Emergy Foods, and CEO Tyler Huggins (PhDCivEngr’16) have closed on their first round of venture capital funding and have constructed a manufacturing facility just outside Boulder where they plan to produce their new source of protein.
- Sara Beck finished her undergraduate degrees at ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ in 2003, double majoring in aerospace engineering sciences and studio arts. After an impressive first job at NASA, she returned to the College of Engineering and Applied Science and earned her PhD in environmental engineering under Professor Karl Linden in 2015.
- Join the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering career and internship fair on September 25th, 2019, from 10:00am-3:00pm at the Folsom Field Club Level (East Side of Stadium, 5th Floor, Elevator near Gate 11).Â
- The Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering Department is welcoming two new faculty members. Read on to see why we’re so excited about these talented new hires
- As the fall semester starts at the ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ, the school’s civil engineering senior students may be eyeballing one of the last classes of their undergraduate career: their capstone design project.
- Professor Joseph Ryan’s Oil and Gas Contamination of Jackson County Waters project is one of 33 faculty-led projects selected to receive the ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ Outreach Award for 2019-20. The Outreach Awards were created 20 years ago to fund university research, teaching and creative work that has a direct impact on public needs.
- Senior Professional Research Associate Renée Railsback was awarded the National Local Technical Assistance Program Achievement Award at the association’s conference in Vermont this month.
- Professor Srubar’s research got featured on 9 News. Srubar's goal is to create a living hybrid building material that exhibits both structural and biological function. The possibilities for his work are endless and especially interesting in extreme environments and military applications. Bricks could self-heal after natural disasters or enemy fire, or act as alarms by changing color when there are toxins in the air.
- "This is not a problem that’s going away," emphasized Paul Chinowsky, a civil engineer at the ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ. "The impacts are not something that is 10 years away," he added. "It's something that’s happening right now."
- ShanghaiRanking Consultancy’s Global Ranking of Academic Subjects has taken notice of the quality of ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ’s programs, ranking environmental science and engineering 26th overall and water resources 15th overall in its 2019 report.Â