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  • Solar decathlon team
    An affordable, net-zero energy home designed by ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ students and featuring a unique hydrogen energy system was honored Sunday as part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s 2023 Solar Decathlon Build Challenge. The team took first place in the durability and resilience category and third place in engineering. The team was also recognized in the advanced technology category.
  • Assistant Professor Kyri Baker in the early morning light leaning against her Tesla, which is parked between two windmills.
    Assistant Professor Kyri Baker is a member of  ‘Decarb Bros,’  a loose affiliation of mostly young researchers, climate tech workers and policymakers who believe the best way to combat climate change is to ditch the gloom of earlier environmentalism and focus on what new technology can do.
  • Karl Linden and Ben Ma wearing protective glasses in the lab.
    Ben Ma, a postdoctoral researcher in environmental engineering, was the first author on a paper that confirmed the safety of a new portable, handheld disinfecting device. The device emits a wavelength of ultraviolet light that is safe for disinfecting public spaces.
  • The Kuparek River
    Streamflow is increasing in Alaskan rivers during both spring and fall seasons, primarily due to increasing air temperatures over the past 60 years, according to new ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ-led research. Dylan Blaskey, a doctoral student in civil engineering, is the lead author on the study.
  • Evan Thomas stands next to one of his filtration devices in Africa
    Professor Evan Thomas discussed ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ work to bring climate finance solutions to water quality challenges in the American West and East Africa at TedXCU on April 7 in Macky Auditorium.

  • Graphic of a family in front of a large battery
    In this Washington Post article, Assistant Professor Kyri Baker says appliances with batteries will be a "game changer," able to stash energy at home for when it's needed while building the grid’s capacity to absorb clean, excess energy.

  • Gregor Henze
    Professor Gregor Henze, who has spent the last 15 years focusing on sustainable building design, sees the general types of projects as "doable" but not without some challenges, primarily when it comes to retrofitting the buildings for heating and cooling.
  • Cassie Venable
    Casie Venable (PhDCivEngr’20) came to ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ to work with professors Amy Javernick-Will and Abbie Liel on community resilience. Today Venable works in San Francisco for Arup, a global collective of designers, engineers, and consultants dedicated to sustainable development. As a consultant she works with clients to help them understand the potential risks they face from a variety of natural hazards, such as seismic activity and wind as well as manmade disasters like train derailments.
  • CEAE students in hard hats at Gross Reservoir site.
    As part of their capstone project, seniors in ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ's civil engineering program are contributing to the design of the expansion of Denver Water’s Gross Reservoir Expansion Project, which involves raising the height of Gross Dam by 131 feet. The renovated dam will nearly triple the reservoir’s water storage capacity and create a more reliable water system for 1.5 million people in the Denver metro area.
  • Professor Mark Hernandez and doctoral graduate Marina Nieto-Caballero stand inside a bioaerosol chamber in the Environmental Engineering disinfection laboratory at the Sustainability, Energy and Environment Complex (SEEC)
    Mark Hernandez, S. J. Archuleta Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and senior author of recent research published in PNAS-Nexus, found that airborne particles carrying a mammalian coronavirus closely related to the virus which causes COVID-19 remain infectious for twice as long in drier air.
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