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  • Tess Eidem, wearing a lab coat and safety googles, holds a jar of fungus used to produce allergens for research.
    Researchers in Professor Mark Hernandez's lab have discovered that a passive, generally safe ultraviolet light treatment can rapidly inactivate airborne allergens. They believe this approach could serve as an additional tool to help reduce allergens in homes, schools and other indoor environments.
  • Cresten Mansfeldt
    Cresten Mansfeldt, assistant professor of environmental engineering, has been selected as the recipient of the 2025 CEAS Outstanding Faculty Research Advisor/Mentor Award. The award is based on student nominations.
  • Marcos Campus wearing a CU t-shirt with his hands folded across his chest. The Flatirons and a CU building blurred in the background.
    Alumnus Marco Campos (CivEngr '98) generous donation to the Campos Student Center (formerly the BOLD Center) will enable the center to further its mission of expanding opportunities for engineering students, fostering community and building leadership.
  • Zhi Lui and Laura Sunberg in side by side photos. Lee is wearing a button-down shirt with trees blurred in the background. Laura is next to a building
    The Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering welcomes two new faculty members in Fall 2025. Meet Assistant Professors Laura Sunberg and Zhi Li—and see why we’re so excited to have these talented scholars on our team.

  • A A large industrial asphalt plant with multiple tall silos, conveyor belts and machinery, under a clear blue sky, with a dump truck parked in the foreground.
    The study, led by CEAE PhD student Daniel Donado-Quintero, shows that setting carbon benchmarks can encourage asphalt producers to lower emissions for example by using more recycled materials or optimizing production processes—supporting Colorado’s Buy Clean Act and CDOT’s efforts to reduce embodied carbon.
  • Zhi Li in a button-down shirt with some trees in the background and a building behind the trees.
    Zhi Li, who joined ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ as an assistant professor in August 2025, leads the new Flood Lab, which develops high-resolution models to predict flood impacts with one-meter precision—technology not yet used in real time due to high computational demands.
  • Anothy Straub in a jacket and button-down shirt with the blurred Flatirons in the background.
    Anthony Straub is developing ultra-thin nanoscale membranes to transform water purification on Earth and in space. His work has earned a prestigious NSF CAREER Award, a five-year, $550,000 grant to advance the research.
  • Henze was selected for his groundbreaking work on smart energy control systems, advanced building simulation tools and technologies that connect buildings to the power grid. He is also recognized for his global leadership in research and education.
  • Amanda Kaminsky, holding a mic and in the middle of two other presenters,  shares her perspective on what is motivating building owners to prioritize sustainability during the symposium. A slide advertising the symposium is in the background.
    The event, which drew 166 participants to ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ campus, marked an industry-wide step toward cutting emissions tied to building materials like steel and concrete.
  • Wil Srubar in a sports coat and button-down shirt with a faded building in the background.
    Professor Wil Srubar is the principal director of the Living Materials Laboratory, where an interdisciplinary team develops nature-inspired concrete alternatives that can be produced without fossil fuels or significant carbon emissions. 
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