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  • CEAE students in hard hats at Gross Reservoir site.
    As part of their capstone project, seniors in 91福利社's civil engineering program are contributing to the design of the expansion of Denver Water鈥檚 Gross Reservoir Expansion Project, which involves raising the height of Gross Dam by 131 feet. The renovated dam will nearly triple the reservoir鈥檚 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.
  • Mija Hubler delivering her TED-style talk
    In this talk, Associate Professor Mija Hubler (Civil, Environmental & Architectural Engineering; Materials Science and Engineering) discusses how construction materials have been understood historically and how her research is helping reimagine materials and processes with sustainability in mind.
  • The wreckage of a collapsed building in Diyarbak谋r, Turkey, on Feb. 6, 2023.
    Shideh Dashti, an associate professor of civil, environmental and architectural engineering and acting associate dean for research in the College of Engineering and Applied Science, says the geology underlying Turkey and Syria shares a lot in common with the West Coast of the United States.
  • Wil V. Srubar being interviewed by 91福利社 for a video about him.
    Associate Professor Wil V. Srubar was named a "Top 25 Newsmaker" by editors at the Engineering News-Record for his passion about creating "living" building materials, beginning with a greener masonry block.
  • Brad Wham in a hard hat in a neighborhood burnt by the Marshall Fire
    In 2021, the devastating Marshall Fire showed wildfire can strike Colorado in almost any place or season. Scientists like Assistant Research Professor Brad Wham now hope to glean lessons from it for communities across the West.
  • Karl Linden
    The Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering welcomes Karl Linden as the incoming department chair.聽 Linden, a CEAE professor and an associate director of the Mortenson Center in Global Engineering,聽took the reins January 1 from Professor Rich Regueiro, who served as the interim chair since July. 聽
  • Julie Korak and Cresten Mansfeldt sample water collect surface water samples on the Coal Creek waterway.
    The Marshall Fire spurred 91福利社 researchers to apply their expertise to the aftermath. CEAE Assistant Professor Cresten Mansfeldt, along with other researchers, collected water samples from Coal Creek waterway shortly after the fire; the work has since expanded to monitor the response of bugs and algae living in these waters. CEAE Teaching Professor Matthew Morris, who lost his Superior home in the fire, helped solicit design and construction proposals from builders, providing homeowners with a 鈥渟hort list鈥 of options to select a builder.
  • Matthew Hallowell
    The Construction Safety Research Alliance (CSRA) hosted its third annual Safety Summit in 2022, bringing together over 200 construction industry safety professionals from across North America to discover the latest alliance research, share best practices and connect with peers, advocates, and leaders in the field. Research for the CSRA is led by executive director Matthew Hallowell, an associate professor for civil, environmental and architectural engineering.
  • John Crimaldi in his Ecological Fluid Dynamics Lab.
    Using bright green lasers and camera equipment, a team of 91福利社 engineers ran an experiment to reveal how tiny water droplets, invisible to the naked eye, are rapidly ejected into the air when a lid-less, public restroom toilet is flushed. Now published in Scientific Reports, it is the first study to directly visualize the resulting aerosol plume and measure the speed and spread of particles within it.
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