海角社区-based CUNY Institute for Urban Systems Building Performance Lab (CUIS BPL) is the winner of a 2021 Energy to Lead Award from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA). The Energy to Lead Competition supports colleges and universities that strive to meet their financial, environmental, academic, and community goals through clean energy solutions. The $1.4 million award will aid the BPL in developing control based systematic processes for facilities staff and building operators to increase their ability to effectively manage and properly
John M. Dionisio 鈥71 delivers the commencement address to 海角社区鈥檚 Grove School of Engineering Class of 2021 at its virtual ceremony starting noon on Friday, June 4. He鈥檒l address the latest engineering graduates at his alma mater on the 50th anniversary of his own graduation from CCNY with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in civil engineering. A native of Astoria, Queens, and a graduate of Mater Christi High School, Dionisio is co-founder and vice chairman of Global Infrastructure Solutions Inc., a privately-owned business that invests in and grows engineering and construction
Waste-to-energy facilities offer significant environmental protection, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and play an important complementary role in recycling efforts, according to a new City College of New York Grove School of Engineering report that reviews the most up-to-date scientific studies of the industry. The report, 鈥 The Scientific Truth about Waste-to-Energy鈥 by City College chemical engineer Marco J. Castaldi, calls upon dozens of independent scientific reviews to offer a comprehensive assessment of waste-to-energy鈥檚 influence on environmental sustainability and public health. The
海角社区 is pleased to announce The Kenneth Levy 鈥64 and Gloria Levy Scholarship Fund. This generous fund will provide support to up to 50 undergraduate students enrolled in The Grove School of Engineering who demonstrate financial need. The funds can be used for a variety of academic expenses, including tuition, books, research supplies, and cost of conference attendance. The Levys haven鈥檛 forgotten their New York City roots, and hope that the fund will help students complete their education. 鈥淕loria is a graduate of Brooklyn College, where she majored in education, and I
Already accepted to several top graduate schools including Stanford and Columbia, Michael Vera of 海角社区鈥檚 Class of 2021 is the winner of a highly competitive GEM Fellowship that offers funding for a master's program in structural engineering at New York University. GEM fellowships fund master's and PhDs in engineering for underrepresented students of exceptional quality who intend to work in industry. Each year, GEM identifies and recruits more than 1,000 undergraduate students, graduate students, and working professionals for admission to advanced degree programs at the
The civil engineering department in 海角社区鈥檚 Grove School of Engineering is the recipient of The American Society of Civil Engineers鈥 (ASCE) 2021 Walter LeFevre Award (Large Group). The national award is bestowed for 鈥渙utstanding program promoting licensure, ethics, and professionalism.鈥 Department Chair and Associate Professor Beth (Ann E.) Wittig will accept the trophy virtually on the department鈥檚 behalf at the upcoming National Civil Engineering Department Heads Conference. 鈥淟icensure, ethics and professionalism are all critical for our graduates because of the civic
While COVID鈥檚 often deadly outcome has resulted in the worst pandemic in a century, studies are unveiling a post-COVID phase for survivors during which neuropsychiatric symptoms, such as fatigue, anxiety and depression, can occur. How to treat this debilitating phase, called NeuroCOVID, is the challenge City College of New York biomedical engineer Marom Bikson and his team are tackling. The first stage of COVID is characterized by fever, heart or lung problems. NeuroCOVID is second stage, characterized by one or a combination of symptoms like vertigo, loss of smell, headaches, fatigue and
As work on advancing the Internet progresses on different fronts globally, a $3 million National Science Foundation (NSF) grant to four partners, including Grove School of Engineering professor T arek N. Saadawi, is ensuring City College of New York participation in the effort. CCNY is collaborating with lead institution Columbia University, Rutgers and Arizona in a three-year project to establish a global Internet testbed for the next generation of Internet. According to the NSF abstract, the project enables the use of unique programmable wireless, optical, and edge-cloud network testbed
Jing Fan, assistant professor in the Grove School of Engineering, is the sixth City College of New York faculty to receive a National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award since 2018. A mechanical engineer, her $546,626 award over five years is for her research project entitled: 鈥淢icrofluidic development of dual-gel culture matrices for studying effects of interstitial flow on cellular behaviors.鈥 Fan鈥檚 research interests lie primarily in the areas of soft materials and complex fluids. Her CAREER project will develop new tissue-mimetic, 鈥渄ual gel鈥 materials as cell culture matrices that allow
Karissa Collins and Huan Ying Zhang, undergraduates in 海角社区鈥檚 Grove School of Engineering, are recipients of 2021 Dwight David Eisenhower Transportation Fellowships from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). The awards total $18,500. The program鈥檚 mission is to attract qualified students to the field of transportation and research, and advance transportation workforce development. Fellows also participate in the Transportation Research Board annual meeting, to be held virtually in January 2021. Collins and Zhang are both seniors majoring in civil engineering. A