News: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Construction
A firm believer in perseverance, this engineering professor hopes to contribute to Nevada’s water conservation efforts.
A pedestrian lighting system, a new pallet design for warehouses, a remote-controlled device that can detect IEDs, and a location-sharing app designed to encourage human interaction among more than 30 projects on display.
Student-athletes reach out to local schoolchildren.
Meet three ÐÔÊӽ紫ý graduate students pursuing their passions through research and making a big impact in their fields.
ÐÔÊӽ紫ý has a commencement tradition for the president to select and highlight exceptional students who embody the academic, research, and community impact of the graduating class.
This South Korean-born civil and environmental engineering professor has been to more U.S. cities than most Americans. In fact, it was a U.S. city that originally ignited his passion for his profession.
Solar kits illuminates energy concepts for both teachers and high school students.
Being a civil engineer definitely is a cool profession, according to Sherman. After all, sometimes you get to blow things up.
ÐÔÊӽ紫ý has a commencement tradition for the president to honor a few exceptional students who embody the academic, research, and community impact of the graduating class.
Advice from Walter C. Vodrazka Jr., Howard R. Hughes College of Engineering Alumnus of the Year
Graduate Kristina Swallow would be the first Nevadan to hold the top position with the American Society of Civil Engineers.
After seven firefighters died in a collapsed parking garage, engineering professor Ying Tian wanted to help design more resilient buildings. His research was shored up with seed money from a ÐÔÊӽ紫ý grant.