Spotlights
Alumni spotlight on Jeremy D. Billig
Jeremy D. Billig, P.E., President, McLaren Engineering Group , CEE B.S. '04, M.Eng. '05 Q. How did your educational background prepare you for your current role? A. My educational experience at... Read more
Grad student spotlight: Eirini Sarri
Eirini Sarri is pursuing a Master's of Engineering in Civil and Environmental Engineering with an Environmental Water Resources and Systems focus. Q. Can you talk about your area of research? A. I am... Read more
Welcome Greeshma Gadikota ( 2019 )
Greeshma Gadikota has joined Cornell Engineering as an assistant professor and Croll Sesquicentennial Fellow in the School of Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE). Gadikota’s research is focused... Read more
Recent Wetland Restoration Class Field Trips
This past Friday, Nov. 1., the Wetland Restoration class collected data in and around the pond and wetlands adjacent to the Lab of Ornithology. Professor of Practice Mike Rolband said, “What we’re... Read more
Summer plans: Yitzy Rosenberg, EnVE ’20
We asked CEE students the familiar back-to-school question: what did you do this summer? Thanks to funding from Engaged Cornell, Yitzy Rosenberg, Environmental Engineering ’20, hosted an AguaClara... Read more
New Class is a Win-Win for M.Eng. Students and Local Startups
Robert Newman, a Senior Lecturer in Engineering Management in Cornell’s College of Engineering, had some specific objectives when he launched the new class ENGMT 5940: Economics and Finance for... Read more
Ph.D. Profile: Terrence Moran
When Terrence Moran was 17 years old he decided to join the United States Marines. “I wasn’t a particularly great student and I didn’t really see myself getting much out of college at that point,”... Read more
CORNELL GIVING DAY 2019
Thank you to everyone who supported CEE on Cornell Giving Day! Learn more at https://givingday.cornell.edu/campaigns/cu-civil-and-environmental-engineering Thank you for making Cornell CEE stronger... Read more
Few pathways to an acceptable climate future without immediate action, according to study
A new Cornell study has painted over 5 million pictures of humanity’s potential future, and few foretell an Earth that has not severely warmed. Read more