NIST awards $123 million in grants for research facilities.

Press Release Summary:



NIST announced grants totaling more than $123 million to 11 universities and nonprofit research organization to provide cost-shared support for scientific research facility construction. Targeting ultimate research such as off-shore wind power and coral reef ecology to quantum physics and nanotechnology, projects will launch more than $250 million in new laboratory construction projects this year.



Original Press Release:



$123 Million in Grants Will Fund New Research Facilities



The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) last week announced grants totaling more than $123 million to 11 universities and a non-profit research organization to provide cost-shared support for the construction of new scientific research facilities.

With ultimate research targets ranging from off-shore wind power and coral reef ecology to quantum physics and nanotechnology, the 12 cost-shared projects will launch more than $250 million in new laboratory construction projects beginning early this year.

The 12 construction project awards, the result of a competition announced by NIST last May, include:

$15 million to the University of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh, Pa.) for new laboratories for nanoscience and experimental physics,

$15 million to Nova Southeastern University Inc. (Fort Lauderdale-Davis, Fla.) for a Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Ecosystem Science research facility,

$12.4 million to the University of Maine (Orono, Me.) for an Advanced Nanocomposites in Renewable Energy Laboratory,

$12.3 million to the University of Kansas Center for Research (Lawrence, Kan.) for the new Measurement, Materials and Sustainable Environment Center (M2SEC),

$11.8 million to the University of Kentucky (Lexington, Ky.) for an expansion of the Center for Applied Energy Research Laboratory,

$11.8 million to Purdue University (West Lafayette, Ind.) for a Center for High Performance Buildings at the Ray W. Herrick Laboratories,

$11.6 million to the Georgia Tech Research Corporation (Atlanta, Ga.) for a pilot-scale laboratory for carbon-neutral energy solutions,

$10.3 million to the University of Maryland (College Park, Md.) for a laboratory for advanced quantum science in the school's new Physical Sciences Complex,

$8.1 million to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Barnstable, Mass.) for the Laboratory for Ocean Sensors and Observing Systems (LOSOS),

$6.9 million to the University of Nebraska - Lincoln (Lincoln, Neb.) for a nanoscience metrology facility,

$6.9 million to Georgetown University (Washington, D.C.) for The Institute for Soft Matter Synthesis and Metrology, and

$1.4 million to Columbia University (New York, N.Y.) for an ultraclean geochemistry laboratory at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

Additional information on each project may be read in the NIST news release "NIST Awards $123 Million in Recovery Act Grants To Construct New Research Facilities" (www.nist.gov/public_affairs/releases/20100108_cgp_awards.htm.)

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