The Ohio State Universitys Controlled Environment Agriculture Research Complex
The Ohio State Universitys Controlled Environment Agriculture Research Complex
The Ohio State University is developing a greenhouse of the future.
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The Ohio State University
The vision of the Center for Electron Microscopy and Analysis (CEMAS) is to disrupt the stratification of disciplines in the characterization of materials. We will bring together multidisciplinary expertise to drive synergy and amplify our characterization capabilities, and thus challenge what is possible in electron microscopy. CEMAS has become the hub for business and academia for materials characterization. Our point of difference is our world-class multidisciplinary approach that enables academic and business partners to "see more" than ever before. We are the Center that breaks through the current characterization limitations in medicine, environmental science, energy materials, and beyond.
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The Ohio State University
The Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (MAE) enjoys an excellent academic reputation among peer programs, industry and government. The department instills the analytical skills, scientific fundamentals and broad education necessary to produce professional engineers, educators and researchers. MAE graduates utilize their engineering knowledge at the frontiers of applied mechanics, design and manufacturing, dynamic systems, and energy, fluid and thermal systems. Our engineers touch countless lives each day through the production of everything from clean energy to objects that soar above the earth. Wherever engineering challenges persist—in residential, commercial or industrial environments—our graduates work to improve the mechanisms that propel technological change.
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The Ohio State University
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Transportation Research Center
The Ohio State University
TRC is strategically located near the center of the nation’s ever-expanding automotive technology and manufacturing corridor, about 45 miles northwest of Columbus, TRC Inc. operates 24/7, 359 days a year, in all weather conditions. With more than 4,500 acres of varied terrain, extensive test and laboratory facilities, and a full range of road surfaces, virtually every kind of vehicle testing can be performed – durability, reliability, safety, crash avoidance, crash protection, brake, fuel economy, emissions, etc. – on any type of vehicle.
The Ohio State University Airport
The Ohio State University
The Ohio State University has played an integral part in advancing the aeronautics field, while evolving into one of the nation’s premier aviation programs. Less than 14 years after the first flight, World War I created the need for qualified military pilots. In spring 1917, the War Department established Schools of Military Aeronautics at six universities, including The Ohio State University.
The School of Aeronautics opened May 21, 1917, when the first "squadron" or group of 16 cadets reported. As the story goes, the cadets built the aircraft in the aeronautics building, located on the southeast corner of West 19th Avenue and Neil Avenue. The planes would then be rolled down the hill to the field just east of the Olentangy River, where flight tests and training would ensue.
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In support of its pilot training program, the university, in May 1942, purchased property for the development of an airport. The new facility was located on the outskirts of town, seven miles north of campus in northwest Columbus. The first plane to utilize the new airport landed at the field on November 5, 1942. What followed was the construction of the airport's first two buildings in the spring of 1943, and two 2,200 feet, hard-surfaced runways, taxiways, and aprons in early 1944.
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The Ohio State University
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The Ohio State University
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The Ohio State University
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The Ohio State University Center for Design and Manufacturing Excellence - Additive Manufacturing
The Ohio State University
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In order to serve its mission to sustain life, The Ohio State University College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences (CFAES) must transform into a more highly effective, relevant, efficient, and innovative college.
The college’s current greenhouse capabilities—designed using technology that is now 50 years out of date—are lacking basic features common among modern greenhouses. In areas where CFAES faculty and students have taken the lead, college facilities have lagged behind and might serve as a barrier to recruiting, securing, and maintaining diverse talent as well as leveraging student engagement and inclusion.
CFAES’ accomplishments are exceptional, but imagine how a cutting-edge complex at the forefront of controlled environment food production research will make a difference. The focus in this facility—research of modern, sustainable food production technologies, including soilless and hydroponic production—will help distinguish Ohio State from other institutions.
“The focus is unique in this facility,” said Chieri Kubota, PhD, professor of controlled environment agriculture in the CFAES Department of Horticulture and Crop Science. “It also will be interdisciplinary research and innovation.”
In short, CFAES needs a greenhouse of the future. This greenhouse is CEARC.
The college’s current greenhouse capabilities—designed using technology that is now 50 years out of date—are lacking basic features common among modern greenhouses. In areas where CFAES faculty and students have taken the lead, college facilities have lagged behind and might serve as a barrier to recruiting, securing, and maintaining diverse talent as well as leveraging student engagement and inclusion.
CFAES’ accomplishments are exceptional, but imagine how a cutting-edge complex at the forefront of controlled environment food production research will make a difference. The focus in this facility—research of modern, sustainable food production technologies, including soilless and hydroponic production—will help distinguish Ohio State from other institutions.
“The focus is unique in this facility,” said Chieri Kubota, PhD, professor of controlled environment agriculture in the CFAES Department of Horticulture and Crop Science. “It also will be interdisciplinary research and innovation.”
In short, CFAES needs a greenhouse of the future. This greenhouse is CEARC.
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