ChBE News—Spring/Summer 2003

Page 1

CHEM

NEWS

GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY • SCHOOL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING • VOL. 11 NO. 1 • SPRING/SUMMER 2003

Tech Dedicates the Ford Environmental Science and Technology Building, the School of Chemical Engineering’s New Home are certain to miss the future.” Tech President Wayne Clough, Mr. Ford and Dr. Meredith also addressed the large crowd during the dedication ceremony.

School Chair Ronald Rousseau stands outside the Gossage Atrium with the Ramblin’ Wreck at the Ford ES&T Building dedication.

After more than three years of planning and anticipation, the School of Chemical Engineering officially relocated to the newly constructed Ford Environmental Science and Technology Building in January. Four months later, on May 16, the building was officially dedicated with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and named for its principal and $10-million-donor, the Ford Motor Company. Numerous special guests attended the event, including Edsel Ford II, a member of the Board of Directors of Ford and great-grandson of the company’s founder; Thomas C. Meredith, Chancellor of the University

System of Georgia; and Virginia and Thomas Gossage, ChE ‘56, MSChE ‘57, who provided funding for the building’s Gossage Atrium. The School was honored to have Tiffany Stark, a senior chemical engineering major who will graduate this summer, selected to speak for the student body. She presented her thoughts on the new facility and how it will impact the campus now and in years to come. Quoting President John F. Kennedy, Tiffany challenged the audience to consider the importance of change: “Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or present

Boasting 287,000 square feet, the building is the largest academic structure on campus and anchors the Institute’s interdisciplinary Life Sciences and Technology Complex. Each department in the facility emphasizes in their curriculum the implications of technology on the environment. In addition to housing Chemical Engineering, classrooms and research facilities are also designated for the Advanced Technology & Development Center, Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, as well as the disciplines of environmental biology and chemistry. “Georgia Tech is already a recognized leader in creating sustainable technologies, solving environmental problems and educating students to view their professions through the prism of sustainability,” said President Clough during the dedication. “The ES&T Building will take our efforts to a new level, and we are very pleased to have

Ford Motor Company as a partner in this effort.” The $58 million Ford ES&T Building was built with a combination of state and private funding, including $38 million from the state of Georgia, $15 million from private donors and $5 million from the Georgia Research Alliance. “This is a tremendous new building, and it also is a tool,” said Mr. Ford. “But what counts most is the Georgia Tech scientists, engineers and cadre of dedicated graduate assistants. In the hands of these very capable people, this facility will help increase our environmental understanding and shape a better world for all of us.” Ford has a long history of hiring Tech graduates as well as funding the Institute’s programs. Over the past 40 years the company has been a key corporate partner with the Institute, giving more than $10.4 million with an additional $6.2 million committed for future gifts. Ford celebrated its 100th anniversary on June 16. Please see pages 2, 3 & 4 for photos of the Ford ES&T Building.


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