Network for Engineering With Nature

Network for Engineering With Nature

Environmental Services

Combining a diversity of on-the-ground experience with interdisciplinary teams.

About us

The Network for Engineering with Nature (N-EWN), established in 2019, is an active community of researchers, practitioners and educators who are addressing the major infrastructure challenges facing our society while creating opportunities that align ecological, social and engineering processes to achieve multiple societal benefits. Partners can join our LinkedIn group here: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13030164/

Website
https://n-ewn.org/
Industry
Environmental Services
Company size
2-10 employees
Type
Nonprofit
Founded
2020
Specialties
Environmental Engineering, Wetland Restoration, Environmental Science, Biodiversity, and Levee Setbacks

Updates

  • Network for Engineering With Nature reposted this

    View organization page for CREW, graphic

    305 followers

    View profile for Robert W. Nairn, PhD, BCES, graphic

    Robert W. Hughes Centennial Professor | David L. Boren Professor | Viersen Presidential Professor, Center for Restoration of Ecosystems and Watersheds, University of Oklahoma

    The University of Oklahoma Center for Restoration of Ecosystems and Watersheds (CREW) hosted the Central Great Plains Nature-Based Solutions Opportunities Inventory Workshop October 10-11 at the OU-Tulsa Schusterman Learning Center. The goal of this event was to identify the unique challenges and potential opportunities for nature-based solutions (NBS) and natural infrastructure (NI) in our region. Representatives from federal, state and local agencies, non-profit organizations, Tribal Nations, and academia, as well as interested citizens, participated in several breakout discussion groups on Thursday and took part in a field trip to local NBS and NI implementation sites on Friday. Special thanks to Hailey Blackwell, CHEYENNE MORGAN, Justine McCann, Lori Han and Robert Knox from CREW and Jeri Fleming, Stephen Nikolai, Dustin Browning, Bill Mausbach and Darrell Townsend from the Grand River Dam Authority, and Summer R. King and Paige Ford from the Quapaw Nation.

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  • Matthew Berg, CEO and Principal Scientist at our partner organization Simfero, contributed to a recent paper outlining opportunities for nature-based solutions, equity, and broad sustainability considerations in managing water resources in Texas. “Addressing Challenges to Ensuring Justice and Sustainability in Policy and Infrastructure for Texas Water Resources in the 21st Century” was published earlier this month in the Texas Water Journal, an outlet geared primarily toward decision makers and policy experts in the Lone Star State. The publication is a collaborative effort of the Texas Water Research Network, a working group of researchers from academia, non-profit organizations and the private sector. The authors point to the relatively uneven landscape of environmental justice efforts in the state of Texas, presenting recommendations for research and practice that aim to address policy and planning gaps with persistent environmental justice issues. “We aim to help water managers and policy makers identify and dismantle sources of inequity, particularly through including community voice.” Check out the full paper here: https://lnkd.in/gv-YeG_T

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  • Need some easy listening? Here's your October Partner Podcast Roundup! ☀️ The Institute for Resilient Infrastructure Systems' Resilient Futures Podcast welcomed professor and researcher Lauren McPhillips to discuss how to implement solar power while protecting ecosystems. 🩺 The Engineering With Nature® (EWN®) Podcast featured physician Chris Lemon for a two-part series on climate change, disease, and human health. 🏞️ The Engineering With Nature Podcast also spoke with Brian Davis, landscape architecture professor, and Cathy Johnson, NPS coastal ecologist to discuss combatting climate change threats in National Parks. Check out all of these wherever you listen to podcasts! https://lnkd.in/eQy6-k8x

    October 2024 Partner Podcast Roundup: Getting Creative with Climate Solutions - NETWORK FOR ENGINEERING WITH NATURE

    October 2024 Partner Podcast Roundup: Getting Creative with Climate Solutions - NETWORK FOR ENGINEERING WITH NATURE

    https://n-ewn.org

  • We love to see this relationship between our founding partners continue to grow! Congratulations to UGA on a pretty great new hire. 😉

    We’re very excited to welcome a new adjunct faculty member to the Institute for Resilient Infrastructure Systems (IRIS) team: Dr. Amanda Tritinger, PhD, PE, Deputy Program Manager of the Engineering With Nature® (EWN®) Initiative at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). Tritinger has worked extensively with the IRIS team as part of the Network for Engineering With Nature (N-EWN), which was founded jointly by USACE and IRIS in 2019. As part of her work with N-EWN, she serves on the operations and leadership team. Stationed at the US Army Engineering Research and Development Center’s Coastal and Hydraulics Laboratory (ERDC’s CHL), she collaborates extensively across ERDC Labs, USACE Districts, and external partners. Driven by a steadfast commitment to advancing coastal resilience, her research aims to foster a more resilient future for America’s coastal communities. Her dedication and contributions have been recognized with accolades including the ERDC’s CHL’s Team Member Award and CHL’s Achievement of Army Award in 2020, the Department of the Army’s Achievement of Army Medal in 2021, and the Department of the Army’s Commendation Medal in 2022. In her new role as an adjunct faculty member, Tritinger will serve on committees for IRIS graduate students and participate in various research endeavors.

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  • N-EWN partner Anchor QEA’s 2024 scholarship is now accepting applicants! Eligible students can apply through November 20, 2024, and recipients will be announced in January 2025. The scholarship awards funding to individuals who fit the following criteria: ✅ Are full-time graduate students in the United States (or have been accepted to a United States graduate school), ✅ Are pursuing a major related to Anchor QEA’s areas of expertise (engineering, environmental sciences, planning and restoration, or related technical field), and ✅ Have a demonstrated financial need. Since 1999, Anchor has QEA presented more than 170 scholarships to graduate students across the country, and we continue to take steps toward dismantling the financial barriers that contribute to inequities in STEM fields. We commit half of all funds to Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) candidates and strongly consider financial need during the application process. Candidates may access the scoring rubric, the application, and additional information about the scholarship here: https://lnkd.in/gugpVbt

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  • Each month, the N-EWN partners gather together to share updates on their work in and outside the Network. Meetings begin with a speaker or two from one of our partners to discuss their ongoing work, and then we hold a discussion period to ask questions about the presentation and share ideas with each other. This month, we heard from: The UCSC Center for Coastal Climate Resilience aims to lead the field of climate change mitigation on coasts by assessing risks, evaluating the benefits of nature and nature-based solutions (NbS), and identifying incentives to invest in NbS. Mike Beck, CCCR’s Director, pointed to the recent Hurricanes Helene and Milton to make their point: “The risks are real. They’re here now.” The meeting’s second speaker also pointed to the recent hurricanes- Aditya Gupta is a postdoctoral research scientist at UGA's Institute for Resilient Infrastructure Systems and works on a number of hydrodynamics and morphodynamics projects. In this talk, Gupta reviewed the benefits of barrier islands and coastal marshes for protection against storm surge. Our monthly meetings normally have two speakers, but this time we had a bonus talk by Ellis Kalaidijan from USACE ERDC! Kalaidijan and colleagues at USACE called for input from N-EWN’s community of NbS researchers, practitioners and stakeholders on a new project to evaluate NbS projects and support implementation. The Network for Engineering With Nature holds gatherings, both virtually and in person, to facilitate the social dynamics of innovation among diverse organizations. This month’s speakers engaged the entire team with exciting NbS news, and a reminder why natural solutions are so important. Thank you to all of our speakers!

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  • Network for Engineering With Nature reposted this

    View profile for Steven Bailey, graphic

    Landscape Architect working with USACE to promote and develop Engineering with Nature (EWN)

    This past week I had the pleasure of attending the ASLA conference and sitting in on an EWN short course hosted at the RAE conference in Washington, D.C. Many new connections were made, and boy oh boy did I learn a lot! It was great to listen in to all the new happenings within Engineering With Nature® (EWN®).

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  • Network for Engineering With Nature reposted this

    Join us for this month's N-EWN Knowledge Series, "The Evolution of a Resilient Coastal Community: Over 20 Years of Beaches, Back Bays, Rivers and Stormwater in Norfolk, Virginia." This month's speakers are Brian Joyner from Moffatt & Nichol and Kelli Cunningham from Waggonner & Ball. Register for this webinar series here: https://bit.ly/3gR9ADL Read more: https://lnkd.in/evkbTzDP

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  • Network for Engineering With Nature reposted this

    View profile for Ram Mohan, graphic

    Sr. Principal & Nature-Based Solutions Lead at Anchor QEA Inc; Professor of Practice & Director, Sustainable Sediment Management Hub, Institute of Resilient Infrastructure Systems (IRIS), University of Georgia

    A Call for Action at the RAE 2024 Summit! It was energizing to meet friends and colleagues at the Restore America's Estuaries 2024 Summit in Crystal City, Virginia, where we spent almost a week, discussing how to advance nature based solutions (NBS) as a vital tool to restore our estuaries. The REPI (Readness and Environmental Protection Integration) program’s closing plenary was truly a highlight, kicked off by Mr. Ron Tickle, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Environmental Management and Restoration, attended by nearly 350 professionals. The panel, chaired by Dr. Michelle Covi, discussed how to integrate NBS and innovative thinking to further advance REPI (Jacquelene Smith, Dr. Rom Lipcius, Benjamin McFarlane, AICP, CFM). A nice finishing touch was Thursday’s Engineering With Nature® (EWN®) short course, hosted by Amanda Tritinger, PhD, PE, and Dr. Jeff King from the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC), attended by 75 professionals. We ended with a call to be “big and bold” on NBS, thanks to Dr. Todd Bridges from UGA’s Institute for Resilient Infrastructure Systems.

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