The National Science Foundation
created the George E. Brown, Jr.
Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES) to improve
our understanding of earthquakes and their effects.
NEES is a shared national network of 15 experimental facilities,
collaborative tools, a centralized data repository, and earthquake
simulation software, all linked by the ultra-high-speed Internet2
connections of NEESgrid. Together, these resources provide the means
for collaboration and discovery in the form of more advanced research
based on experimentation and computational simulations of the ways
buildings, bridges, utility systems, coastal regions, and geomaterials
perform during seismic events.
NEES will revolutionize earthquake engineering research and
education. NEES research will enable engineers to develop better
and more cost-effective ways of mitigating earthquake damage through
the innovative use of improved designs, materials, construction
techniques, and monitoring tools. This research can also help prevent
infrastructure damage from other natural disasters and from terrorism.
Preparing for and protecting against these threats makes American
communities more resilient and enhances their ability to meet the
challenges posed by future disasters.
With funding from NSF, NEES will operate for ten years (October 1,
2004 - September 30, 2014). The program is managed by the nonprofit
NEES Consortium, Inc. (NEESinc).
|
The NEES project was named in honor of the late George E. Brown,
Jr., former chairman of the House Science Committee and a champion of
engineering and science in Congress for more than 30 years.
In 1977, Representative Brown authored the legislation creating the
Federal interagency National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program,
which led to the creation of the George E. Brown, Jr. Network for
Earthquake Engineering Simulation.
|