Call for Judges for ASCE Sustainable Solutions Competition

The ASCE Sustainable Solutions Competition is currently seeking judges for the 22 ASCE Student Symposia that will take place across the United States throughout the spring of 2025. ISI continues to support the ASCE Sustainable Solutions Competition this year through promotion and participation, and we hope you’ll consider joining us as we engage with these talented young students!

 

Judges should:

  • Have experience in sustainable design and be familiar with the Envision framework – ENV SP credential is a plus.
  • Enjoy interacting with students.
  • Have time to review and score project submissions before the event. Pre-work, which includes scoring technical design proposals, sustainability, and public outreach posters, will take about two hours per team submission.
  • Plan to attend the student symposium in-person to view poster displays, judge presentations, and meet with judging team to finalize team rankings.
  • Be impartial and fair to all participating teams.

 

To volunteer, fill out the volunteer form. Select “competition judge” and “ASCE Sustainable Solutions Competition.” Under “How did you learn about this student symposia volunteer opportunity?”please note ISI.

 

ISI’s New Technical Assistance Program Supports Small and Economically Distressed Communities

ISI launched its pilot for the Technical Assistance Program (TAP), which focuses on helping small and/or economically distressed communities in their efforts to develop more sustainable, resilient, and equitable infrastructure.Read more

Nearly 130 Organizations are Celebrating ISI Membership Milestones

This month we’re recognizing all organizations who reached 3, 5, and 10-year membership milestones with ISI in 2024. These companies and public agencies are committed to implementing more sustainable, equitable and resilient infrastructure projects with ISI and Envision.

Envision enables organizations to go beyond traditional minimum project requirements and focus on the areas that are critical to their long-term success, including: human well-being, mobility and access, community development, economic development, leadership, planning, collaboration, materials, energy, water, siting, conservation, ecology, emissions, and resilience. 

Continue reading this article.

Three Envision Italia Projects Earn Awards

Three infrastructure projects in Italy have obtained Envision awards through ICMQ. Stazione di Lecce and Stazione di Teramo each earned Envision Gold, and the redevelopment of Piazza Sigmund Freud, adjacent to Milan’s Porta Garibaldi Station earned Envision Silver. All three are Rete Ferroviaria Italiana-owned projects.

The Teramo Station project, pictured above, will support integration of the station with its urban and regional context, including by redeveloping station environments and creating spaces for community interaction. Located in the Abruzzo region, this project is also designed to enhance intermodal services by increasing parking facilities—facilitating efficient access to and from the station.

The Lecce Railway Station project, located in the Apulia region, focuses on removing architectural barriers, upgrading the existing underpass, and enhancing the travellers’ building to revitalize the station complex. The project also protects and enhances the heritage status of the traveller’s building and is implementing the GBC Historic Building protocol.

Piazza Sigmund Freud will feature a new urban park with expansive green spaces, medium- and large-sized trees, pools, and rest areas with terraces. Through the remade piazza, Porta Garibaldi Station in Milan will be reconnected to the adjoining community, becoming the hub of a cohesive and vibrant urban space.

Richmond’s New Sustainable Design Standards Are Supported by Envision

Richmond, Virginia provided an update on November 22 on the amazing work it is undertaking to meet climate and resilience objectives. The city’s new sustainable design standards, which reference the Envision Framework, were presented to community members and city employees in the City Council Chambers.

These standards are part of RVA Green 2050, led by the Office of Sustainability. Designed as an equity-centered, community based, integrated climate action and climate resilience plan, this initiative is formally called RVAgreen 2050: Climate Equity Action Plan 2030.

Richmond’s Mayor Levar M. Stoney was joined by Office of Sustainability Director Laura Thomas and other staff. ISI President & CEO Anthony Kane was also invited to share remarks!

The intent with the new sustainable design standards is for new development projects to “not only meet the functional requirements, and community needs but also align with the long-term vision for an equitable, sustainable, and vibrant Richmond.” To that end, Envision is identified as a key tool, particularly for horizontal projects where the framework “shall be applied… regardless of size, ensuring that sustainable practices are integrated throughout planning, design, construction, and operation” (4.2).

Learn more:

Sustainable Design Standards: https://www.rvagreen2050.com/sds
RVA Green Website: https://www.rvagreen2050.com/rvagreen-2050-plan
RVA Green 2050 plan: https://www.rva.gov/sites/default/files/2023-01/FullDocumentRVAgreenClimateEquityActionPlan2030.pdf