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What is NEES...? The National Science Foundation (NSF) George E. Brown, Jr. Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES) is a project funded under the NSF Major Research Equipment Program.  Congress has authorized NEES for a five-year construction period, from October 1, 1999 through September 30, 2004, for a total of $81.9 million.  The goal of NEES is to provide a national, networked collaboratory of geographically-distributed, shared-use next-generation experimental research equipment sites, with teleobservation and teleoperation capabilities, which will transform the environment for earthquake engineering research and education through collaborative and integrated experimentation, computation, theory, databases, and model-based simulation to improve the seismic design and performance of U.S. civil and mechanical infrastructure systems.  The construction period was completed on September 30, 2004, the NEES collaboratory has entered its operational period from October 1, 2004 through September 30, 2014 and will be managed by the NEES Consortium.

The NEES program will provide an unprecedented infrastructure for research and education, consisting of networked and geographically distributed resources for experimentation, computation, model-based simulation, data management, and communication. Rather than placing all of these resources at a single location, NSF has leveraged its investment and facilitated research and education integration by distributing the shared-use equipment among 15 universities throughout the US. To insure that the nation's researchers can effectively use this equipment, equipment sites will be operated as shared-use facilities, and NEES will be implemented as a network-enabled collaboratory. As such, members of the earthquake engineering community will be able to interact with one another, access unique, next generation instruments and equipment, share data and computational resources, and retrieve information from digital libraries without regard to geographical location. Currently, four major activities are being undertaken to bring NEES on line. These include constructing the shared-use Equipment Sites, developing standards and advanced networking capabilities to connect the powerful new experimental and computational resources with the earthquake engineering community as well as to the public at large, developing a community-backed research collaboratory and consortium to carryout and manage NEES activities, and identifying a research agenda that addresses high priority needs.

Other NEES Equipment Sites

Shake Table Research Equipment

University of Nevada, Reno
University at Buffalo, SUNY
University of California, San Diego

Centrifuge Research Equipment


University of California, Davis
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Tsumani Wave Basin

Oregon State University, Corvallis

Large Scale Lifeline Testing

Cornell University

Field Experimentation and Monitoring Installations




University of California, Los Angeles
University of Texas at Austin
University of California, Santa Barbara

Large Scale Labratory Experimentation Systems

University at Buffalo, SUNY
University of California at Berkeley
University of Colorado, Boulder
University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Lehigh University
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
NEES@UNR footer Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering