Tools for making imagination blossom at MIT.nano
New STUDIO.nano supports artistic research and encounters within MIT.nano’s facilities.
New STUDIO.nano supports artistic research and encounters within MIT.nano’s facilities.
A wide range of faculty disciplines showcases the breadth of research and scholarship across the school.
The effort to accelerate climate work at the Institute adds to its leadership team.
Increasing severity and duration of heat drives data collection and resiliency planning for the forthcoming Climate Resiliency and Adaptation Roadmap.
With NASA planning permanent bases in space and on the moon, MIT students develop prototypes for habitats far from planet Earth.
Ranking at the top for the 13th year in a row, the Institute also places first in 11 subject areas.
“Design is not a luxury,” the Gensler global co-chair told advanced degree recipients. “It’s for everyone, everywhere.”
The 10 Design Fellows are MIT graduate students working at the intersection of design and multiple disciplines across the Institute.
For the MIT Visiting Artist Chloé Bensahel, fabric itself tells the story.
The grants fund studies of clean hydrogen production, fetal health-sensing fabric, basalt architecture, and shark-based ocean monitoring.
The Institute also ranks second in five subject areas.
PhD student Lavender Tessmer applies computation to create textiles that behave in novel ways.
In order to recycle construction materials, keep them close to home, a new study of Amsterdam suggests.
In class 4.500 (Design Computation), Professor Larry Sass teaches the thoughtful and experimental process of design through the familiar idea of a chair, while exploring “foundational technologies.”
Extractive industries threaten water, glaciers, and livelihoods, but new research offers hope.