front and center:
UNL Gets Regional Transportation Center Bid:
The University of Nebraska-Lincoln has
been awarded a $6.2 million grant from
the U.S. Department of Transportation's
Research and Innovative Technology Administration
designating UNL's Mid-America
Transportation Center as a regional university
transportation center.
"For five years we have had a vision of winning
this regional university transportation
center and now our day has come," said Prem
Paul, UNL vice chancellor for research. "This
is an important grant because this center
will put us in the driver's seat as the leader in
transportation research and education in this
region, and it will put our faculty, our university
and our state at the table where national
transportation priorities are set."
The Mid-America Transportation Center is
a consortium with UNL as the lead institution
with regional partners Kansas State University,
University of Kansas, University of Missouri-
Rolla and University of Missouri. The Nebraska
Department of Roads and the Kansas
and Missouri Departments of Transportation
also are key partners. Laurence Rilett, Keith
W. Klaasmeyer Chair in Engineering and
Technology in the civil engineering department
at UNL, is the center director.
Nebraska has always been a transportation
hub; from the days of the Pony Express
and Oregon Trail through the building of the
first transcontinental railway, which began at
Omaha. Today, Interstate 80 and the nation's
two largest railways carry the nation's freight
across the state, while the Missouri River is
gaining importance as a transportation route.
"Nebraska is becoming a major transportation
and logistics hub because of our
strategic location and this is an important
driver of economic growth of the state," said
UNL Chancellor Harvey Perlman. "MATC,
together with the Nebraska Transportation
Center that we established in partnership
with the Nebraska Department of Roads this
year, will contribute directly to this sector of
our economy through research that improves
our roads and increases safety and by
educating and training the next generation of
transportation professionals."
Although the United States arguably has
the world's best transportation system, it
faces numerous challenges, including large
increases in freight movements by all modes
of transportation, Rilett said.
"This is particularly true in the Midwest,
which is literally at the crossroads of the
nation's transportation system," he said.
The UNL-based regional center's theme
is "improving safety and minimizing risk
associated with increasing multi-modal freight
movement on the U.S. surface transportation
system," which fits well with MATC's
expertise. MATC will focus on safety research
related to rural transportation. Key safety
research areas include traffic control, animal
crashes, safer at-grade railway crossings and
work zones and the development of more effective
and economical roadside crash barriers.
The university transportation centers
program supports transportation research,
education and technology transfer that
promote scientific innovations in a variety
of transportation modes and disciplines,
according to U.S. Department of Transportation
information.
MATC is the Region 7 center, serving
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. It
is one of 10 regional university transportation
centers in the nation. Other universities
designated as regional centers in the competition
included the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Purdue University, Texas A&M
University, the University of California and
Pennsylvania State University.
-Monica Norby, Office of Research