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Science and Technology
New RENCI Center in Charlotte to focus on urbanization and regional growth
| New RENCI Center in Charlotte to focus on urbanization and regional growth |
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| Wednesday, October 24, 2007 | |
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The Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI) today announced a partnership with the University of North Carolina at Charlotte to create a new RENCI engagement center focused on forecasting urban growth and its impacts. RENCI is a major collaborative venture of UNC-Chapel Hill, N.C. State and Duke universities and the state of North Carolina. RENCI at UNC Charlotte will be administered by the university’s Urban Institute and will be developed as a partnership among the Urban Institute, the Center for Applied Geographic Information Science and the Charlotte Visualization Center. The three campus entities will collaborate on interdisciplinary research that addresses trends in land use and development in the Charlotte area, and the effects of urbanization on natural resources, traffic patterns, urban infrastructure, quality of life and disaster response. Using resources provided through RENCI’s statewide organization, RENCI at UNC Charlotte will develop models to forecast future urban development, create and disseminate interactive, visual simulations of data on urbanization trends and deploy visual decision support tools that stakeholders will be able to use to develop and assess sustainable growth and economic development policies. The new center at UNC Charlotte will contribute its research and expertise to RENCI’s statewide mission of solving problems important to North Carolina through collaborations among research institutions, government and business. It will link via the North Carolina Research and Education Network to RENCI headquarters in Chapel Hill, to centers on the campuses of UNC-Chapel Hill, N.C. State and Duke universities and to engagement centers at UNC-Asheville and East Carolina University in Greenville. “RENCI at UNC Charlotte will expand our reach into our state’s largest metropolitan area and will bring a new core of university expertise to bear on an issue of great importance to North Carolina, our region and our nation,” said RENCI Director Dan Reed. “The work done at this new RENCI center will be valuable to urban and regional planners, developers, government officials, and citizens and will serve as a model for other communities wrestling with issues related to urbanization. We welcome our Charlotte colleagues to the RENCI virtual organization and look forward to many collaborations.” RENCI was launched in 2004 with a mission of initiating multidisciplinary research to address problems important to North Carolina. The institute received state funding in 2005 and launched multidisciplinary research efforts focused on planning and mitigating natural disasters, finding the genetic causes of disease, and using technology to improve healthcare. The institute is designed to be flexible, able to address a range of complex problems, to engage experts in the university system, in business and in government, and to share resources and expertise among its seven locations. |

