Pushing Boundaries
- A team of engineering students, with the help of ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Boulder's crowdfunding platform, plans to put its design to the test in this year's International RoboSub Competition.
- The backyard shed is getting a modern upgrade thanks to the innovative ideas of a group of ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Boulder students. Using modern design ideas and trends in working behavior, the team is creating environments that enhance personal, professional and creative productivity to achieve a better work/life balance.
- Walk through the Japanese torii gate surrounded by a wildflower garden and step into an ethereal glass building filled with rare and unusual plants and flowers, open twice a year for public tours.
- Launched in 2015, the UMC Student Arts Program showcases artwork by ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Boulder graduate students and undergraduates. Two participants discuss their art related to this year's theme "Empower the Future."
- Through the center, students delve into the American West's vibrant, complex narratives and rich heritage while engaging with leading scholars, writers and civil servants.
- What happens when aerospace engineering students come together with marine biologists to help save sperm whales from harm and potential extinction? The SHAMU whale-scouting drone system.
- VeRVE strives to build a strong and diverse community to motivate, entertain and bring people together through dance, shining a positive light on street dance and hip-hop and the true meaning behind them.
- A new technology developed in the Joel Kralj Lab at ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Boulder is driving the field of bacterial electrophysiology in new directions and enabling researchers to study electrical activity in live bacteria.
- With the blink of an eye, users of a hands-free device can control an electric wheelchair, operate a drone or lock the front door, regardless of their physical capacities.
- Based on campus data and student feedback on quality of life, career preparation and environmentally responsible practices, ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Boulder is a top "green" school, according to The Princeton Review.