Building Services achieves ISSA CIMS-Green Building certification
Those who work and park in the southwest sector of campus will notice more disruption this week as Phase I of construction begins on the Campus Center project.
Quentin Holden, certified as an arborist through the International Society of Arboriculture, takes care of Tech's trees.
Georgia Tech’s transformation of its physical space helps create healthy spaces that give back to the environment and the campus community.
In January, as 13 new trees were being planted in Tech's triangle green space in the center of campus, the Institute also celebrated 11 consecutive years of earning its Tree Campus USA Certification.
Georgia Tech’s campus continues to grow and evolve. Right now, growing pains are particularly acute in the northwest sector of campus.
Georgia Tech is honored with Tree Campus USA certification for eleventh year straight.
This fall, Georgia Tech ranked No. 43 in The Princeton Review’s Top 50 Green Colleges and was also featured in the 2018 edition of The Princeton Review Guide to 399 Green Colleges.
The two trees — a 106-foot-tall willow oak located just south of Tech Green and a 58-foot-tall water oak located at the northeast end of Fitten Residence Hall — are failing and have both been deemed very high risk by an independent arborist.
There’s a little less shade in the middle of campus where one of Georgia Tech’s oldest trees stood for more than a century.