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Nicholas School of the Environment

Nicholas School of the Environment
Duke-Shield-Nicholas.jpg
Type Private
Established 1938 — School of Forestry and Environmental Studies
1995 — Nicholas School of the Environment
Dean Jeffrey Vincent
Location Durham, North Carolina, U.S.
Website www.nicholas.duke.edu

The Nicholas School of the Environment is one of ten graduate and professional schools at Duke University and is headquartered on Duke’s main campus in Durham, N.C. A secondary coastal facility is maintained in Beaufort, North Carolina. The Nicholas School is composed of three research divisions: Earth and Ocean Sciences, Environmental Sciences and Policy and Marine Science and Conservation. The current dean of the Nicholas School is Jeffrey Vincent.

The Nicholas School celebrates its creation date as 1991, but it represents a coming together of three entities that are almost as old as the university itself. Both formed in 1938, the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and the Duke University Marine Laboratory came together in 1991 to become the School of Environment. Following a $20 million gift from Peter M. and Ginny Nicholas in 1995, the school was named the Nicholas School of the Environment. In 1997, the Department of Geology (formed in 1936) joined the school as the Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences and focuses on a number of areas at the intersection of earth and environmental sciences.

The school is headquartered in Environment Hall, a new 70,000-square-foot, five-story glass-and-concrete building, located on Circuit Drive on Duke’s West Campus that incorporates green features and technologies inside and out. It has been designed to meet or exceed the criteria for LEED Green Building platinum certification, the highest level of sustainability. Duke University’s Environment Hall Received LEED Platinum Certification on October 26, 2015.

The hall houses five classrooms, a 105-seat auditorium, 45 private offices, 72 open office spaces, a 32-seat computer lab, an outdoor courtyard and an environmental art gallery, as well as conference rooms, shared workrooms and common.

Green features range from rooftop solar panels and innovative climate control and water systems, to special windows that moderate light and heat, to an organic orchard and sustainably designed landscaping. The building sits in front of the A Wing of Levine Science Research Center (LSRC) its former home. That wing of the LSRC is currently undergoing renovations to house laboratories and student services oriented offices. The Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences occupies renovated laboratories in the Old Chemistry building on the West Campus with plans to relocate to new space in Environment Hall sometime in 2015. The division maintains facilities for geochemical analysis and climate modeling studies.


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