CATchment
An emblematic example of TFISE’s role in facilitating the campus as a living laboratory while making meaningful environmental change. It was installed as a storm water filtration soft structure that provides storm water cleanup in a sensitive area of south campus while exposing commuters to the basics of pollinator and wildlife habitat in constructed wetlands. In 2018 we are continuing development with the addition of signage to help inform users and passers-by and to promote visitor and data logs. TFISE supports semi-annual clean-ups to maintain the CATchment each April and October. Learn more
CCG: Campus Community Gardens at Shawneetown
Originally installed in 2009 through the Gaines Scholar Program and improved in 2014 as part of a Sustainability Challenge Grant, Cultivating Place for a Sustainable Community: revitalizing the Shawneetown Community Garden, the CCG are a destination for residents of the Graduate and Family Housing and the broader campus to grow nourishment and community through association and interaction. TFISE Associate Director has renewed support for regular maintenance of the CCG on an as needed basis as part of the TFISE service mission.
Interdisciplinary Faculty Working Groups
For several years, the TFISE supported a number of faculty working groups that engaged a variety of topics with a transdisciplinary approach. This included groups focused on the built environment, food and water systems, urban forests, climate and more. The scholarship and outreach of several of these groups directly contributed to the creation of ongoing initiatives, including: