Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future

The Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability is the hub of collaborative sustainability research at Cornell University, forging vital connections among researchers, students, staff, and external partners. The center’s funding and programming accelerate groundbreaking research within and across all of Cornell’s colleges and schools. In turn, the center is the university’s home to bold ideas and powerful new models that ensure people and the planet not only survive, but thrive.

Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability
Company typeResearch Organization
PredecessorCornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability
Founded2010
Headquarters200 Rice Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 14850
Key people
David Lodge, The Francis J. DiSalvo Director
ParentCornell University
Websiteatkinson.cornell.edu

History

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Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability grew out of the Cornell Center for a Sustainable Future (CCSF), which was established in 2007 as a pilot program with support from alumnus David R. Atkinson '60 and his wife Patricia[1] following a multiyear, cross-campus discussion about energy and sustainability. In 2010, the Atkinsons endowed the center with an $80 million gift,[2][3] making it the largest gift ever received from an individual at Cornell University at that time.[4]

Recognizing that sustainability solutions cannot be limited to one field of inquiry and that discovery in one area may affect other parts of the whole, the center is home to 514 Faculty Fellows representing 12 Cornell University colleges and 90 departments.

By providing startup funding for cross-college collaborations, time-sensitive research, and external partnerships, the center supports pioneering discovery with real-world impact in food systems, energy transitions, climate, behavior, the built environment, and the linkages between human and environmental health.

 
Atkinson Hall under construction in June 2023

Construction on a new building to house the Center was announced in 2021. The 90,000 square foot, four-story building on Tower Road is expected to be completed in 2024.[5]

Research Support

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The Atkinson Center supports Cornell University researchers through multiple funds and fellowships:

  • Academic Venture Fund—The Academic Venture Fund (AVF) seeds original, multidisciplinary research that is not likely to find funding elsewhere because the projects are novel, risky, need early data to establish traction, or involve new teams working together.
  • Innovation for Impact Fund—The Innovation for Impact Fund (IIF) connects our nonprofit, government, and industry partners with the research capacity of Cornell to jointly develop and test evidence-based solutions. Current collaborators include CARE, The Nature Conservancy, Environmental Defense Fund, Avangrid, and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute.
  • Rapid Response Fund—The Rapid Response Fund (RRF) facilitates urgent or time-sensitive sustainability research, workshops, and other activities. With unusually flexible guidelines, the RRF is a source of funding for smaller projects that foster a broad range of sustainability initiatives.
  • Faculty Fellowship for Social Sciences, Humanities, and Arts—The Social Sciences, Humanities, and Arts (SSHA) Faculty Fellows Fund adds a unique and invaluable perspective by reshaping imaginations, behaviors, and minds. This work complements and extends the center’s sustainability advances in the life, physical, environmental, and agricultural sciences.

Partner Organizations

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Partner organizations include but are not limited to:

  • CARE—This collaboration connects Atkinson Center research teams with CARE staff on the ground in communities around the world, speeding delivery of science-based solutions. Cornell scientists also provide background research to inform CARE positions on policy issues related to international food assistance and relief aid.
  • Environmental Defense Fund (EDF)—The center's work with Environmental Defense Fund includes joint research activities and an undergraduate internship program. The research program leverages Cornell research expertise with EDF's leadership in the policy arena. The internship program places Cornell students in EDF offices around the world to work on complex projects.
  • Oxfam America—This collaboration of the Atkinson Center, Clark University, and Oxfam America looks to identify common threads in evaluating rural resilience around the world.
  • The Nature Conservancy (TNC)—In partnership with the Atkinson Center and five other leading universities, The Nature Conservancy established a NatureNet Science Fellows program to create a reservoir of next-generation interdisciplinary science talent. The fellowships are awarded annually to six outstanding early-career scientists working at the interface of conservation, business, and technology.
  • Smithsonian Institution—This comprehensive collaboration between the Atkinson Center and the world’s largest museum and research complex responds to urgent needs in wildlife and natural habitat conservation. Together, experts from the center and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute are training the next generation of conservation scientists, providing practical advice to governments and the private sector in biodiversity hot spots, and sharing evidence with a wide audience that wildlife and natural habitat conservation improves all lives.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Graduate Pays Back Cornell With $80 Million Gift". Dealbook. 28 October 2010. Retrieved 14 July 2011.
  2. ^ "Historic gift creates Atkinson Center to bolster sustainability research, education, action". Cornell Chronicle. Archived from the original on 5 July 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2011.
  3. ^ "Record Gift to Cornell to Fund Research". Wall Street Journal. 28 October 2010. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  4. ^ Dobbin, Ben (28 October 2010). "Cornell Gets $80M Gift For Sustainability Work". Huffington Post. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  5. ^ Fleischman, Tom (8 March 2021). "Atkinsons' $30M gift to name multidisciplinary building". Cornell Chronicle. Cornell University. Archived from the original on 1 February 2023. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
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