Jump to main content.


Information for P3 Teams

NCER Logo
Topics in this Section
Multimedia Highlights
View a P3 video describing the P3 competition.
P3 Research Project Search
Enter Search Term:

Advanced Search

Reporting expectations for new grantees are described in the Terms and Conditions of your grant which accompanied the award letter to your institution and are linked below. Once your project has been funded, your team is expected to work on the design during the fall and spring semesters. Then, April 20-22, 2008, your team and faculty advisor will come to Washington, DC, to exhibit your technology at the National Sustainable Design Expo on the National Mall. All teams are expected to attend this event in Washington. To see what the events were like in previous years, view the past teams and be sure to view the video filmed at last year’s Expo. Your team is also expected to submit a Project Report describing your project and your team proposal for a Phase II grant award (information is below).

Project Report Instructions

Your project report will be due at the end of March 2008. This will give the American Academy for the Advancement of Science enough time to distribute it to the panel of judges who will review it prior to their face-to-face visits with teams at the National Sustainable Design Expo and P3 Award Competition in Washington, DC.

Instructions for Final Report (Deadline extended by 5 hours to 9 PM EDT, Monday, March 31, 2008.)

Expo Information

Exciting Additional Opportunity while you’re in DC:

P3 teams are invited to attend a collaborative grantee progress review workshop being held in concert with the 4th Annual National Sustainable Design Expo. This workshop will review progress of the research projects awarded under the 2006 Collaborative Science and Technology Network for Sustainability (CNS) solicitation.

The workshop is scheduled for April 22-23, 2008, at the Grand Hyatt Hotel, in Washington, DC. The CNS grants program is a “testing ground” for new scientific or engineering approaches to sustainability. The CNS program enables citizens from all sectors – local governments, nonprofits and universities – to work together on practical projects for communities and states to achieve the economic and environmental benefits of green building and smart growth. Examples of CNS projects are tools to predict the impact of housing development on nearby lakes and streams, and methods for urban planners to build sustainability into land development and transportation in cities. [Read More about CNS]

Programmatic Terms & Conditions for the 2007 Phase 1 P3 Grants (PDF) (3 pp, 23 K, about PDF)

Top of page

 


Local Navigation


Jump to main content.