NIST issues $1.5 million grant to develop energy efficient building products in Philadelphia

by Ann Withanee — September 15, 2010—The Delaware Valley Industrial Resource Center (DVIRC) and New Jersey Manufacturing Extension Partnership (NJMEP) have received a $1.5 million grant from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) to help small to medium size manufacturers in the Philadelphia region commercialize new technologies in conjunction with the recently announced $122 million Department of Energy (DOE) Energy Innovation Hub located at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.

The new NIST award and the DOE Energy Innovation Hub are both key components of the Greater Philadelphia Innovation Cluster (GPIC) for Energy Efficient Buildings at The Navy Yard. The goals of the GPIC are to improve energy efficiency of buildings, and create jobs in Greater Philadelphia, the Mid-Atlantic region, and beyond.

The three-year grant will help connect the approximately 6,500 manufacturers in the region with the research and development initiatives at the Navy Yard and provide a pathway for energy-efficient building products to be commercialized in the marketplace. The project represents the first time federal, state, and local public and private assets will be shared to create a formal applied research, commercialization, manufacturing, and workforce education cluster.

DVIRC and NJMEP collective roles will be to connect Philadelphia’s manufacturers to various projects being developed at the Energy Innovation Hub including R&D, design and testing of new products, materials, technologies, and systems and commercialize those opportunities to grow business value and spur job creation. Together they will leverage their relationships with manufacturers to identify technologies such as sensors, new building material and computer simulation tools, which can be developed into components to be licensed and manufactured.

The mission of the Energy Innovation Hub is to research, develop and demonstrate highly efficient building components, systems, and models which are applicable to both retrofit and new construction. The Hub team will pursue a research, development, demonstration, and deployment (RDD&D) program targeting technologies for single buildings and district-wide systems.

For more information, see the Web site.