Georgia Tech is one of only six higher education campuses in the nation to receive the GS-42 certification.
The Georgia Institute of Technology has received the U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon Schools (ED-GRS) recognition award.
Three initiatives demonstrate efforts in this department to reduce waste and optimize operations.
Tech earned recognition as a Tree Campus USA for 2016 from the Arbor Day Foundation.
This fall, the Office of Solid Waste Management & Recycling, Building Services, and the Office of Campus Sustainability launched a pilot composting project in the Roger A. and Helen B. Krone Engineered Biosystems Building (EBB).
This fall, Georgia Tech ranked No. 43 in The Princeton Review’s Top 50 Green Colleges and was also featured in the 2018 edition of The Princeton Review Guide to 399 Green Colleges.
Georgia Tech’s transformation of its physical space helps create healthy spaces that give back to the environment and the campus community.
As the construction fencing comes down, a fresh, new greenspace welcomes students for the spring semester.
On the one-year anniversary of the launch of Sustainability Next, a publicly available version of the plan is being released and several plan initiatives are coming to life.
Events throughout the month of October offer a glimpse into the wide-ranging commitment to sustainability at Georgia Tech.

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