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Building Science Deep Dive into Blower Door Testing Peter Yost interviews Collin Olson from The Energy Conservatory and learns about the blower door equation exponent, depressurization vs. Pressurization, using sound to assess air leakage, and more. Inscribed on the southeast corner of University of Cincinnati’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business is a name. A permanent tribute to a man who was said to bleed red and black. Those who knew him best described John B. Goering as a man of great value and values. A man of remarkable character, integrity, and a tremendous sense of purpose. Thoughtful, generous, and disciplined.
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*Drivers The Energy Conservatory ReviewsFebruary 10, 2021
Inscribed on the southeast corner of the University of Cincinnati’s Carl H. Lindner College of Business is a name. A permanent tribute to a man who was said to bleed red and black.
Those who knew John B. Goering best described him as a man of great value and values. A man of remarkable character, integrity and a tremendous sense of purpose. A family man. Thoughtful, generous, and disciplined. A Bearcat forever.
In 1952, Goering enrolled in UC’s College of Business. There, he met the love of his life, Gloria, who was studying home economics. The pair were engaged during John’s senior year and married that fall. They would be married for 55 years, raising two children, Stuart and Susan, and enjoying seven grandchildren, before Gloria passed.
Shortly after marrying, Goering accepted a position with the college to teach accounting. He would serve as a professor in the college until 1981 while simultaneously acting as university registrar and associate vice president of admissions and records from 1967 to 1975. An incredible feat, to be sure.
Goering also would serve as president of the UC Alumni Association and UC Foundation trustee, earning eight distinguished service awards from UC, including the William Howard Taft Medal for Notable Achievement as well as an honorary doctorate of commercial science.
“I don’t think you could find many people who care as deeply for the university and the Cincinnati community as John did,” said Marianne Lewis, dean of the Carl H. Lindner College of Business. “He was such a positive driver and treasured adviser. I’m deeply grateful for his impact and inspiration.”
“He was a Bearcat, through and through,” said Sidney Barton, PhD, John and Gloria Goering Professor of Family and Private Business, Department of Management. “If it weren’t for John, we would not have a dedicated center for family and private businesses.”I don’t think you could find many people who care as deeply for the university and the Cincinnati community as John did. He was such a positive driver and treasured adviser. I’m deeply grateful for his impact and inspiration.
Marianne LewisDean, Carl H. Lindner College of Business Drivers The Energy Conservatory
In the 1980s, while working in his family’s meat-packing plant, Goering observed a conflict between his father and uncle. Their unequal partnership and resulting discord planted a seed of curiosity in John about how family businesses addressed relational challenges. From there, the family business center idea germinated.
In 1985, Goering met with Leonard Arnoff, former dean of the Carl H. Lindner College of Business, to discuss the idea. After a community survey revealed the lack of family business-focused programs, they got to work laying the foundation for the Goering Center for Family and Private Business.
“They needed a faculty member to serve as a university sponsor and to fill the executive director role,” explained Barton, whose background in private business made him the natural fit. “We had a few initial goals: we wanted to establish value by creating a program that was self-sustaining, and we wanted to make it affordable. John felt particularly strong about the second.”
John Goering at the grand opening of Carl H. Lindner Hall in 2019.
From trips to Georgia to gain insights from a model program at Kennesaw State to establishing the center as a 501(c)(3) to filming a Sunday-morning TV program, the pair pursued several strategies to ensure success of the center.
“John and Sid were really a dynamic duo getting the center off the ground,” Lewis said.
“When John established the Goering Center, there were some founding principles that John really wanted to be enduring. One of those principles was to always do what is in the best interests of our core members — the family and private businesses in our Cincinnati region. John lived that,” said Larry Grypp, former president of the Goering Center.
Today, the Goering Center has grown to become America’s largest university-based educational resource for family and private businesses. It now serves more than 400 family and private businesses with nearly a dozen staff members and more than 200 volunteers.
“There is no denying that our mission to serve families is an important one,” Goering wrote on the center’s website. “Family and private businesses are a significant economic driver in the community and a source of growth in employment across our region. The ultimate goal of the Goering Center is to see people succeed in both their family and business life, thus moving forward in their journey.”
How do you recognize a man like John Goering?
It’s a question Carol Butler has explored frequently as president of the Goering Center. Drivers sweex input devices. In 2018, she executed the perfect tribute.
“It was my first year emceeing our annual awards ceremony,” Butler said. “John had just retired from the board, and we were trying to figure out how to honor his legacy.”
A lecture hall within the college already had been named for him and Gloria, and plans were in progress to carve his name into a wall outside the building — to become the only name besides “Lindner” on the outer wall — but Butler wanted to do more.
A big idea was born: To surprise Goering during an upcoming event with the UC marching band. Butler started at the top, contacting the Chair of UC’s Board of Trustees, the UC President and finally the Director of Bearcat Bands.
On Sept. 11, 2018, nearly 700 people gathered in a banquet hall in downtown Cincinnati to celebrate the Goering Center’s 19th annual award winners.
“It was after John’s third standing ovation of the evening when more than 250 UC band members crept toward the door,” Butler remembers. “I said, ‘John, for this next thing, I completely ignored what you asked me to do.’”
She then gleefully said, “Christopher, strike up the band!”
With that, the band came pouring in.
“John’s face was priceless,” Butler said. “Just complete joy.”
Goering will be remembered for many things: His vision and passion for family and private business, his impact on the community, and his investment in time, energy and treasure at the university he loved — which loved him back.
Goering’s leadership and generosity was felt across the university. Some highlights of his service and generosity include:
*Goering was also one of the longest-serving trustees in UC Foundation history (1986-2014).
*In 2015, he received the Chairman Award, the UC Foundation’s highest recognition for a volunteer who has made a noteworthy, university-wide philanthropic impact.
*He helped to create UCATS and received his Black Blazer in 2000, UC Athletics’ highest honor.
*Together with his brothers, Goering created the Albert W. Goering Memorial Scholarship to honor his father.
Featured image at top: John Goering with a UC student. Photo/UC Brand + Creative.TagsDrivers The Energy Conservatory CareersDebugQuery for this Keynote 1 – A Tale of Smart Cities: The Role of Electrical Energy and Electrification
Tuesday, 29 September
The energy industry in undergoing major transformations due to a number of drivers, including the push for decarbonization and the effects climate change are having on communities around the world. Electric utilities like Commonwealth Edison (ComEd), are developing significant innovations and making groundbreaking discoveries when it comes to energy technology and the smart city. These new and emerging technologies are being designed to address the realities of climate change, the increased frequency of cyber-security threats, and public health concerns regarding COVID-19.
In this keynote address, Dr. Shay Bahramirad, Vice President of Engineering and Smart Grid at ComEd, will provide the opportunity for conference attendees to learn more about beneficial electrification, the connected communities that are working toward achieving decarbonization, and the latest energy technologies that are making the smart city dream into a reality. This keynote speech provides unique insight into what utilities and stakeholders are doing to promote widespread decarbonization and smart city technology today.Shay Bahramirad
Short bio:
Dr. Shay Bahramirad is the Vice President of Engineering and Smart Grid at Commonwealth Edison. She holds executive responsibility for ComEd’s grid engineering, planning, and reliability functions, as well as developing the vision of grid of the future, emerging technology roadmaps, and investment strategies. Shay serves as a strategic business leader in ComEd, working on the 21st century power grid transformation and the new energy economy. She is Vice President of New Initiatives and Outreach at IEEE PE and an Editorial Board Member of Electricity Journal. Dr. Bahramirad is also an Adjunct Professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology and holds multiple advanced degrees, including a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from the Illinois Institute of Technology.Keynote 2 – Regulatory & Policies Impacting Smart Cities and Clean Energy
Wednesday, 30 September
GHG emissions have been historically peaking year on year despite the massive availability of highly competitive low carbon energy technologies. Beyond clean technologies, achieving climate neutrality requires a profound policy driven societal transformation that can only achieved by a holistic and multidisciplinary redefinition of our governance systems, social organization, lifestyles, values and behaviors. Cities have been at the forefront of the Clean Energy Transition and constitute a privileged living laboratory to experiment optimal transformational pathways to climate neutrality. The session will put in perspective the state of play and highlight the need for a systemic transformational approach to address the climate challenge ahead of us.Adel El GammalSecretary General of the European Energy Research Alliance (EERA)
Short bio:
Adel El Gammal is the Secretary General of the European Energy Research Alliance (EERA). Usb passthru driver ( multi-instance ) driver download for windows 10. EERA is the strategic pillar of the EU Strategic Energy Technology Plan and coordinates Research activities between 250 Research Organisations and Universities across 30 countries in Europe. Adel El Gammal is a recognized expert and a senior EU Affairs professional in the fields of low carbon technologies, energy transition, and climate change. Before joining EERA, Adel was active for the last 11 years in the EU climate energy debate, notably as Director of the Becquerel Institute, an advanced consultancy on the role of PV in the energy transition, Executive Director of LowCarbonFacts (an ECF funded programme) and Secretary General of the EU Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA, now SolarPower Europe). Before focusing his activities on renewable energy and the energy transition, Adel held various international executive positions in blue chip companies active in the field of IT and Management Consulting. Adel is civil engineer from Ecole Polytechnique of Brussels, holds degrees in Business Administration from Solvay Business School (Belgium) and Insead (France) and later specialized in Environment Management (IGEAT, Belgium).Keynote 3 – Smart Mobility beyond Covid-19: where is our yellow brick road?
Thursday, October 1
Less than a year ago, mobility trends around the world seemed quite clear: 51 million connected cars shipped in 2019, shared mobility a la Uber, Lyft and Didi growing fast in many countries, and billions of dollars of venture capital and corporate investment poured into developing autonomous vehicles and racing them to the market. With the Covid-19 pandemic everything changed from one day to another. While it’s clear that our human society will continue to move large numbers of people and goods, nobody really knows how mobility will look like even six months from now let alone one year.
In this keynote, we will start by exploring the available data on how the pandemic is changing the mobility landscape in the near-term. After formulating a few scenarios for the aftermath, we will draw from eight years of experience deploying city-scale networks of connected vehicles to illustrate how the convergence of transportation, communication and computation continues to offer unparalleled opportunities for smarter and more sustainable mobility services — all of which indispensable for us to face the very real and enormous challenges of climate change.Drivers The Energy Conservatory Seating ChartJoão BarrosDrivers The Energy Conservatory Reviews
An award-winning wireless engineer, academic leader and passionate entrepreneur, João loves to turn complex theorems and algorithms into products and services that can make a real difference in people’s lives. After more than a decade developing new wireless networking technologies at Technische Universitaet Muenchen, Universidade do Porto, MIT, and Carnegie Mellon, João founded an award-winning venture-backed startup, Veniam, where he serves as CEO. His work has led to 180 science and technology papers, as well as feature articles by NPR, BBC, MIT Technology Review, The Atlantic, and TechCrunch.
João Barros has received several awards, including the 2010 IEEE Communications Society Young Researcher Award for the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, the 2011 IEEE ComSoC and Information Theory Society Joint Paper Award, the 2012 BES National Innovation Award, the 2013 Building Global Innovators Grand Prize (ISCTE-IUL and MIT) and a state-wide best teaching award by the Bavarian State Ministry of Sciences, Research and the Arts.
João Barros has a Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering and Information Technology from the Technische Universitaet Muenchen (Germany), his undergraduate education in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the Universidade do Porto, Portugal and Universitaet Karlsruhe, Germany, and a performing arts degree in flute from the Music Conservatory of Porto, Portugal.
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