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    eat 'em up coogs

    University of Houston wins $5M NASA grant for aerospace research center

    Laura Furr Mericas, InnovationMap
    May 23, 2024 | 10:15 am
    NASA Miro suit


    The five-year grant from NASA will go toward a center devoted to aerospace research.

    Photo via UH.edu

    The University of Houston was one of seven minority-serving institutions to receive a nearly $5 million grant this month to support aerospace research focused on extending human presence on the moon and Mars.

    The $4,996,136 grant over five years is funded by the NASA Office of STEM Engagement Minority University Research and Education Project (MUREP) Institutional Research Opportunity (MIRO) program. It will go toward creating the NASA MIRO Inflatable Deployable Environments and Adaptive Space Systems (IDEAS2) Center at UH, according to a statement from the university.

    “The vision of the IDEAS2 Center is to become a premier national innovation hub that propels NASA-centric, state-of-the-art research and promotes 21st-century aerospace education,” Karolos Grigoriadis, Moores Professor of Mechanical Engineering and director of aerospace engineering at UH, said in a statement.

    Another goal of the grant is to develop the next generation of aerospace professionals.

    Graduate, undergraduate, and even middle and high school students will conduct research out of IDEAS2 and work closely with the Johnson Space Center, located in the Houston area.

    The center will collaborate with Texas A&M University, Houston Community College, San Jacinto College, and Stanford University.

    Grigoriadis will lead the center. Dimitris Lagoudas, from Texas A&M University, and Olga Bannova, UH's research professor of Mechanical Engineering and director of the Space Architecture graduate program, will serve as associate directors.

    "Our mission is to establish a sustainable nexus of excellence in aerospace engineering research and education supported by targeted multi-institutional collaborations, strategic partnerships and diverse educational initiatives,” Grigoriadis said.

    Industrial partners include Boeing, Axiom Space, Bastion Technologies, and Lockheed Martin, according to UH.

    UH is part of 21 higher-education institutions to receive about $45 million through NASA MUREP grants.

    According to NASA, the six other universities to received about $5 million MIRO grants over five years and their projects includes:

    • Alaska Pacific University in Anchorage: Alaska Pacific University Microplastics Research and Education Center
    • California State University in Fullerton: SpaceIgnite Center for Advanced Research-Education in Combustion
    • City University of New York, Hunter College in New York: NASA-Hunter College Center for Advanced Energy Storage for Space
    • Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University in Tallahassee: Integrative Space Additive Manufacturing: Opportunities for Workforce-Development in NASA Related Materials Research and Education
    • New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark:AI Powered Solar Eruption Center of Excellence in Research and Education
    • University of Illinois in Chicago: Center for In-Space Manufacturing: Recycling and Regolith Processing

    Fourteen other institutions will receive up to $750,000 each over the course of a three-year period. Those include:

    • University of Mississippi
    • University of Alabama in Huntsville
    • Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge
    • West Virginia University in Morgantown
    • University of Puerto Rico in San Juan
    • Desert Research Institute, Reno, Nevada
    • Oklahoma State University in Stillwater
    • Iowa State University in Ames
    • University of Alaska Fairbanks in Fairbanks
    • University of the Virgin Islands in Charlotte Amalie
    • University of Hawaii at Manoa in Honolulu
    • University of Idaho in Moscow
    • University of Arkansas in Little Rock
    • South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City
    • Satellite Datastreams

    NASA's MUREP hosted its annual "Space Tank" pitch event at Space Center Houston last month. Teams from across the country — including three Texas teams — pitched business plans based on NASA-originated technology. Click here to learn more about the seven finalists.

    ----

    This article originally appeared on our sister site, InnovationMap.

    aerospace researchuniversity of houstonnasa murepspace
    news/innovation

    Jobs report

    Texas clocks in as No. 7 best state to find a job, new report says

    John Egan, InnovationMap
    Nov 28, 2025 | 1:00 pm
    Job interview, work
    Photo by The Jopwell Collection on Unsplash
    It's easier to find a job in Texas than in nearly any other state.

    If you’re hunting for a job in Texas amid a tough employment market, you stand a better chance of landing it here than you might in other states.

    A new ranking by personal finance website WalletHub of the best states for jobs puts Texas at No. 7. The Lone Star State lands at No. 2 in the economic environment category and No. 18 in the job market category.

    Massachusetts tops the list, and West Virginia appears at the bottom.

    To determine the most attractive states for employment, WalletHub compared the 50 states across 34 key indicators of economic health and job market strength. Ranking factors included employment growth, median annual income, and average commute time.

    “Living in one of the best states for jobs can provide stable conditions for the long term, helping you ride out the fluctuations that the economy will experience in the future,” WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo says.

    In September, Gov. Greg Abbott announced Texas led the U.S. in job creation with the addition of 195,600 jobs over the past 12 months.

    While Abbott proclaimed Texas is “America’s jobs leader,” the state’s level of job creation has recently slowed. In June, the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas noted that the state’s year-to-date job growth rate had dipped to 1.8 percent, and that even slower job growth was expected in the second half of this year.

    The August unemployment rate in Texas stood at 4.1 percent, according to the Texas Workforce Commission. Throughout 2025, the monthly rate in Texas has been either four percent or 4.1 percent.

    By comparison, the U.S. unemployment rate in August was 4.3 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. In 2025, the monthly rate for the U.S. has ranged from 4 percent to 4.3 percent.

    Here’s a rundown of the August unemployment rates in Texas’ four biggest metro areas:

    • Austin — 3.9 percent
    • Dallas-Fort Worth — 4.4 percent
    • San Antonio — 4.4 percent
    • Houston — 5 percent

    Unemployment rates have remained steady this year despite layoffs and hiring freezes driven by economic uncertainty. However, the number of U.S. workers who’ve been without a job for at least 27 weeks has risen by 385,000 this year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in August. That month, long-term unemployed workers accounted for about one-fourth of all unemployed workers.

    An August survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed a record-low 44.9 percent of Americans were confident about finding a job if they lost their current one.

    This story originally was published on our sister site, InnovationMap.
    job markettexaswallethubjobs
    news/innovation

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