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Civil and Environmental Engineering
The Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering program at UNH offers advanced research training in resilient infrastructure and sustainable systems. Here you'll be able to conduct innovative research at specialized facilities like the Center for Infrastructure Resilience to Climate while developing expertise in areas from water quality to sustainable construction.
Through hands-on experience addressing climate challenges and infrastructure needs, you'll develop the advanced knowledge needed for leadership roles in engineering research, design, and project management.
*Number of courses and course credit hours may vary, please reach out to your academic advisor for exact requirements.
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Earning a Ph.D. in civil and environmental engineering can open doors to leadership roles in academia, research, or industry, allowing you to drive innovation in sustainable infrastructure. With a Ph.D., you'll contribute to groundbreaking projects that emphasize public safety, health, and sustainability. Graduates often lead large-scale projects such as designing resilient bridges, highways, and skyscrapers, or working on water quality restoration and environmental protection.
UNH offers a dynamic Ph.D. program with a focus on advanced research across areas such as environmental engineering, geotechnical engineering, structural design, transportation systems, and water resources. You'll work with state-of-the-art facilities, including the UNH Center for Infrastructure Resilience to Climate, the Stormwater Center, and the Living Bridge Project, which integrates smart infrastructure technology to monitor Memorial Bridge. Ph.D. candidates at UNH are trained to tackle complex, real-world challenges, preparing them for impactful careers.
The goal of the Civil and Environmental Engineering program is to elucidate civil and environmental engineering technology by involving students in the design and construction of sustainable infrastructure projects that emphasize safety and public health. Our graduates enhance the quality of life for people both locally and around the world by providing safe structures such as bridges, highways, skyscrapers, tunnels and dams, and by helping to restore and maintain water quality and the environment. Civil Engineering has always been an exciting yet flexible profession filled with opportunities.
Following admission into the program, a guidance committee is appointed for the student by the dean of the Graduate School upon recommendation of the advisor and graduate coordinator. This committee assists in outlining the student's course of study and may specify individual coursework requirements. The guidance committee administers the qualifying examination.
The student must pass a qualifying exam that includes both a written and an oral component. The content of the qualifying exam will be determined at the discretion of the guidance committee and will be based on the coursework (both graduate and undergraduate) completed to date. The qualifying exam is pass/fail. At the discretion of the guidance committee a student may conditionally pass the exam and be reevaluated after a specified time period. The qualifying exam must be completed within 18 months of admission for students that have a master’s degree and within 30 months of admission for students that enter the PhD program with only a bachelor’s degree.
Course Credit Requirements: The student must successfully complete at least 42 graded course credit hours beyond a bachelor’s degree. These 42 course credit requirements can include 2 courses (up to 8 credits) from the accelerated masters program. Additional course credits beyond these minimum levels may be required by the guidance committee.
Requirements for Optional Minor: An identifiable group of courses (9 credits minimum) in an area outside of the civil engineering department and approved by the guidance committee must be successfully completed to provide a minor to the Ph.D. degree. A minor may be satisfied by courses taken toward a master's degree other than civil engineering, but the credits will not be applied against the 42 credit-hour minimum.
Professional Outreach Experience: A minimum of one semester as a teaching assistant or comparable experience, or preparation and submission of article(s) to refereed journal(s), or presentations at professional meetings is required. The guidance committee will evaluate whether a student's past teaching assistantship satisfies this requirement.
Student Seminar: All Ph.D. degree students are required to register for CEE 997 Doctoral Student Seminar for one semester. Students are required to make one presentation in CEE 997 during their program of study.
Doctoral Candidates: Upon successful completion of the Ph.D. qualifying examination, a doctoral student is advanced to the status of doctoral candidate. When a student achieves candidacy, a doctoral committee is established. The doctoral committee reviews research, reviews the student's progress, supervises and approves the doctoral dissertation, and administers the final examination (also known as the dissertation defense). The student must present and defend a research proposal within 6 months of achieving candidacy and no later than one year prior to the dissertation defense.
Upon completion of the dissertation, and with the approval of the doctoral committee, the student schedules an oral defense in accordance with the requirements of the Graduate School. For graduation, a B average (3.00 GPA) and successful dissertation defense must be achieved.
Applications must be completed by the following deadlines in order to be reviewed for admission:
Application fee: $65
Campus: Durham
New England Regional: No
Accelerated Masters Eligible: No
Students claiming in-state residency must also submit a Proof of Residence Form. This form is not required to complete your application, but you will need to submit it after you are offered admission, or you will not be able to register for classes.
If you attended UNH or Granite State College (GSC) after September 1, 1991, and have indicated so on your online application, we will retrieve your transcript internally; this includes UNH-Durham, UNH-Manchester, UNH Non-Degree work and GSC.
If you did not attend UNH, or attended prior to September 1, 1991, then you must upload a copy (PDF) of your transcript in the application form. International transcripts must be translated into English.
If admitted, you must then request an official transcript be sent directly to our office from the Registrar's Office of each college/university attended. We accept transcripts both electronically and in hard copy:
Transcripts from all previous post-secondary institutions must be submitted and applicants must disclose any previous academic or disciplinary sanctions that resulted in their temporary or permanent separation from a previous post-secondary institution. If it is found that previous academic or disciplinary separations were not disclosed, applicants may face denial and admitted students may face dismissal from their academic program.
Recommendation letters submitted by relatives or friends, as well as letters older than one year, will not be accepted.
The GRE scores are optional, if you wish to provide scores please email the scores directly to the department once you have submitted your application online.
Prepare a brief but careful statement regarding:
All applicants are encouraged to contact programs directly to discuss program-specific application questions.
Prospective international students are required to submit TOEFL, IELTS, or equivalent examination scores. English Language Exams may be waived if English is your first language. If you wish to request a waiver, then please visit our Test Scores webpage for more information.
The graduate level focus areas in the department of Civil & Environmental Engineering include: