Jon Bray Elected to NAE

Featured Faculty: Jonathan D. Bray

CEE faculty member, Jonathan Bray, was among the 67 individuals elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE).

Bray, who holds the Faculty Chair in Earthquake Engineering Excellence, was elected for his contributions to earthquake engineering and advances in mitigation of surface faulting, liquefaction, and seismic slope failure. He is a member of CEE's GeoSystems (GeoEngineering) program.

Bray earned engineering degrees from West Point (B.S.), Stanford University (M.S. in Structural Engineering), and the University of California, Berkeley (Ph.D. in Geotechnical Engineering). He joined the faculty at UC Berkeley in 1993.

Bray is acknowledged internationally as a leader in geotechnical earthquake engineering. He founded and leads the National Science Foundation-sponsored Geotechnical Extreme Events Reconnaissance (GEER) Association. GEER organizes and executes reconnaissance surveys that capture key geotechnical observations of ground and building performance and other perishable data following important extreme events, such as earthquakes, massive landslides, and storm surge.

Bray has served as a consultant on major activities that include the California High-Speed Train Project Technical Advisory Panel, Advisor to the New Zealand Earthquake Commission, and the BART Earthquake Safety Program Peer Review Panel. Additionally, he served as the Vice-President of the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute and as a member of the Advisory Committee on Earthquake Hazards Reduction.

Bray has authored over 300 research publications. He pioneered procedures to evaluate seismic slope displacements, the hazards associated with surface fault rupture, and soil liquefaction and its effects on structures.

He has received several honors, including the ASCE Peck Lecture Award, SSA-EERI Joyner Lecture Award, ASCE Huber Research Prize, Packard Foundation Fellowship, and NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award. 

Election to the National Academy of Engineering is among the highest professional distinctions accorded to an engineer. Academy membership honors those who have made outstanding contributions to engineering research, practice, or education and who are pioneers of new and developing fields of technology.

See NAE New Members press release (Feb. 5. 2015)

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