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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JULY 25,1996 PSA#1644National Institute of Standards and Technology, Bldg. 101, Room A430,
Gaithersburg, MD 20899-0001 A -- PUBLIC MEETING ON MATERIALS PROCESSING FOR HEAVY MANUFACTURING
SOL Q- DUE 091096 POC Lori Phillips (301) 975-4513, Fax (301) 948-2067,
Clare Allocca (301)975-4359, Fax (301)548-1087, Customer Representative
1-800-287-3863 Advanced Technology Program: Public Meeting on Materials
Processing for Heavy Manufacturing, September 24-25, 1996, Gaithersburg
Marriott Washingtonian Center Gaithersburg, MD. About the Advanced
Technology Program: The NIST Advanced Technology Program (ATP) provides
competitive, cost-shared awards for industry to develop high-risk,
enabling technologies with broad-based economic benefit. The ATP seeks
to help industry fill the gap between basic research and product
development, and to invest in technology that wouldn't be developed in
a competitive time-frame without government cost-sharing. Along with
general competitions which are open to proposals from all technical
areas, the ATP is also funding a series of ''focused programs'' with
specific business and technical goals. Background: The ATP has
supported a focused initiative in Materials Processing for Heavy
Manufacturing since 1995. The purpose of this multi-year, cost-shared
ATP focused program is to promote U.S. economic growth by developing
innovative materials processing technologies for use in the
manufacturing sector. The primary technical goals are to help U.S.
manufacturers develop the new technologies that will ultimately lead to
longer-lasting, more reliable, and more efficient products; and to
reduce manufacturing costs significantly -- these aims are expected to
precipitate improvements in the global competitiveness of U.S.
manufacturers, stimulating broad-based benefits to the U.S. economy.
Among strategies to meet these technical goals are the elimination of
processing steps, the prevention of waste and pollution, the reduction
of manufacturing cycle time, and the development of surface treatments
and coatings to increase resistance to wear, corrosion, fatigue, or
temperature-mediated degradation. To meet the above technical
objectives simultaneously, the first competition of this focused
initiative accepted proposals in the following broad technical areas:
intelligent processing, surface engineering, net shape processing,
welding and joining, and waste elimination. The technical scope of the
program is limited to metals and ceramics, their composites, and
coatings, and excludes polymer-matrix composites, concrete, or organic
materials. The three commercial markets within the scope of this
focused program are: engines, power trains and chassis for surface
transportation; heavy equipment for construction, agriculture, mining
and oil/gas field operations; and engines, turbines, rotors and related
equipment for stationary power generation. Members of the materials
manufacturing ''food chain'' -- materials suppliers, materials
processors, processing equipment manufacturers, component
manufacturers, and original equipment manufacturers -- estimate that up
to $25 billion in additional market share would follow early in the
next century were they able to systematically overcome current problems
and limitations in materials processing and manufacturing. These are
the industries that compete for $1 trillion worth of global
infrastructure work, which supports an annual $100 billion worldwide
market in heavy off-road equipment that is expected to double early in
the next century; a $45 billion annual worldwide market in equipment
for large power plants that is growing at an annual clip of 2 percent;
and a $60 billion annual domestic market in vehicular engines, power
trains, and vehicle chassis, which has an annual growth rate of 2
percent. Public Meeting Objectives: This meeting will bring together
all current ATP project participants in the Materials Processing for
Heavy Manufacturing Focused Program, as well as complementary projects
from the General Competition and the Motor Vehicle Manufacturing
Technology (MVMT) Focused Program. The goals of the meeting are: to
inform the entire community about activities at this early stage of the
program; to promote cross-fertilization of concepts and efforts in
order to achieve a ''critical mass'' of research activity in all three
commercial areas of interest; to promote strategic partnering through
the materials chain and across the application targets of this
program; to accelerate commercialization of promising technologies
emerging from this research; and to lay the groundwork for a second
solicitation of this program. Agenda: This two-day meeting will be
divided among the three market areas of interest in the focused
program. The agenda will include company presentations of progress on
their research, including perspectives on the future of the particular
technical area. Additionally, NIST-related research will be presented.
Presentations will be followed by a discussion session during which
comments on the appropriate directions for these technologies are
encouraged. Attendees are urged to come prepared to address synthesized
ideas about general trends in the industry, including a worldwide
competitive assessment -- specifically, what is missing or could be
better emphasized by this ATP focused initiative? Location: The
Gaithersburg Marriott Washingtonian Center, 9751 Washingtonian
Boulevard, Gaithersburg, Md. Gaithersburg is located approximately 20
miles northwest of Washington, D.C. Registration: The registration fee
is $235 per person and includes coffee breaks, lunches, a banquet,
conference materials, and proceedings. For your name to appear on the
preliminary participants' list, registration must be received no later
than Tuesday, September 10, 1996. Requests for refund or cancellation
must also be received, in writing, by September 10. Accommodations: A
block of rooms has been reserved at the Gaithersburg Marriott
Washingtonian Center, (301) 590-0044. The special rate is $90, single
or double. Please add 12% tax to this rate. Transportation: BWI Super
Shuttle, (301) 369-0009, offers commercial van service from
Baltimore-Washington International Airport to the Gaithersburg area.
Call for reservations. Crystal Airport Shuttle, 1-800-872-2797, is
available from Dulles International and Washington National Airports to
Gaithersburg. The cost is $19 - $30 one-way. The Washington Metro has
subway service to Gaithersburg. The Metro System can be boarded at
Washington National Airport. Take the Yellow Line train marked ''Mount
Vernon Square'' to Gallery Place and transfer to the Red Line train
marked ''Shady Grove'' to the Shady Grove station in Gaithersburg.
Service is every 6 to 15 minutes depending on the time of day. Travel
time from National to Shady Grove is approximately 50 minutes. Taxis
are available from the Shady Grove Metro station to area hotels.
Registration Contact: Lori Phillips, NIST, Bldg.101, Rm. B116,
Gaithersburg, Md. 20899-0001, Telephone: (301) 975-4513, Fax: (301)
948-2067, e-mail: lori.phillips@nist.gov Technical Contact: Clare
Allocca, NIST, Bldg. 101, Rm. A626, Gaithersburg, Md. 20899-0001,
Telephone: (301) 975-4359, Fax: (301) 548-1087, e-mail:
clare.allocca@nist.gov ATP General Information: For general information
or to add your name to the ATP mailing list, contact the ATP Office:
Telephone: (800) ATP-FUND or (800) 287-3863, Fax: (301) 926-9524,
e-mail: atp@micf.nist.gov. (0205) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0001 19960724\A-0001.SOL)
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