Engineer Ashley Thrall named fellow of the National Academy of Inventors
The National Academy of Inventors has named Ashley Thrall, the Myron and Rosemary Noble Collegiate Professor of Structural Engineering in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences at the University of Notre Dame, to its 2024 class of fellows.
Election as an academy fellow is the highest professional distinction awarded solely to inventors.
Thrall designs modular structures — such as bridges, shelters and buildings — that can be rapidly erected, relocated and deployed. She has pioneered a comprehensive approach to kinetic (movable) structures, guiding design concepts from initial development through rigorous experimentation. Her work incorporates techniques such as origami, 3D printing and cold bending, applied to concrete, advanced composites and steel.
Thrall’s research, which integrates numerical and experimental methods, has resulted in six issued utility patents. These innovations include deployable, origami-inspired shelters for soldiers as well as modular steel bridge technologies that can be rapidly assembled for disaster relief or to meet immediate infrastructure needs.
Her research has resulted in 48 peer-reviewed journal publications. She has received both national and international recognition through prestigious awards such as the Hangai Prize from the International Association for Shell and Spatial Structures, the National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award and the American Institute of Steel Construction Early Career Faculty Award. She is also an inaugural AISC Innovation Scholar.
Thrall founded the Kinetic Structures Laboratory, which is dedicated to investigating the behavior, design and optimization of kinetic civil infrastructure. She also established and chaired the Modular, Rapidly Erectable, and Deployable Structures Committee of the American Society of Civil Engineers Structural Engineering Institute.
She received a doctorate in civil and environmental engineering from Princeton University and joined the Notre Dame faculty in 2011.
Other recent NAI fellows at Notre Dame include Ed Maginn (2023), Nosang Myung (2022), Gary Bernstein and Hsueh-Chia Chang (2020) and Bert Hochwald (2019).
Originally published by Karla Cruise at engineering.nd.edu.
Latest Faculty & Staff
- ND Expert on tariffs and trade policy: ‘How should the US be engaged with the rest of the world?’To make sense of the new administration's recent tariff announcements and policy changes, Robert Johnson, the Brian and Jeannelle Brady Associate Professor of Economics at Notre Dame, explains how tariffs affect global economies and what this means for U.S. engagement in global trade.
- In memoriam: W. David Solomon, founding director of the Center for Ethics and CultureW. David Solomon, associate professor of philosophy emeritus and founding director of the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture at the University of Notre Dame, died on February 26, 2025. He was 81.
- In memoriam: Larry Cunningham, the John A. O’Brien Professor of Theology EmeritusLarry Cunningham, the John A. O’Brien Professor of Theology Emeritus, died Feb. 20 in South Bend. He was 89.
- Dan Cook appointed University architect and vice president for facilities design and operationsThe University of Notre Dame has appointed Dan Cook as its new University architect and vice president for facilities design and operations. 1996 Notre Dame alumnus, Cook succeeds Doug Marsh, who served as the inaugural University architect and will continue as a key leader of the facilities design and operations team through May.
- Physicist Laura Fields granted a Presidential Early Career AwardLaura Fields, an associate professor in the Department of Physics & Astronomy at the University of Notre Dame, received the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) for her research studying the properties of fundamental particles called neutrinos.
- Three Notre Dame Faculty Recognized in 2025 RHSU Edu-Scholar Public Influence RankingsThree University of Notre Dame faculty members have been named to the 2025 RHSU Edu-Scholar Public Influence Rankings. This prestigious annual list recognizes the 200 scholars whose academic work has most influenced educational practice and policy nationwide.