Taking Golden to Guam

by | Feb 23, 2026 | Inside Mines, Winter 2026 | 0 comments

A group of officials gathered at the University of Guam.

Mines will open its first additional location in 2026 on Guam as part of a major initiative to build additive materials and manufacturing capacity in the U.S. island territory.

Located on the grounds of the University of Guam, the Mines campus in Guam is the first-ever additional location of a mainland U.S. university on island. Mines will confer a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering with a focus in additive manufacturing, allowing students in Guam and across the Pacific to complete a four-year mechanical engineering degree without leaving the island.

Supported by an educational partnership with the University of Guam, Mines-Guam is a key component of the Applied Science & Technology Research Organization of America (ASTRO America) Guam Additive Materials & Manufacturing Accelerator (GAMMA) initiative, backed by the U.S. Navy’s Maritime Industrial Base (MIB) Program office and BlueForge Alliance.

“We’re excited for this new partnership because of what it offers students, the universities and the U.S. military,” said Mines President Paul C. Johnson. “The students receive the opportunity to earn a Mines degree in Guam, and the University of Guam and Colorado School of Mines benefit from the investment in state-of-the-art advanced manufacturing facilities and closer ties to the U.S. military and supporting industries in the Pacific—both of which will benefit from the graduates, innovation and capabilities that grow out of this strategic partnership. Mines is a leader in additive manufacturing, and this partnership builds on that and extends the global reach and impact of that program.”

“This collaboration between a top-tier mainland university and a leading Guam institution brings a premier engineering program to the island while supporting a strategic workforce need for the U.S. Navy’s maritime industrial base and beyond,” said Neal Orringer, president of ASTRO America. “Colorado School of Mines is a recognized leader in mechanical and manufacturing engineering, and together with a crucial foundational component offered by the University of Guam, these colleges’ dual presence will provide the next generation with world-class instruction in technologies that are reshaping defense and industrial production worldwide.”

Through the educational initiative, the University of Guam will provide the first two years of engineering education, and Mines will provide the final two years of education and degree conferral on island. Students will have the opportunity to specialize in additive manufacturing through technical elective courses from the Mines Additive Manufacturing Interdisciplinary Graduate Program.

The Guam program will prepare students and engineers to design, fabricate and test components where they are needed, right on island. The educational initiative will be complemented by a strong research partnership with the Alliance for the Development of Additive Processing Technologies (ADAPT), Mines’ additive manufacturing research center and industry consortium.

“Collaboration with the University of Guam and the GAMMA Applications Center offers an exciting opportunity to expand the breadth and impact of our additive manufacturing research,” said Joy Gockel, associate professor of mechanical engineering and executive director of ADAPT. “Together, we can advance application-driven innovations that enhance supply chain resilience and accelerate the development of next-generation additive manufacturing technologies.”

Academic planning is underway for the first cohort of students, with classes expected to begin in Summer 2026.