Flow Science, Inc. has announced its 2027 FLOW-3D HYDRO Symposium, taking place February 2–4, at The American Hotel in Atlanta, GA. The event brings together FLOW-3D HYDRO users from across the industry to exchange technical insights and deepen their modeling expertise.
Building on the success of the inaugural symposium held in 2025, the 2027 event places a stronger emphasis on technical skill development. The program will include dedicated training sessions on topics central to accurate simulation of complex hydraulic systems alongside a hands-on post-processing workshop designed to help attendees get more out of their simulation results. User presentations and an expanded poster session will span a range of water infrastructure applications, reflecting the breadth of ways FLOW-3D HYDRO is being applied in practice and research. Attendance certificates will be provided for those seeking PDH credits.
“Water infrastructure projects demand results that can withstand scrutiny, and that starts with sound modeling practice. The Symposium is designed to give practitioners the technical grounding they need to apply FLOW-3D HYDRO with confidence, produce defensible results, and stay current with the guidance and methodologies that matter most in this field,” said Dr. Dan Gessler, PE, Global Lead for Water Infrastructure at Flow Science.
Open to FLOW-3D HYDRO users and the broader water infrastructure community, the Symposium will encourage peer exchange as well as formal instruction. The opening reception and poster session takes place February 2, with technical sessions and training February 3–4, and a conference dinner on February 3. Abstracts are now being accepted, and early-bird registration is open.
“The FLOW-3D HYDRO user community has grown remarkably and so has the software. We have some genuinely exciting developments to share at the 2027 Symposium, and I can’t think of a better setting than Atlanta to bring this community together, learn from each other, and get a look at where FLOW-3D HYDRO is headed. Whether you’re a longtime user or just getting started, I encourage you to join us in February,” said John Wendelbo, President of Flow Science.