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Professor Philip Beesley from the School of Architecture has been shortlisted for a prestigious award recognizing his work in building more harmonious relationships between people, buildings and environments.

Beesley has been named one of three finalists for the 2022 Partnership Award, one of 12 impact awards granted by Canada’s Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). He is one of three finalists selected for this award by a national jury.

The Canada-based developer of a wearable lower-limb exoskeleton called XoMotion is supplying the Canadian government with two units for clinical testing at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.

Human in Motion Robotics (HMR) was co-founded by Waterloo Engineering alumnus Dr. Siamak Arzanpour (PhD ’07, mechanical engineering) in 2016. In just six years, Arzanpour and his team have successfully built a wearable robot that is designed to get people out of wheelchairs and walking again with full mobility and independence.

A networking company co-founded by a Waterloo Engineering alumnus is expanding a series of product offerings after securing $75 million in its first institutional funding round.

10KC, also known as Ten Thousand Coffees, was launched in 2014 by Elliott Garcea (BASc '11, computer engineering) and Dave Wilkin, a University of Waterloo science graduate, as an online networking platform to bring together students and alumni from post-secondary educational institutions (including Waterloo Engineering) and employees at companies worldwide.

A research team led by a Waterloo Engineering professor has set its sights on solving the worldwide problem of micro plastics (MPs) pollution.

“It’s a bold move, as currently there’s no real approach to treat the problem of MPs in the environment," said Dr. Boxin Zhao, a chemical engineering professor. "The road to solving this emerging global issue will be filled with uncertainties. We wanted to take leadership to solve it.”

Three graduates of Waterloo Engineering have been named to a high-profile list of the 100 most powerful women in Canada.

Malgosia Green, Stephanie Thompson and Laura Kennedy are among 11 leaders in education, business and the community who made the grade and have campus-wide ties to the University of Waterloo.

The recipients of Waterloo Engineering's teaching, research and staff excellence awards were announced today by Dean Mary Wells.

In a memo to engineering faculty and staff, Wells said she would like to "thank all our award recipients for their inspiring work and ongoing dedication to the faculty." 

Waterloo Engineering proudly hosted the inaugural conference this week for a fellowship program that was created to boost representation of Black and Indigenous scholars in engineering and technology disciplines.

Launched in January 2021, the Indigenous and Black Engineering and Technology (IBET) PhD Project aims to address the urgent need to increase the number of Indigenous and Black academics in engineering and related fields.

Waterloo Engineering professors Dr. David Fortin and Dr. Tizazu Mekonnen have been named to a list of leading innovators by a national anti-racism organization.

The inaugural edition of Canada’s Top 20 Aspiring Innovators of the Year, released by the Coalition of Innovation Leaders Against Racism (CILAR), recognizes Black, Indigenous and People of Colour winners who are positively impacting their communities, the world and future generations through the innovation ecosystem.