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The University of Waterloo’s International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Team achieved a gold medal standing for the fourth consecutive year, as well as the award for Best Poster in the overgrad division in the 2016 iGEM Giant Jamboree competition.

Waterloo’s team, made up of undergraduate students from the Faculties of engineering, math and science, competed against over 300 others from universities throughout the world at the jamboree held in Boston from October 27 to 31.

Four graduates of Waterloo Engineering took top honours in their categories this week at a prestigious awards gala for Ontario entrepreneurs.

Sponsored by professional services firm Ernst & Young and held in Toronto, the event recognized Waterloo alumni with successful businesses in fields ranging from video games to aluminum manufacturing.

Cited by judges at the 23rd annual EY Entrepreneur of the Year program for Ontario were:

Researchers at the University of Waterloo are joining a major effort to help make Canadian manufacturers more competitive through the use of computer modelling.

Led by Kaan Erkorkmaz, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering, the Waterloo team is in line for $1.3 million in funding over five years to tackle complex issues in advanced manufacturing.

Perseverance is paying off for a Waterloo Engineering alumnus with ambitions to make the game of hockey even faster than it already is.

Jeffrey Azzolin (BASc 2013, Mechanical) applied his education to develop a skate blade that speeds up players using a spring action to store and release energy as they stride.

Closeup of hockey skate being tied.

Time was tight, but Team Pear made it under the wire as more than 200 first-year mechatronics engineering students got out of class to tackle hands-on problems recently.

Despite a math error that set them back two hours, members Eric Chee, Ken Jen Lee, Karan Bajaj and Mulan Ramani combined calculus, linear algebra, graphic design, computer programming and a little 3D modelling to make a plotter using a Lego controller.