Alumni Spotlight
Across a wide range of fields and disciplines, Faculty of Engineering alumni have brought their knowledge, expertise and enthusiasm to a wide range of successful projects and ventures, effecting real change in the world. Find out more here about their unique stories.
Read more about some of these extraordinary alumni below.
John WuThis enterprising undergraduate used his networking expertise to build learning opportunities and growth potential for the Faculty.ÌýJohn Wu (BEng’19) is on a mission. Read Here |
Selina LiuSelina Liu (BEng’15, MEng’17) shares her diary of what it was like to be an undergraduate student in the Faculty of Engineering in the inspired active learning environment of Enhanced Learning and Teaching in Engineering (eLATE). |
Paul Albert-LebrunThanks to the vision of recent Faculty of Engineering graduate Paul Albert-Lebrun, students from across 91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ can contribute to a holistic vision of space exploration. Read Here |
Mariam HachemMariam Hachem (BEng’16) may be working high up on the 44th floor of a Montreal skyscraper, but she still has her feet firmly planted on the ground. She is the epitome of how extracurricular experiences in the Faculty of Engineering are creating the next wave of Canadian leaders: articulate, passionate and socially principled. |
Pedro AlvarezPedro Alvarez (BEng’82) was a Scholar-in-Residence at the TISED, until October 2017. His research into nanotechnology could play a huge role in the water decontamination systems of the future. Read Here |
Saloumeh GhasemianSaloumeh Ghasemian’s (PhD ’17) research explored a new generation of electrode coatings for electrochemistry-based water treatment. It’s an example of the kind of innovations that are being developed in the Faculty through philanthropist supported research fellowships. |
Eleanora BottaThe beautiful night sky above us is rapidly becoming a garbage dump for space debris. Alumna Eleonora Botta’s MEDA-sponsored research is aiming to clean it up. |
William LepryWilliam Lepry’s patented sol-gel process for making bioactive borate glass is a promising advance for uncanny bone-healing biomaterials. |
Maysan MamounMaysan Mamoun is looking at how men and women interact (or not) in the coffee shops of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Read Here |
Susane HavelkaWhen Schulich Scholar Susane Havelka (PhD Arch ‘17) traveled to the small Inuit community of Clyde River—on the north-east coast of Baffin Island—to perform architectural research on ‘cabin culture’ and its place in Inuit life, she had a fortuitous exchange that would add a new dimension to her experience with the Inuit culture. |