Nearly 100 civil and environmental engineering students assessed ideas to deal with climate change on United Nation’s World Water Day.
Nearly 100 civil and environmental engineering students assessed ideas to deal with climate change on United Nation’s World Water Day.
First-year civil engineering student Jay Panchal discusses a project with acting director Mark Burrows of the International Joint Commission during World Water Day presentations Thursday in the Centre for Engineering Innovation.
More than 20 students of civil and environmental engineering presented poster projects Thursday in celebration of World Water Day.
Board members of Camp Cherith (standing) thank UWindsor engineering students Lauren Ramirez, Anne Baker, Karla Gorospe, and Rachel Muir for their help in fighting erosion of the camp’s grounds. (Not pictured: Kwame Afrani and Mike Kadhim.)
A team of engineering students has designed a structure that will help protect a children’s camp from erosion on the banks of the Saugeen River.
The UWindsor team of James Park, Shannon Deehan, Christina Ure and Lina Florian earned a second-place finish in the WEAO Student Design Competition.
The UWindsor team of James Park, Shannon Deehan, Christina Ure and Lina Florian earned a second-place finish in the WEAO Student Design Competition.
Civil engineering student Zach McPhee discusses measures to reduce stormwater run-off with professor Tirupati Bolisetti during a display of research posters Wednesday in the Centre for Engineering Innovation.
Civil engineering students presented posters of their research Wednesday to mark World Water Day.
Doctoral candidate Priscilla Williams poses with her poster at a presentation marking World Water Day 2016.
Student researchers will present posters on their projects related to World Water Day, Wednesday in the lobby of the Centre for Engineering Innovation.
Priscilla Williams, a PhD candidate in civil and environmental engineering, displays her research on climate change and the Great Lakes in the Centre for Engineering Innovation.
UWindsor engineering students are bracing for a wetter future created by climate change by examining and improving the design of local water systems.
Ram Balachandar, vice-provost international, and Patti Weir, dean of graduate studies, are pleased to announce the receipt of two Canadian Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Scholarships.
These prestigious three-year scholarships are funded through the Community Foundations of Canada, the Rideau Hall Foundation and the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada.
AUCC president Paul Davidson says the scholarships will provide students with transformative international study and research experiences.
From left, engineering students Shibin Pennickara, Hajjar Al-Hasna Ahmad Rizal, Yanting Liu, and Stephanie Shaw took top honours in the Water Environment Association of Ontario student design contest.
A group of fourth-year engineering students will get an all-expenses paid trip to New Orleans this fall after taking top honours in a contest that required them to design a new wastewater treatment plan for a rapidly growing region north of Toronto.
Aojeen Issac, Omotola Ajao, and Rafal Marynowski were among the civil engineering students displaying their water management projects in the Centre for Engineering Innovation lobby Friday.
Civil engineering students observed World Water Day with poster presentations Friday.