McGill University Faculty of Engineering
The Faculty of Engineering is one of the constituent faculties of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, offering undergraduate and graduate degrees in chemical, civil, computer, electrical, mechanical, bio-engineering, materials and mining engineering. The faculty also comprises the School of Architecture and the School of Urban Planning, and teaches courses in bio-resource engineering (Faculty of Agriculture) and biomedical engineering (Faculty of Medicine) at the master's level.
Motto | Prove All Things |
---|---|
Established | 1931[1] |
Dean | Jim A. Nicell |
Academic staff | 154 (professors)[2] |
Students | 4,612[2] |
Undergraduates | 3,403[2] |
Postgraduates | 1,209[2] |
Location | , , |
Campus | Urban |
Alumni | Over 24,000 [2] |
Affiliations | McGill University |
Website | Official Website |
History
1855-1900
Dawson Lectures (1855)
Thirty years before the construction of Engineering's two original edifices; McGill had been offering lectures in Applied Sciences. This series of lectures was started in 1855 by William Dawson, a renowned geologist and McGill's fifth principal which was offered within the Faculty of Arts until the formation of the Department of Applied Sciences in 1871. Dawson accepted the offer, but he traveled to Britain first and while there delivered several papers at the annual meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. Eventually, the lectures formed the core of a two-year curriculum leading to a Diploma in Civil Engineering.[3]
First Engineering Buildings (1893)
For the first time in the history of McGill, buildings are constructed specifically to house engineers. The imposing Macdonald Engineering Building and the more modest Workman Technical Shops were both designed by architect Sir Andrew Taylor and his partner, William Gordon. Featuring a symmetrical Italian Renaissance facade and a Montreal limestone exterior, the five-storey Macdonald building is equipped to meet every conceivable need. Among the facilities housed on its five floors are an apparatus museum, a library, a forge, a foundry, and a dynamo and engine room.[4]
1900-1999
Fire of the Macdonald Building and Rebuilding (1907-1909)
On April 5, 1907, the Macdonald Engineering Building burns. Everything in it, except the contents of the ground floor laboratories, is destroyed. Fortunately, the fire doors that were built in the adjoining Workman Technical Shops (commonly referred to as the Workman Wing) do their job, keeping the building intact and sparing it from significant damage. Less than a week earlier the old Medical Building had burned down. Some of the stone salvaged from this fire was used to add a fourth floor to the Workman shops. The Faculty's sponsor, Sir William Macdonald, again stepped forward, this time volunteering to contribute to build a new structure on the foundation of its predecessor. Percy Nobbs, Director of McGill's School of Architecture is asked to design and build the new structure. The University and Macdonald both stress to him the importance of function and fire resistance. The carved phoenix rising from the flames is one of the few ornaments on a building constructed specifically for fire-proof functionality. Although the phoenix is easy to overlook, the Macdonald Engineering Building is a mainstay on the east side of McGill's downtown campus.[5]
Faculty of Engineering Launched (1931)
The Faculty of Applied Science becomes the Faculty of Engineering in 1931. It offers two degrees – Bachelor of Engineering (BEng) and Master of Engineering (MEng). McGill also introduces a completely revised curriculum in Chemical Engineering, to be administered by the Department of Chemistry.[6]
Dawson College (1945)
Dawson College was opened in 1945 to accommodate the greatly increased enrollment due to the return of students from the armed services and was housed at the R.C.A.F base at St-Jean, Quebec. All first year science and engineering students were transferred there. The number of students enrolled, mainly veterans, reached a peak of 1687 in January 1947. The College was closed in 1950. Dawson College was administered by a Vice-Principal, Dawson College and by various other McGill staff members who undertook duties such as that of Assistant Bursar and Secretary.[7]
First Woman to Graduate From Engineering (1946)
Mary Blair Jackson (later Mary Fowler) graduates from Mechanical Engineering, McGill's first woman engineering (non-Architecture) graduate. She would go on to become a pilot officer at RCAF training command headquarters in Trenton, Ontario, where she conducted statistical work connected with the training of ground crews.[8]
The J.W. McConnell Building Is Completed (1958)
Named in honour of J.W. McConnell, a Governor of the University from 1927 to 1958, the new four-storey McConnell Engineering Building is officially dedicated by Chancellor Ray Edwin Powell on October 6, 1958. The new building doubles the Faculty's space and provides much needed facilities for graduate programs.[9]
Center for Intelligent Machines (1985)
With a grant from the Québec Ministère de l’Enseignement Supérieur et de la Science, four researchers – Martin Levin, Steve Zucker, Pierre Bélanger, and George Zames (BEng Engineering Physics 1954)– form McRCIM (the McGill Research Centre for Intelligent Machines), now known as the Centre for Intelligent Machines, to study intelligent systems. CIM seeks to advance the state of knowledge in such domains as robotics, automation, artificial intelligence, computer vision, systems and control theory, and speech recognition.[10]
The M.H. Wong Building Reaches Completion (1997)
The new M.H. Wong Building – the first new major academic construction on McGill's downtown campus in almost 20 years – is erected around the Foster Radiation Laboratory (built in 1948). The building, which became the new home of the Departments of Chemical and Mining, Metals, and Materials Engineering cost close to $34 million, $12 million of which came from private donations. The largest of these was a gift of $8 million from the family and friends of the late Man Hung (Jimmy) Wong (BArch 1981). Another anonymous donor from Hong Kong contributed $1.9 million in honour of the late Chemical Engineering professor J.B. Philips.[11]
2000- Present
Philanthropist Lorne Trottier Makes Transformative Gift (2000)
Quebec entrepreneur Lorne Trottier announced a gift of $5 million to help build a new Information Technology undergraduate teaching facility at McGill, estimated at a cost of $17 million. The government of Quebec announced that it will provide $7 million to complete the Lorne M. Trottier Building, prompting Trottier to double his gift to $10 million. In 2003, the Lorne M. Trottier Building opened in September. The building houses six floors of advanced teaching laboratories, interactive learning rooms and meeting spaces and is equipped with all of the latest high-tech equipment.[12]
School of Architecture Receives Landmark Gift (2017)
Through a gift from McGill alumnus Peter Guo-hua Fu, the School of Architecture is renamed the Peter Guo-hua Fu School of Architecture. His gift will support the full range of architecture education at McGill, creating new learning and research opportunities that will position the school and its students for a vibrant future. One portion of the gift will be used to create the Peter Guo-hua Fu Fellowships. These will be awarded, on the basis of academic merit, to graduate students entering or enrolled in the School. Preference will be given to citizens of China.[13]
Departments and Schools
Department of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics
The Department of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics (est. 1871) offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels. The Department currently has twenty-two full-time faculty members. In addition, the department enjoyed great relations with corporate partners and has many Faculty Lecturers, Associate Professors, and researchers working with students in the department. The Department of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics has consistently ranked in the top hundred Civil Engineering schools worldwide and top 3 in Canada.[14]
There are approximately four hundred undergraduate and eighty graduate students in the department, of whom over half are women and over one-third are from outside Canada as of 2018. Broad programs of study are available that offer specialized courses in all areas of civil engineering. Facilities include state-of-the-art teaching, research, and computing laboratories.
Department of Mining and Materials Engineering
Established in 1871, the mining engineering program is the oldest in Canada.[15] It is the oldest program of its kind in North America. In the mid 1960s mining engineering at universities in Canada was suffering. Toronto closed its school; McGill had only one undergraduate student and its Professor of Mining was due to retire. In 1964 John Ross Bradfield, Chairman of Noranda, was asked to form a committee to study and resolve the problem. The result was the raising of funds to help finance a Chair of Mining at McGill and to persuade Professor Frank T. M. White to come from the University of Queensland in Australia to take the position of Chairman of the Department of Mining Engineering and Applied Geophysics. Professor White initiated a program that graduated a large cohort of postgraduate engineers, many of whom served to rebuild the educational capacity of mining throughout Canada. This, together with the contribution that he made in promoting mining education, resolved the crisis. Professor White died in 1971; McGill University and the Canadian Mineral Industry Education Foundation set up the F.T.M. White Award to honour him for his outstanding contribution to mining education in Canada.[16]
Department of Chemical Engineering
Over one hundred years of chemical engineering at McGill has evolved through several distinct stages. The chemical engineering curriculum, established at McGill in 1908, produced its first bachelor's degree graduate in 1911. Today, collectively, 17 members of the academic staff conduct research programs in almost all areas of modern chemical engineering, drawing upon theoretical, computational and experimental methodologies.[17]
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering (ECE)
The department of Electrical & Computer Engineering is located in McGill's downtown Montreal campus with a student body of 900 undergraduate students, 350 graduate students, 20 staff members and 40 faculty members.[18] ECE offers four undergraduate degrees in the areas of Electrical (including Honours), Computer and Software Engineering, all accredited by the Canadian Engineering Accreditation Board (CEAB). Graduate studies in ECE offer a wealth of opportunities for stimulating collaborations, multidisciplinary projects and industrially relevant innovation.
Department of Bioengineering
Established in 2012, the Department of Bioengineering is the newest department to join McGill University's Faculty of Engineering. McGill researchers from nearly all Faculty units, including seven Canada Research Chairs and many colleagues in the Faculties of Medicine, Science, and Agriculture and Environmental Sciences are actively involved in various areas of Bioengineering. Within the Department, the faculty are focusing on three major directions: biological materials and mechanics; bio molecular and cellular engineering; and biomedical, diagnostics and high throughput screening.[19]
Department of Mechanical Engineering
The department of Mechanical is located in McGill's main downtown Montreal campus and is one of the primary engineering departments. Mechanical Engineering at McGill offers students an opportunity to spend their years of study alongside some of the best students and researchers from around the world. Students come from across Canada and beyond, while professors have studied at top ranked universities worldwide. The Department offers an Honours program which is particularly suitable for those with a high aptitude in mathematics and physics and which gives a thorough grounding in the basic engineering sciences.
School of Urban Planning
McGill was the first university in Canada to offer a full-time program in urban planning. An interdisciplinary program through which students combined a master's degree in their original field was combined with urban planning was established in 1947. An autonomous program was established in 1972. In 1976, the School of Urban Planning was established as a unit within the Faculty of Engineering.
The School offers three Master of Urban Planning programs (a Core Program, with a concentration in Transportation Planning, and with a Concentration in Urban Design) and a Ph.D. in Urban Planning, Policy, and Design program. Major research areas include the Community-University Research Alliance (CURA), Transportation Research at McGill (TRAM), and Whole-corridor Urban Design Strategies (WCUDS).
Peter Guo-hua Fu School of Architecture
Founded in 1896, McGill's School of Architecture is among the oldest architecture schools in North America, offering professional and post-professional programs from undergraduate through to PhD levels. The School has established an international reputation and a record of producing leading professionals and researchers, with McGill alumni practicing and teaching in firms and institutions across the nation and the globe. It is housed in the Macdonald-Harrington Building, designed by Montreal architect Andrew Taylor. The School of Architecture has produced renowned architects, including Arthur Erickson, Moshe Safdie, Melvin Charney, Raymond Affleck, Catherine Wisnicki, Blanche van Ginkel, Witold Rybczynski, and Raymond Moriyama; leading Montreal-based architects such as Howard Davies and Anne Cormier of Atelier Big City and Annie Lebel of In Situ; Julia Gerzovitz and Alain Founier of EVOQ, Danny Pearl and Mark Poddubuik of L’OEUF as well as contemporary international architects such as Adam Caruso (London), Amale Andraos (Work Architecture, New York), Eric Bunge (nArchitects, New York), and Todd Saunders (Bergen, Norway).
On 26 September 2017, the School was renamed the Peter Guo-hua Fu School of Architecture following a $12 million gift from Chinese architect and McGill graduate Peter Fu.
Institutes
Institute for the Public Life of Arts and Ideas (IPLAI)
IPLAI (Institute for the Public Life of Arts and Ideas) is a collaboration among six faculties across McGill, two schools and the McGill Libraries. IPLAI's mission is to connect interdisciplinary academic research with the public world of art, policy and culture. IPLAI creates bridges between academic thought and applied public practice to bring about a world rich in both intellectual and material resources — for pleasure, for play, for moral fulfillment, and for the betterment of humanity.[20]
Trottier Institute for Sustainability in Engineering and Design (TISED)
TISED promotes bold and green ideas through education, outreach, and research, where we aim to connect our institution with the public for a greater understanding of sustainability issues in our society. Engineering, architecture and urban planning professionals play key roles through their involvement in everything from sustainable development and aerospace industry success, to manufacturing sector renewal, improving infrastructure, and our energy horizon.[21]
McGill Institute for Aerospace Engineering (MIAE)
MIAE is an initiative of the Lorne Trottier Chair in Aerospace Engineering to foster interest in Aerospace Engineering among undergraduate and graduate students and awareness of the multi-disciplinary and multi-cultural environment in which they may work as future engineers working in the Aerospace Industry. Students accepted into the Institute will be given the opportunity to participate in a number of 500 to 1000 hours Research Projects proposed by the Aerospace Companies.[22]
McGill Institute for Advance Materials (MIAM)
McGill Institute for Advance Materials was established by the Faculties of Science and Engineering to act as a focal point for research into all forms of advanced materials. Engineering innovation and materials creation have led to important developments in communications, information technology, transportation, clinical diagnosis and care, and energy generation, for example. New materials are considered by knowledge-based economies to be a precursor to many technological developments necessary for development and growth, and have been identified as one of Canada's strategic areas of research, and a priority area for McGill.[23]
Buildings & Laboratories
Macdonald Building
When the Arts Building was becoming overcrowded in the 1890s as enrollment climbed; new faculties were added to the University Campus. The Applied Science Faculty, (which was the term used for Engineering at that time), relocated in 1893 to two new buildings. One was donated by Thomas Workman and the other by Sir William Macdonald, one of McGill's most generous benefactors.
Macdonald-Harrington Building
The Macdonald Chemistry Building, recently renamed the Macdonald-Harrington Building after its first Chemistry professor, Bernard Harrington, was built between 1896 and 1897 and was one of the many donations made to the University by Sir William Macdonald. Located in the Macdonald-Harrington Building are: Engineering Micro-computing Facilities; School of Architecture; School of Urban Planning.
M. H. Wong Building
This edifice, donated by Mr. Wong, an alumnus of McGill's School of Architecture, preserves the atmosphere of the campus both in its size and in its materials. It is composed of two sections, the older Foster section which consists of four storeys, and a new wing north of Foster which adds another six storeys to the whole. The Foster Wing, which will be used as offices, has had classrooms and labs added to both its west side and the top of the building, designated for Metallurgical Engineering labs. The new wing is used for Chemical Engineering labs.
McConnell Engineering Building
The McConnell Engineering Building was donated to McGill in 1959 by John W. McConnell, a major benefactor of the University since 1911 and one of its Governors from 1928 until 1958. In the period after World War II when all of the Engineering Faculties were greatly expanding, this nine-storey structure doubled the number of classrooms, lecture rooms, and offices available for use by the above faculties.
Frank Dawson Adams Building
The Physical Sciences Centre was renamed the "Frank Dawson Adams Building" after a professor of Geology who was the first chairman of Graduate Studies, and also served as Vice Principal from 1920 to 1924. The building was completed in October 1951.
Lorne M. Trottier Building
The Lorne M. Trottier Building was inaugurated on March 26, 2004. This building is part of the TechSquare and will allow the University to expand its popular electrical engineering, computer science and telecommunications programs.
Student Life
Engineering Undergraduate Society (EUS)
The Engineering Undergraduate Society is the coordinating body and voice of undergraduate students in the Faculty of Engineering. All students registered in the Faculty of Engineering automatically become members of the EUS. The EUS plays active roles in enhancing all aspects of student life in the Faculty, including social events, sports, volunteerism, competitions and academics.
Architecture Students Association (ASA)
Architecture Students Association (ASA) is a non-profit student-run society within the School of Architecture. The society serves as an organizational body for student activities and affairs, a voice for students in academic and university issues at McGill, and a link between other schools of architecture across the country.
Clubs, Teams & Associations
McGill Artificial Intelligence Society (McGillAI) is a student run group under the Engineering Undergraduate Society of McGill University that strives to make AI more accessible by hosting events, bootcamps, and workshops that give students an opportunity to learn about AI in a peer-based, supportive environment.
Promoting Opportunities for Women in Engineering (POWE) is a student run, philanthropic group under the Engineering Undergraduate Society of McGill University. Our goals are to encourage the presence of women in engineering and to increase awareness about the amazing contributions women have made to engineering.
National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) its mission is to increase the number of culturally responsible students who excel academically to also succeed professionally and thereby make a positive impact in the community. Our objectives are to stimulate and develop interest in engineering, sciences and business.
Queer Engineer is an EUS club at McGill University that strives to provide a safe and welcoming environment for gender and sexual minorities, within both the Faculty of Engineering and McGill as whole.
The National Organization for Business and Engineering (NOBE) mission is to bring together individuals at corporate and academic institutions interested in both business and engineering and to integrate these fields into one practice.
Notable Alumni
Engineers
Richard Birdsall Rogers (BEng’1878) – Creator of the Peterborough Lift Lock
George Hodgson (BEng 1916) – Canadian Olympic swimmer and first Canadian to win two Olympic gold medals
Val Fitch (BEng'48, DSc'87) – American nuclear physicist and co-recipient of the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physics
Livio De Simone (BEng’57) – Chairman and CEO of 3M Corporation
Henry Mintzberg (BEng'61) – Acclaimed management thinker, author and iconoclast
Les Vadasz (BEng'61) – Founding member of Intel Corporation
Jake Eberts (BEng'62) – Award-winning movie producer and film financier
Dr. Andy Benedek (BEng’66) – Founder and CEO of ZENON Environmental Inc.
Dr. Taro Alepian (BEng’67) – Executive Vice-President of SNC-Lavalin Group
Dr. Michael Avedesian (BEng’69) – CEO of MAGNOLA Corporation
Lorne Trottier (BEng'70, MEng'73) – Leading philanthropist and co-founder of Matrox Electronic Systems Ltd.
Dr. Axel Meisen (PhD’70) – President, Memorial University of Newfoundland
John Wills (BEng’75) – President, Plumbing Products Division of Masco Corporation, makers of Delta faucets
Dr. Peter Tsantrizos (MEng’81) – Founder of Pyrogenesis Inc.
Dr. Noubar Afeyan (BEng’83) – Founder and CEO of Applied Biosystems Inc.
Julie Payette (BEng'86, DSc’03) – Former Chief Astronaut for the Canadian Space Agency and current Governor General of Canada.
Greg Vance (BEng’87) – Vice-President and partner at Procaps Ltd.
Laurent Levi (BEng’91) – Successful owner of AIREX Manufacturing Corp.
Motaz Kabbani (BEng’93) – Dancer and choreographer
Matt Colleyer (MEng '96) – Skat musician of Planet Smashers and founder of Stomp Records
Dr. Jeffrey Karp (BEng'99) –Inventor of gecko-tape
Hicham Ratnani (BEng’08) – Co-founder and chief operating officer of Frank & Oak
Architects
Arthur Erickson (BArch’50) – Renowned Canadian Architect and Urban Planner
Moshe Safdie (MArch’61) –Israeli-Canadian architect, urban designer, educator, theorist, and author.
Raymond Moriyama (MArch’57) – Notable Canadian architect of Japanese descent
Witold Rybczynski (MArch’72) – Canadian American architect, professor and writer
References
- McGill Faculty of Engineering. "History". mcgill.ca. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
- Faculty of Engineering (2018). "Quick Facts". McGill University. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
- "William Dawson". Retrieved October 22, 2018.
- "1811-1899". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "History of the Faculty of Engineering". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "1900-1950". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "Dawson College". www.archives.mcgill.ca. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "1900-1950". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "1951-2003". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "1951-2003". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "1951-2003". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "1951-2003". Faculty of Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "Illustrious Chinese architect invests in future of education: landmark $12-million gift to transform teaching and research, build stronger academic ties to China". Newsroom. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- Top Universities. "Civil Engineering Rankings". QS World University Rankings. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- https://www.mcgill.ca/minmat/mining/
- Canadian Mineral Industry Education Foundation. F.T.M.White Award. http://cmief.ca/english/ftm_en_txt.html Accessed Nov 11, 2015
- "History". Chemical Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "Electrical and Computer Engineering". Electrical and Computer Engineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "Department of Bioengineering". Department of Bioengineering. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "Institute for the Public Life of Arts and Ideas". iplai.ca. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "Trottier Institute for Sustainability in Engineering and Design". Trottier Institute for Sustainability in Engineering and Design. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "McGill Institute for Aerospace Engineering (MIAE)". McGill Institute for Aerospace Engineering (MIAE). Retrieved 2018-10-26.
- "McGill Institute for Advanced Materials". McGill Institute for Advanced Materials. Retrieved 2018-10-26.