News

Yip reflects on the value of student voices, what it means to think sustainably and what’s next for U of T Engineering ...
U of T Engineering’s self-driving car team aUToronto has once again taken the top spot at a prestigious international ...
Fellows are recognized for their contributions in the arts, the humanities and the sciences, and in Canadian public life ...
UTIAS professor Tim Barfoot and PhD student Alec Krawciw are partnering with MDA Space to create and test algorithms for Canada’s proposed Lunar Utility Vehicle ...
A new study from U of T Engineering’s Department of Civil & Mineral Engineering suggests that large-scale adoption of electric vehicles (EVs) could lead to significant population-level health benefits ...
Researchers at the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering have used machine learning to design nano-architected materials that have the strength of carbon steel but the ...
This article originally appeared in the 2016 issue of Skulematters magazine. George Klein in the electric wheelchair he helped design. Photo courtesy of the National Research Council of Canada. In ...
Fifteen members of the U of T Engineering community are among the recipients of the 2024 Arbor Awards — the University of Toronto’s highest honour in recognition of exceptional and longstanding ...
Professor Aereas Aung (BME) and his research team are creating a new generation of vaccines that can bypass barriers faced by traditional formulations. This project is supported by the Connaught New ...
A new analysis from U of T Engineering researchers leverages machine learning to help answer a thorny question: where should new protected bike lanes be placed to provide maximum benefit? “More lanes ...
U of T Engineering researchers have designed a new way to recycle steel that has the potential to decarbonize a range of manufacturing industries and usher in a circular steel economy. It introduces ...
From ChatGPT to DALL-E, deep learning artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms are being applied to an ever-growing range of fields. A new study from U of T Engineering researchers, published in Nature ...