Partnerships news

Each year, we collaborate more than 400 partner organizations on research and development projects, work-integrated learning programs and much more. Our partners range from local startups to multinational corporations to not-for-profit enterprises, and everything in between.

Tennis fan Professor Timothy Chan (MIE) is applying his expertise in mathematical optimization, originally developed to improve the delivery of health care, to help amateur sports federations across the country make the most of their limited resources. (Photo courtesy Timothy Chan)

#Rio2016: How ‘moneyball’ research can help amateur athletes reach for Olympic gold

Professor Timothy Chan (MIE) is applying his expertise in optimization to help amateur sports federations make the most of their limited resources

CVST map of the Greater Toronto area. The red, yellow and blue circles represent the number of data points in a specific location. (Courtesy: CVST)

Mapping the city: smart transport data pave the way for a driverless future

Alberto Leon-Garcia’s Connected Vehicles and Smart Transportation project presents an interactive map of Toronto that gives a real-time picture of how people get around the city

Post-doctoral fellow Aaron Persad (MIE) shows his experiment that aims to solve the longstanding mystery of how water behaves in space. (credit: Aaron Persaud).

How does water behave in space? U of T Engineering researchers aim to solve longstanding mystery

Experiment launched aboard SpaceX CRS-9 mission to International Space Station should deliver answers

Professor Kamran Behdinan (MIE) hopes to improve the design of aircraft landing gear. He was recently awarded a $900,000, three-year NSERC Collaborative Research and Development (CRD) grant to make it happen. (Credit: kov-A-c via Flickr).

Kamran Behdinan looks to design the next generation of aircraft landing gear

MIE professor awarded a $900,000, three-year NSERC Collaborative Research and Development for the multidisciplinary project

Born into a fifth-generation salt producing family in India, honorary graduand Venkatesh Mannar has spent close to four decades working in developing countries around the world to help put an end to malnutrition and micronutrient deficiency. (courtesy: Venkatesh Mannar)

Engineering Convocation 2016: Global health pioneer M.G. Venkatesh Mannar

This honorary graduand has been the principal architect of the global salt iodization program now reaching nearly five billion people

More than a dozen of the employees at Zebra’s Mississauga office are current or former students from U of T Engineering’s Professional Experience Year (PEY) program, including Coby Segall (back row, second from left), Jordan Varley (front row, first from right) and Jagdeep Rangi (front row, second from right). (Photo: <a href="http://www.neilta.ca/">Neil Ta</a>)

Zebra: A case study in engineering experiential learning

More than a dozen current and former students in the Professional Experience Year program work at Zebra, which makes mobile computers, motion sensing solutions and more

Wind turbines are used to generate electricity. ECE’s Centre for Power & Information hosted its inaugural Research Showcase event April 18, and incorporating renewable energy sources into the grid topped the agenda. (Image via Creative Commons CC0).

Sustainable power, smart infrastructure and cyber-physical security top agenda at CPI research showcase

Academia, industry partners join forces to tackle pressing challenges of designing tomorrow’s energy infrastructure

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U of T Engineering students bring design solutions to challenges in Toronto communities

Running with the dinosaurs, picking up litter and bottling honey: Praxis II Showcase event unveils innovative answers to nine problems plaguing local community leaders, businesses and agencies

The explosion of connected sensors and objects, dubbed the Internet of Things, is just one application driving future Internet architectures capable of handling massive quantities of data at ultra-high speeds. Designing the next Internet is just one project U of T engineers are working on in collaboration with Huawei: a new agreement between the parties will spark new multidisciplinary partnerships in areas such as biomedical engineering, materials science and more. (Photo: Creative Commons).

New industry partnership with Huawei fosters collaborations on next-generation technologies

Agreement establishes terms to facilitate collaboration on pressing challenges in cloud computing, data centre optimization and beyond