Posts Tagged: Shoshanna Saxe
UTTRI associated faculty Professors Eric Miller and Shoshanna Saxe weigh in on provincial transit plans in the Toronto Star article “Over the Don and under Fort York — where experts […]
Shoshanna Saxe, Assistant Professor at the Department of Civil & Mineral Engineering at the University of Toronto, gave a fascinating talk about the importance of understanding embodied materials and emissions […]
UTTRI associated faculty Professors Matti Siemiatycki and Shoshanna Saxe are working with Dr. Dan Durrant of UCL’s Bartlett School of Planning to identify the pressures created in infrastructure planning and delivery in London […]
UTTRI associated faculty Professor Shoshanna Saxe was quoted in “Should Canada charge drivers to use roads during rush hour?” posted March 30, 2019 by Global News. Congestion pricing has been […]
UTTRI associated faculty Assistant Professor Shoshanna Saxe was quoted in the Toronto Star February 11 in “How a budget with less money for repairs could leave Toronto ‘rusted out, leaky, cracked, […]
Congratulations to four UTTRI associated faculty within the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering who have been awarded Dean’s Spark Professorships (DSP). All twelve recipients of the DSP are within […]
UTTRI associated faculty Professor Shoshanna Saxe, Assistant Professor in Sustainable Urban Infrastructure in the Department of Civil and Mineral Engineering, has been named a Clean50 Emerging Leader. “Shoshanna drives researchers, engineers and […]
July 5, 2018 The results of the 2018 XSeed program were recently announced. Three of the eight projects approved involve UTTRI associated faculty (see details below). “XSeed: Expanding Our Research […]
Professors Shoshanna Saxe and I. Daniel Posen were jointly awarded a Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) John R. Evans Leaders Fund grant for their project entitled “Improving Sustainability of Urban Infrastructure Systems.” The funding will enable the development […]
A team of researchers from U of T Engineering is partnering with the construction industry to help reduce the carbon footprint of buildings, bridges, public transit and other major infrastructure projects.
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