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The Faculty has been undergoing recent renovation at its city Campus, including a modern atrium area with café, updated library, four new computer labs, two new large lecture theaters, and updates to equipment and seating in many smaller lecture rooms.
The Faculty has been undergoing recent renovation at its city Campus, including a modern atrium area with café, updated library, four new computer labs, two new large lecture theaters, and updates to equipment and seating in many smaller lecture rooms.


New Zealand's only [[Scanning Electron Microscope| Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope]] was acquired by the Research Center for Surface Materials Science (RCSMS) in 2005. <ref>http://www.engineering.auckland.ac.nz/uoa/engineering/about/profile.cfm Faculty Profile on the official Faculty website</ref>
New Zealand's only [[Scanning Electron Microscope| Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope]] was acquired by the Research Center for Surface Materials Science (RCSMS) in 2005.<ref>http://www.engineering.auckland.ac.nz/uoa/engineering/about/profile.cfm Faculty Profile on the official Faculty website</ref>


== History ==
== History ==
Line 68: Line 68:


==Interesting projects==
==Interesting projects==
Some students are with olpc on a project for sending data via radio. [[Team_OneBeep|Team OneBeep]] came third in the international Microsoft Imagine Cup for their solution.
Some students are with olpc on a project for sending data via radio. [[Team OneBeep]] came third in the international Microsoft Imagine Cup for their solution.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 14:22, 2 June 2011

Template:Infobox University Faculty

The faculty buildings on Symonds Street.

The University of Auckland Faculty of Engineering is one of nine faculties that make up the University of Auckland. Located on Symonds Street, Auckland, it has been consistently rated as the best Engineering School in New Zealand for quality of research.[1]

Facilities

The faculty itself is based at the University of Auckland city campus, with many research groups based at the Tamaki Campus, including the Center for Advanced Composite Materials (CACM), and the Yacht Research Unit (YRU). The Faculty has been undergoing recent renovation at its city Campus, including a modern atrium area with café, updated library, four new computer labs, two new large lecture theaters, and updates to equipment and seating in many smaller lecture rooms.

New Zealand's only Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope was acquired by the Research Center for Surface Materials Science (RCSMS) in 2005.[2]

History

The faculty was made famous for its role in Team New Zealand's America's Cup victory in 1995 and 2000, instrumental in its contribution was the world's first Twisted Flow Wind Tunnel built in 1994 at the Tamaki Campus that allows better simulation of the flow of wind over yacht sails by varying the angle of attack with height.[3] The smaller DeBray wind tunnel situated at the city campus is used for a variety of research and teaching purposes, but is primarily used commercially to provide pedestrian wind environment tests for new building consents for the Auckland City Council using its 1:400 scale model of the Auckland City central business district.

Departments

Degrees

Undergraduate

Postgraduate

Interesting projects

Some students are with olpc on a project for sending data via radio. Team OneBeep came third in the international Microsoft Imagine Cup for their solution.

References

  1. ^ http://www.tec.govt.nz/upload/downloads/pbrf-full-report-2006.pdf Performance Based Research Fund (PBRF) 2006 full report
  2. ^ http://www.engineering.auckland.ac.nz/uoa/engineering/about/profile.cfm Faculty Profile on the official Faculty website
  3. ^ http://www.engineers.auckland.ac.nz/~dpel004/yru/html/Wind-tunnel/background.html Background of the Twisted Flow Wind Tunnel Facility