Engineering Month

Wonder what it takes to be an engineer? Curious about the work the City’s engineers do? 

Drop by Vaughan City Hall (2141 Major Mackenzie Dr.) on Wednesday, March 19, to learn more! 

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A female construction worker, wearing a hardhat and safety glasses, using a smartphone.

The City’s Infrastructure Development and Public Works portfolios are hosting an Open House from 9:00 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Vaughan Room to mark National Engineering Month, which is held every March. 

 

Speak to Vaughan’s engineers

The event will highlight exciting projects, the critical and diverse roles Vaughan’s engineers play in building and shaping the city, and women’s contributions to the field. There will also be snacks, swag and prizes to be won! 

 

Visit industry booths

Speak to industry professionals, including representatives from the Municipal Engineers Association and the Association of Consulting Engineering Companies-Ontario. 

 

Participate in the Bring a Bridge competition

The Open House will also feature the Bring a Bridge competition, an exciting engineering challenge to engage local high school students. Schools interested in participating are asked to organize a team and build a bridge prior to the event, using white school glue and standard popsicle sticks. Bring your Bridge to the open house, where it will be put to the test – live – at 1 p.m.! The team with the bridge that can hold the most weight will win a prize! Contact Erika.Hinze@vaughan.ca for more information. 

Answer

Working in one of Canada’s fastest-growing municipalities, the City of Vaughan’s Infrastructure Development portfolio has a critical mandate – to advance capital programs and projects. This means the team preserves corporate assets, prepares for growth and advances the city’s transportation system. In addition, staff provide consistent delivery and maintenance of municipal facilities, amenities and infrastructure that contribute to the well-being of the community – including parks and trails, new and renovated libraries and community centres, roads, bridges and the things we cannot see but are vital, such as underground pipelines and so much more.

 

This portfolio includes the following City departments:

  • Development Engineering facilitates and supports the city’s growth through timely engineering review, and the approval of development applications and engineering submissions for the construction of new municipal services, such as roads, sewers and watermains. It also reviews and approves construction plans, and undertakes inspections for all development projects throughout the city.
  • Facilities and Parks Delivery collaborates with residents and stakeholders to support the development of an innovative, accessible, sustainable and safe parks and open space network that fosters physical activity, health and wellness.
  • Infrastructure Delivery is responsible for capital project planning, design, tendering, construction, contract administration and inspection of the City’s buildings and linear infrastructure – such as roads, power lines and pipelines.
  • Infrastructure Planning and Corporate Asset Management works closely with internal departments, the Province of Ontario and York Region to protect the City’s infrastructure interests in the development of growth and renewal infrastructure planning studies and reports. The department also leads a corporate-wide strategy and roadmap for the asset management policy while improving asset management processes, technologies and data.