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As a mechanical, industrial or mechatronics engineer, you’ll access an in-demand field of robotics, mechanics, facilities design and systems operation, and its connection to people. Whether it’s engines and turbines, biomechanical implants and artificial limbs, or logistics and supply chains, you’ll design and develop cutting-edge technologies that impact society and improve lives and the environment. Your options are limitless, with many mechanical, industrial and mechatronics engineers pursuing rewarding careers in pharmaceuticals, transportation, manufacturing, health care, product design, financial services, government, robotics, urban/industrial infrastructure, operations research and management consulting. 

In the Department of Mechanical, Industrial, and Mechatronics Engineering, our students receive instruction from renowned, award-winning professors. Our undergraduates gain hands-on training at labs on campus, as well as invaluable work experience through our optional co-operative internship program in mechatronicsmechanical and industrial engineering. Our graduate students conduct innovative research to find creative solutions for the world’s most urgent problems.

Discover this dynamic profession and accelerate your career. Learn about everything the Department of Mechanical, Industrial, and Mechatronics Engineering has to offer.

Near-net-shape Processing of Materials

The Department of Mechanical , Industrial and Mechatronics Engineering offers more than 20 state-of-the-art laboratories and facilities, including the Centre for Near-net-shape Processing of Materials.

Faculty Spotlight

Geared toward addressing the need for automated decision-making systems and solutions for a sustainable and resilient future, Dr. Sharareh Taghipour, Canada Research Chair in Physical Asset Management, develops and disseminates new knowledge to academia and industry on novel models for real-time and distributed learning and decision optimization for physical asset management, as well as methods for optimal design and operation of systems. She develops models for real-time and distributed prognostic and health management, prescriptive maintenance, and production scheduling and advances the methodologies for optimal design of systems and supply chain networks with the consideration of reliability, resilience, safety, and sustainability. She receives the prestigious NSERC Alliance Quantum Grant.

Faculty Spotlight

The MIME Department is proud to announce that Dr. Ravi Ravindran is the recipient of the 2024 ASM International Albert Easton White Distinguished Teacher Award. He is the first Canadian to receive this award. 

 

Crowd at Yonge-Dundas square

The Centre of Toronto

Step out of the classroom and into the heart of Toronto, Canada’s largest city. Connect with leaders in culture, business, health care or government. Find a local partner for your venture, intern at a downtown company or join a global movement. From here, you can go anywhere.

Faculty Spotlight

The MIME Department is proud to announce that Dr. Liping Fang - along with Keith W. Hipel of the University of Waterloo and D. Marc Kilgour of Wilfrid Laurier University - is the recipient of the IEEE SMC Lotfi A. Zadeh Pioneer Award from the IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics (SMC) Society for developing the innovative Graph Model for Conflict Resolution (GMCR) methodology to understand and resolve complex real-world Systems-of-Systems strategic problems.

The Lotfi A. Zadeh Pioneer Award is "To honor a person or persons with outstanding and pioneering contributions to academic and/or industrial research in systems science and engineering, human-machine systems, and/or cybernetics." https://www.ieeesmc.org/about-smcs/awards/lotfi-a-zadeh-pioneer-award/ (external link) 

Faculty Spotlight

In his Laboratory of Fields, Flows, and Interfaces, Dr. Scott Tsai works with students to develop microfluidic systems that can control the size of microbubbles – and shrink them to ten times smaller than a red blood cell. In the future, healthcare practitioners could use these modified nanobubbles to intravenously send drugs to tissue within a patient’s body and pinpoint diseases in the bloodstream through enhanced ultrasound images. 

To learn more about our department’s professors and their innovative work, visit the Faculty webpage

Greg Lister
Alumni Spotlight

“My academic and extracurricular experiences at Toronto Metropolitan University taught me how to set a plan in motion to reach my goals. Toronto Metropolitan University gave me the tools I needed to break into a competitive industry.”

Greg Lister, Technical Support at Vibrant Performance
Industrial Engineering (BEng) ’17