Inside
WILFRID LAURIER UNIVERSITY
Waterloo | Brantford | Kitchener | Toronto
Photo: Tomasz Adamski
NOVEMBER 2013
Laurier graduated more than 1,200 students at fall convocation in October and awarded honorary degrees to businesswoman Eileen Mercier, and medical doctor and writer Vincent Lam.
Laurier opens landmark research centre Centre for Cold Regions and Water Science home to scientists from across Canada Last month, Laurier and partners celebrated the opening of the Centre for Cold Regions and Water Science, located on Laurier’s Waterloo campus. Research within the centre will involve scientists from across Canada, and will focus on some of the country’s most pressing questions about water and environmental issues in cold regions, with implications for policy development and resource management. The opening began with a traditional Aboriginal welcome from Jean Becker, Laurier’s senior advisor: Aboriginal initiatives, followed by words from Max Blouw, Laurier’s president and vice-chancellor. “It really is a special day, and I think by the buzz in this room everyone is excited to see the building come to completion,” said Blouw. “This will be the home of leading-edge research from scientists all across Canada and, in fact, internationally.”
The two-storey facility will house Laurier’s Canadian Aquatic Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Boreal Ecosystem Research (CALIBER); Laurier’s Cold Regions Research Centre (CRRC); and the Laurier Institute for Water Science (LIWS). It will also house the ecotoxicology activities of the Southern Ontario Water Consortium (SOWC), including equipment and labs, sample preparation and staging areas for mobile trailers. The facility and the research it houses represent a partnership between Laurier, the Government of the Northwest Territories, the Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI), the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario, the Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation, and SOWC. Minister Michael Miltenberger of the Government of the Northwest Territories spoke about the partnership between the university and the territory. “The relationship we have with Laurier is a very important one
to us,” said Miltenberger. “As an indication of how important … we have come 4,900 km to be here to share this moment with you. “The physical structure is beautiful, but we are very, very interested in what’s going to happen in here when it’s operational. This building is
symbolic of the relationship we have, and the importance of the work you’re doing and going to continue to do.” Peter Braid, MP for KitchenerWaterloo, said the centre is integral to training the next generation of scientists. “The construction of the Centre
for Cold Regions and Water Science would not have been possible without the cooperation of many partners, including the governments of the Northwest Territories and Ontario,” said Braid. “This new centre will Water science see page 2
Photo: Sandra Muir
By Mallory O’Brien
The opening of Laurier’s Centre for Cold Regions and Water Science included tours of the building that showcased some of its many features, including four bio-chambers for plants and invertebrates, deep freezers and aquatic tanks.
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