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Polytechnique Montréal

Coordinates:45°30′18″N73°36′45″W / 45.50500°N 73.61250°W /45.50500; -73.61250
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromÉcole Polytechnique de Montréal)
Engineering university in Montréal, Quebec, Canada
Not to be confused with theÉcole Polytechnique of Paris; orÉcole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, a Swiss research university.
Polytechnique Montréal
Seal ofPolytechnique Montréal
Other name
Poly
Former names
École des sciences appliquées aux arts et à l'industrie
MottoUt tensio sic vis
Motto in English
As the extension, so the force
TypePublic
Established1873
Academic affiliations
UACC, CBIE
EndowmentCA$145 million
PresidentPierre Lassonde
DirectorMaud Cohen
Administrative staff
220
Undergraduates4,993[1]
Postgraduates1,917[1]
Address
2500, chemin de Polytechnique
Montreal, Quebec
H3T 1J4

45°30′18″N73°36′45″W / 45.50500°N 73.61250°W /45.50500; -73.61250
CampusUrban
Colours   Red and black
Websitewww.polymtl.ca/en
Map

Polytechnique Montréal (French pronunciation:[pɔlitɛknikmɔ̃ʁeal]; previouslyÉcole polytechnique de Montréal[ekɔlpɔlitɛknikmɔ̃ʁeal]) is apublicresearch university affiliated with theUniversité de Montréal inMontreal, Quebec, Canada. The school offersgraduate and postgraduate training, and is very active in research. Following tradition, newBachelors of Engineering (B.Eng) graduating fromPolytechnique Montréal receive anIron Ring, during the CanadianRitual of the Calling of an Engineer ceremony.

History

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Polytechnique Montréal was founded in 1873 in order to teachtechnical drawing and otheruseful arts. At first, it was set in a converted residence. It later moved to a larger building on Saint-Denis street. In 1958, it moved to its current location on theUniversité de Montréal campus. The original building was enlarged in 1975 and then in 1989. In 2002, the Computer and Electrical Engineering Department (they were later separated) began to occupy the fifth and sixth floor of the oldÉcole des Hautes Études Commerciales de Montréal building. In 2003, the construction of three new buildings started.

Until the 1960s, the main purpose of the school was to train engineers. However, from 1959 on, the focus went to research. Nowadays, it is a leading research institution in applied sciences in Canada.

In 1976, aSLOWPOKE-2 reactor was installed atPolytechnique Montréal. The operating licence for the non-power reactor was renewed June 23, 2023, and is valid until June 30, 2033.[2] The reactor has been in operation since 1976 and is not expected to operate beyond 2040.[3] It is used for research, teaching, neutron generation and isotope production.[4]

1989 massacre

[edit]
Plaque commemorating the murder of 14 female students (December 6, 1989)
Main article:École Polytechnique massacre

On December 6, 1989, 25-year-old CanadianMarc Lépine entered the campus ofPolytechnique Montréal and fatally shot 14 women, wounding 10 other women and four men before killing himself on campus. For more than 30 years, the massacre was the deadliest shooting incident in modern Canadian history, until April 2020, when a gunman slew 22 people in theNova Scotia rampage.[5]

The Polytechnique massacre is commemorated by the Canadian government as theNational Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women.

Campus

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Montreal Metro train on display at Polytechnique

The school's campus is located on the northern face ofMount Royal. Its main building is the highest building on the main campus of theUniversité de Montréal. The J.-Armand-Bombardier building sits beside the main building and mainly serves for research activities and as an emergence centre for spin-off companies, designed to support the pre-startup of technology-based businesses. The building is named forJoseph-Armand Bombardier, the inventor of thesnowmobile.

The Pierre-Lassonde etClaudette MacKay-Lassonde building, home to the Electrical Engineering Department and Computer and Software Engineering Department, was inaugurated in September 2005. This new building won an "Award of Merit" fromCanadian Architect magazine in 2003, received a Gold certification from theU.S. Green Building Council and scored 46 on theLEED points scale which was, at inauguration, the highest score ever obtained in Canada. The energy performance of the Lassonde buildings is 60% better than the standard set by the Model National Energy Code of Canada for Buildings.[6][7]

Organization

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Polytechnique is one of the three largest engineering schools in Canada, and the largest one in the province ofQuebec. Since its foundation in 1873, this French language educational establishment trains engineers and specialists. The school contributes to the scientific and economic expansion of the region. Its graduates were part of most of Quebec's major engineering works of the 20th century such as the construction ofhydroelectric dams. Polytechnique Montréal is in the forefront of engineering in many fields such asaeronautics,computer engineering, telecommunications,biotechnology,nanotechnology,environmental science,artificial intelligence, and many other high-end domains.[citation needed]

Polytechnique offers 12 undergraduate programs, managed by seven departments. Students can choose to specialize in the following disciplines:

Research

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Polytechnique is known for its dynamic research, which represented over 40 percent of its budget for the year 2008–2009 (60.5 million CAD research funding). Among the engineering faculties/schools in theU15, Polytechnique Montréal leads the way in many areas of research: number of Canada Research Chairs (No. 1), total NSERC grants (No. 1), number of publications in engineering faculties in Canada (No. 5) and NSERC research grants in partnership with industry (No.1). Forty research units receive more than 20 percent of the funding and contracts for research in the area ofapplied science given to Quebec's universities.

Students and faculty

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Main building - Polytechnique Montréal

Enrolment for 2007 was 3,929 undergraduate and 1,615graduate students.[9] During the 2003 winter semester there were 5713 students enrolled, of them, 1198 were women and 4515 were men. There were 3997 undergraduates and 1716 graduate students.

220 teachers and 150 researchers are part of the school's community. Approximately 600 diplomas, 200 masters, and 50 doctorates are awarded each year.[10]

Notable alumni

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Former students who have not completed their studies include:

Student life

[edit]
Cafeteria at Polytechnique Montréal

The school is well known for its vivid student life, including its theatre groupPoly-Théâtre and photo club(in French)Poly-Photo. Many other groups are present, such as Allo-Poly (humor), Poly-TV, Polyrad, etc. The student newspaper,(in French)Le Polyscope was founded in 1967. It publishes weekly during the Quebec school year. It is known around the campus of the Université de Montréal for its irreverent humour, crosswords puzzles, Arts & Entertainment section and "you submit it, we'll publish it" policy.

Polytechnique is also home to various extracurricular technical societies. These student organizations are practical projects aiming to design various technological devices, and include:

  • PolyCyber, cybersecurity club;
  • Archimède, human-powered submarine;
  • Avion Cargo, remote controlled cargo plane;
  • Canoe de béton, canoe exclusively made of concrete;
  • Élikos, automated drone;
  • PolySTAR, Robotics Workshops/RoboMaster Competition/Robotics Mentoring;
  • Esteban, solar-powered electric car ;
  • Formule Électrique, electric race car;
  • Formule SAE;
  • La Machine EPM;
  • Mini-Baja, dune buggy;
  • Polybroue, beer brewing;
  • Poly Games, video games development;
  • Polyproject, various high technology electronic devices;
  • PolyCortex, neurotechnologies;
  • Pont d'acier, small scale steel bridge;
  • Oronos, small scale rocket;
  • SAE Robotique;
  • Smart Bird;
  • PolyOrbite, small scale satellite;

Polytechnique is famous around Montreal for its beach party, organised by a delegation of students known as Poly-Party. It takes place once every two years during winter (generally in January). Students build a complete "artificial beach" in the cafeteria, by putting loads of sand on the floor and assembling an interior water park with a large swimming pool.

Also, each year, thePoly-World student delegation goes to another country to learn and compare foreign engineering practices. This extracurricular activity helps participating students learn different cultural visions and helps them appreciate the different factors ofglobalcompetitiveness in the engineering field.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab"Sommaire pour chaque grade par cycle" (in French). L'École polytechnique de Montréal.Archived from the original on March 6, 2014. RetrievedOctober 17, 2012.
  2. ^"Commission renews École Polytechnique de Montréal's SLOWPOKE-2 reactor operating licence for a 10-year period". Canada Nuclear Power Commission. June 23, 2023.
  3. ^Cornelia Chilian (April 12, 2023)."Supplementary Information: Application from École Polytechnique de Montréal to renew its non-power reactor operating licence for its SLOWPOKE-2 facility"(PDF) (in French). p. 23.Archived(PDF) from the original on December 8, 2023. RetrievedDecember 17, 2023.
  4. ^"Record of Proceedings, Including Reasons for Decision: Application for Renewal of the Non-power Operating Licence for Ecole polytechnique de Montreal's Non-power Reactor"(PDF). Canada Nuclear Power Commission. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on October 16, 2013.
  5. ^"16 killed in shooting rampage, deadliest in Canadian history".AP News.Archived from the original on 2023-12-07.
  6. ^"Award of Merit: Pavillon Lassonde, École polytechnique, Université de Montréal".Canadian Architect. Archived fromthe original on July 29, 2005.
  7. ^"GOLD for École polytechnique de Montréal's new "green" buildings - A tangible response to the challenge of climate change". École Polytechnique de Montréal. November 30, 2005. RetrievedMarch 28, 2019.
  8. ^Canadian Engineering Memorial Foundation – University ListArchived March 24, 2007, at theWayback Machine
  9. ^"Statistiques officielles inscription - hiver 2007 - Tableau 2- Ecole polytechnique de Montreal".
  10. ^"Statistiques - Trimestre d'hiver" (in French). École polytechnique de Montréal. 2003. RetrievedMarch 28, 2019.

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