|
|
|
AN
HISTORICAL NOTE
The University of the West Indies was founded in 1948 at Mona,
Jamaica as a College in special relationship with the University
of London, to serve the British territories in the Caribbean
area. It achieved full University status by Royal Charter
in 1962, thereby becoming a degree-granting institution in
its own right.
A second campus of the University was established in 1960
when the Imperial College of Tropical Agriculture (ICTA)
at St. Augustine, Trinidad was incorporated into the University
College. On August 25, 1959, a Plan of Operation was signed
which provided for a United Nations Special Fund allocation
and a Government counterpart contribution for the establishment
of a Faculty of Engineering. The then Vice-Chancellor and
Principal of the University College, Nobel Laureate Sir Arthur
Lewis had the overall responsibility of securing funding
for the financing of the Engineering buildings and for expediting
the final decision to locate the Faculty of Engineering at
St. Augustine.
The initial layout comprised five (5) blocks with a total
of 5,400 square metres of floor space of which the laboratories
occupied 3,030 square metres.
Construction commenced in 1961 and was completed by the end
of 1962. During 1961/62 Academic year (the first year of
teaching), the Faculty was housed in temporary accommodation
on the campus. The formal opening of the new buildings of
the Faculty took place on February 1, 1963.
Initially, undergraduate and graduate research degrees were
offered in the main branches of Engineering - Chemical, Civil,
Electrical and Mechanical. The Faculty steadily grew over
the years with a major expansion of both physical infrastructure
and academic programmes in the 1980s with additional disciplines
at the BSc level and several specialist MSc degrees. Floor
space now occupies close to 50,000 square metres of classrooms,
laboratories and offices, with expansion continuing almost
on a yearly basis.
Semesterisation was introduced on a phased basis in 1990 at
the undergraduate level, followed by the MSc programmes at
a later date.
From a modest beginning of 28 students in the Academic year
1961/62, the Faculty has produced, up to Academic year 2004/2005,
5,882 graduates in fields of Chemical (853), Civil (1,251),
Electrical and Computer (1,586), Mechanical (1,460), Industrial
(336), Agricultural (79), Biosystems (9), Petroleum (48)
and Surveying & Land Information (237). In 2001/2002,
the Faculty introduced its BSc (Hons) programme in Petroleum
Geoscience, graduating 25 students up to 2004/2005.
The Faculty of Engineering continues to dedicate its considerable
resources towards the pursuit of excellence in teaching,
research and community service.

|
|