Liveris Academy scholars Amber Spurway, Flynn Pearman and Victoria Barnes talked to Contact Magazine about how they're adjusting to new ways of learning throughout the COVID-19 crisis.
UQ researchers have helped to develop a quick and easy way to mass-produce face shields for health workers battling COVID-19 in the world's poorest countries.
The University of Queensland has become home to a very special tiny house, constructed using an experimental technique developed by researchers from the ARC Future Timber Hub.
In recent years, false claims have circulated that electric vehicles are “breaking our roads” because they don’t use fuel and so their drivers don’t pay fuel excise.
UQ's sculptor, Rhyl Hinwood is working with our UQ Innovate team to create modern, 3D-printed versions of her traditional sandstone carvings and bronze busts.
The University has reaffirmed its position as a leading research institution, with 28 UQ researchers identified as among the world’s most influential scientific minds.
A timber pavilion constructed by researchers from UQ using an innovative minimal-waste design was recognised at an international conference in Barcelona, Spain this month.
Fire safety engineering researchers from UQ have developed a database of building materials to help industry professionals assess the risk of combustible cladding and boost the safety of our homes and workplaces.
Coastal engineering student Verity Taylor and her supervisor Dr David Callaghan used an Evolutionary Shoreline Model to look at the coastal erosion and accretion on the Bribie Island's coastline.
More than 1.25 million lives are lost on roads around the world each year – a statistic a UQ-led research team is aiming to tackle using engineering technology.
In a bid to preserve the world’s second most used natural resource – sand – UQ PhD candidate Danish Kazmi has developed a sustainable solution that could reduce its use in the construction industry.