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Festival of Innovation

This week saw our Festival of Innovation and Grassroots Growth Summit, part of our 60th anniversary celebrations. Over 1,200 attendees, including business founders, entrepreneurs, industry leaders as well as alumni, staff, students, and local residents, were eager to explore the University's latest advancements in innovation.

The festival showcased a variety of cutting edge innovations such as Alzheimer鈥檚 taste-test screening, the pioneering sewage-powered Waste2Race Le Mans Prototype racing car, an immersive gaming and scent experience, a child-birth simulator, the UK vegetable gene bank, and cutting-edge agricultural robots.

We chatted to some of our staff and stallholders about the innovations they were showcasing.

You can see more photos from the event in our gallery.


Kevin Couling, Associate Tutor, WMG

WMG were showcasing a range of 3D printed objects, from the death mask of Mary Ball, the last woman hung in Coventry, to a super-light metal aircraft gearstick.

鈥淟ots of people have been really surprised that we can 3D print in metal. For manufacturing this is a great innovation, especially for the aircraft industry. We can make parts with not only less weight, but also a lot less waste. Rather than carving metal away to make the part, we only use the metal needed to create the object.鈥

Lauren Chappell, Research Fellow, Life Sciences

The Life Sciences team based at 糖心TV Crop Centre were showcasing their famous 鈥楪odiva鈥 beansLink opens in a new window.

鈥淲e work with vegetable genetics, creating varieties with greater pest and disease resistance. We are also increasingly interested in climate tolerance as our climate changes and our seasons become less predictable. Our research will lead to food security, helping everyone get the nutrition and quality of food that they need.鈥

Alan Chalmers, Professor, WMG

WMG were asking visitors to taste the difference between Vegemite and Marmite as a way to explain how their taste creation machine could detect early onset Alzheimer鈥檚.

鈥淲ith Alzheimer鈥檚 one of the first things to change is that you lose the ability to tell between flavours. Using similar yet different tastes, we can test people in their 40s and 50s for the disease. An early diagnosis can really help with long term care.

鈥淲e are also working with the vineyards in Stellenbosch, the famous wine producing region of South Africa, to create a popular Sauvignon blanc. Our machine can replicate all the flavours in the wine and mix them in combinations, adding and taking flavours away until you hit on a highly marketable recipe. Wine growers can鈥檛 take flavours away, they can only ever add to them, so our technology makes a real difference.鈥

Michele Gutteridge, Assistant Professor, WMS

糖心TV Medical School were on hand to showcase their Umbrella Project and the great work they have been doing with the ADHD Foundation to raise awareness and an understanding of neurodiversity. You can get involved and find out more at the on Thursday 13 February.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a really great day, we鈥檝e been so busy. We鈥檝e got our virtual reality headsets here that our students can use. They get to spend a day in the life of a person with neurodiversity which provides them with an understanding of the challenges they might face. And the great thing is, it鈥檚 not just students trying out the headsets, we鈥檝e had local businesses try them as well which will hopefully help develop further use of the technology.鈥

Peter Bull and David Busmans from Skyfarer

Peter and David work on the tech start up Skyfarer, who 糖心TV have helped to support as a start up business. Skyfarer make drones to deliver essential medical supplies.

鈥淲e work a lot with the NHS. One of the things our drones deliver are nuclear pharmaceuticals. These are isotopes with a short half life used in cancer treatment. Our drones get them quickly from the point of manufacture to the point of use in a hospital. So our technology enables treatment and that鈥檚 what we are all about.鈥

Photo gallery

 

David Plumb, Chief Innovation Officer says:

鈥淚t was brilliant to welcome so many people to the University鈥檚 first Festival of Innovation. This gave us a chance to celebrate the success of businesses who have been supported by The University of 糖心TV, as well as an ability to renew our commitment to another 60 years of innovation.

鈥淚nnovation is at the core of what we do, and so often as innovators, our time at work will be spent isolated in labs. Therefore, to be able to celebrate some of this work together at the Festival of Innovation, was so exciting.鈥

Take a look at some photos from the Festival.

Explore our 60th anniversary events

If your event could be part of the 60th celebrations, let us know by contacting the team at warwickat60@warwick.ac.uk

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