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Innovative Health Care

MP Maggie Chin poses for a group photo with Health Sciences staff and faculty in one of Waterfront Campus's learning landscapes.

George Brown Polytechnic's cutting-edge approach to health care training continues to attract interest from the Government of Canada

Education News Canada
Photo: GBP
Date: May 27, 2026

As the federal government looks to address workforce shortages, aging populations and rising care demands, George Brown is responding with innovative health care programs that integrate technology-enabled learning, simulation training and sustainability. Parliamentary Secretary of Health and Member of Parliament Maggie Chi toured the Waterfront Campus on May 20 to get a first-hand look at our leading-edge teaching and simulation spaces alongside Dr. Wendy Ellis, Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences. The visit offered an in-depth look at how the institution is preparing the next generation of health care professionals through applied, real-world learning.

Diana Chan McNally

Guests in the audience listen to panelists at the Human Rights Day panel

Diana Chan McNally: Bringing community work to Toronto’s City Council

Rabble
Photo: GBP
Date: May 28, 2026

This week, we welcome and spotlight community worker, homelessness advocate, and candidate for Toronto City Council, Diana Chan McNally. We discuss Chan McNally’s run to become City Councillor for Toronto’s Ward 4, Parkdale-High Park, top-of-mind issues for the Ward and the city, provincial encroachment on municipal government and her vision of bringing community work to municipal politics. Diana Chan McNally (she/they) is a former graduate and faculty member of the Community Worker Program at George Brown Polytechnic in Toronto, a long-time front-line worker, and a housing and harm reduction advocate. 

Architectural Award

Limberlost interior - learning landscape

RAIC Architectural Practice Award: Moriyama Teshima Architects

Canadian Architect
Photo: GBP
Date: May 1, 2026

Conceived as a living laboratory for students in George Brown Polytechnic’s architectural programs, Limberlost Place (2025) was Ontario’s first tall wood assembly occupancy academic building. Delivered through a joint venture partnership between MTA and Acton Ostry Architects, the project required close collaboration with authorities having jurisdiction to align emerging construction methodologies with existing codes and approval processes. Innovation in construction supported ambitious environmental and architectural goals, achieved responsibly.

Sustainable Construction

A view of the interior of the Limberlost bridge connecting to 51 Dockside Drive, with buildings visible through the glass

Data-Driven Buildings Signal the Next Phase of Sustainable Construction

Urban Toronto
Photo: GBP
Date: April 30, 2026

In Toronto, George Brown College’s Limberlost Place has emerged as an example of how intelligent systems and high-performance design are being combined at scale. The mass timber academic building's net-zero carbon operation is supported by advanced building systems that monitor energy use and indoor conditions in real time. Designed as both a teaching facility and a living lab, the project embeds performance tracking into daily operations, allowing systems to be studied and adjusted over time.

Earth Month

PSE celebrates Earth Month

Academica Group
Photo: GBP
Date: April 6, 2026

Institutions across the country are launching nature-based events and sharing information in celebration of Earth Month this April. Royal Roads University and York University both announced events such as a forest walk, campus clean ups, and an invasive plant removal activity. The Royal Roads Library has also created Earth Day displays. The University of Saskatchewan provided six suggestions for the community to live more sustainably, which include cutting waste at the office and choosing lower-emission transportation when possible, while George Brown Polytechnic highlighted climate actions it has taken over the past year.

EDII

Jennifer Grant, Associate Vice-President

‘Nothing’s neutral:’ How 2 Canadian employers reframe DEI as equity and belonging

Canadian HR Reporter
Photo: GBP
Date: March 24, 2026

At George Brown Polytechnic and Thales Canada, DEI work is less about hitting compliance targets and more about building workplaces where people can succeed regardless of their identity and feel like they belong, according to HR leaders at each organization. For Jennifer Grant, a key lesson in this space is that “nothing's neutral” — conversations are shaped by structures, practices and policies through a very singular lens: often male, white, able-bodied, English and Christian, for example.f

Natalie Wood

Professor Natalie Wood with colleagues and guests at the William Peyton Hubbard Naming Event, February 2026.

George Brown Professor Natalie Wood wins Michael Baptista Essay Prize

Education News Canada
Photo: GBP
Date: March 16, 2026

George Brown Polytechnic professor and researcher Natalie Wood has been awarded the Michael Baptista Essay Prize by York University's Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean (CERLAC).  Wood, a professor in the Social Service Worker program and co-designer of the Black Futures Research Institute, was recently named the 2025 Baptista Prize winner for the essay, Tidal Relations: Pelagic Theories of the Black Atlantic. The essay outlines ocean-based (pelagic) theories that demonstrate how Black scholars and artists analyze and respond to anti-Black racism, oppression, environmental harm, and Eurocentric power systems by thinking through the significance of the Atlantic Ocean and sites of the Middle Passage. 

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Land Acknowledgement

Land Acknowledgement

George Brown Polytechnic is located on the traditional territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation and other Indigenous peoples who have lived here over time. We are grateful to share this land as treaty people who learn, work and live in the community with each other.