News and Events
- Scientists’ next-generation space materials blast off for tests on ISS
- SFI Industry RD&I Fellowships announced
- Inclusive XR 1.5 days Training Workshop: 17-18 June 2024
- ISRP symposium
- UCD-led space project receives over €7.9m from Disruptive Technologies Innovation Fund
- UCD Researchers awarded over €4m in ERC grants for Biomedical Engineering and Political Economy projects
- Congratulations to Xinhui Wang win the first prizes at the 26th Sir Bernard Crossland Symposium in all-Ireland (Republic of Ireland + Northern Ireland)
- ERC Starting Grants Awarded to UCD Researchers in Humanities and Engineering
- UCD's Livija Vasilenkaite - First Prize Winner #ThisIsEngineering2023
- College researchers recognised in UCD Research Impact Competition
- UCD Graduate Clíodhna Lyons named Automotive News Europe Rising Star
- Irish Government invests in 47 projects to engage and inspire the public about STEM
- Research to Literally Get Under the Skin of Things
- IMI project Screen4Care to speed up diagnosis and enhance healthcare for rare disease patients
- €9M joint investment for US-Ireland R&D Programme
- Helping People Understand and Mitigate the Spread of Aerosol-Born Infections
- Research teams chosen to find disruptive ideas for Irish Defence Forces
- Reducing the operational requirements of wind turbines with real-time downtime detection
- 2021 Archive
- 2020 Archive
- Engineers Ireland’s Engineering Excellence Digital Series
- George Vathakkattil Joseph, a Ph.D. student in the School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering has come runner-up in the ThesisIn3 competition at UCD for his talk
- The Irish Laboratory Awards 2020
- Students celebrate victory at the ‘Shaping Your Future’ 3D printing innovation challenge
- UCD team wins prestigious ESB Inter-Colleges Challenge 2020
- Digital Animation for Educators
- Intel’s Colm Farrell named as Adjunct Professor at UCD
- UCD Engineers Receive 2019 NovaUCD Innovation Awards
- PlasmaBound Seals €1.1 million Investment Round
- UCD Formula Student Wins the 2020 NovaUCD Student Enterprise Competition
- Airflow video shows how easily coronavirus can be spread by coughing
- UCD volunteers use 3D printing to produce PPE for front-line COVID-19 medical staff
- UCD engineer leads Irish efforts in global race to build ventilators
- UCD-based Inventors Help Create Ingenious Solutions to Everyday Problems for Extraordinary People on Big Life Fix
- Arup UCD Engineering scholarships 2019
- 2019 Archive
- 2018 Archive
- 2017 Archive
- 2016 Archive
UCD-based Inventors Help Create Ingenious Solutions to Everyday Problems for Extraordinary People on Big Life Fix
Friday, 6 March, 2020
A brand new RTÉ series, BIG LIFE FIX, which commences tonight on RTÉ 1, challenges a group of 'fixers' - leading designers, engineers, computer programmers and technology experts, including two from University College Dublin (UCD), to create inventions that will transform people's lives.
Filmed over the course of a full year, the group uses cutting-edge science and technology to build practical solutions for those who need their help.
Based at TOG, a facility for makers in Dublin, the team harnesses the power of science to create tailor-made inventions for individuals and families. Between them, the fixers can build everything from space satellites to life saving medical devices and military hardware.
The two UCD-based fixers are Dr David McKeown and Dr Shane Phelan.
Dr McKeown is an Assistant Professor at the UCD School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering whose main area of research is the design of control systems for flexible mechanical systems, including space satellites.
Dr Phelan is an electronic engineer and co-founder of a UCD spin-in company, Iamus Technologies Ltd, which is headquartered at NovaUCD. Iamus Iamus is using machine learning to turn visual, environmental and biometric bird and farm information into actionable data for poultry producers.
The fixer team will take on twelve projects in total across the series. During the programme they will attempt to preserve the voice of Roisin Foley, a young mother dealing with Motor Neurone Disease, and help Eoghan Barry, a teenage rower from Skibbereen, who is missing part of his right arm, to reach his full potential.
They will work with 32-year-old Kevin McGarry, who lost his legs in a farming accident, and who would love to be able to cycle again, and 15-year-old Erin, who was born without arms, and wants to become more independent. They will also help 3-year-old Alana Reid Sochan, who has Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) or 'Butterfly Syndrome' and needs 24-hour care, to sleep in her own room.
In the first episode, which airs tonight on RTÉ 1 at 9:35 pm, the team will try to provide some quality of life to 68-year-old grandmother, Jacinta Dixon, whose world has been torn apart by a rare form of Alzheimer's.
Dr David McKeown is the lead fixer on the Eoghan Barry project which airs on 11th of March.
Dr McKeown said, "It was a really rewarding experience to build something to allow someone to no longer struggle doing something they really love. I found the project a tough challenge but Eoghan is a determined rower, so I felt I had to make sure I brought the same level of stubbornness to finding solutions to the issues he was having. It took a lot of prototypes and late nights, but we got there eventually."
Dr Shane Phelan is the lead fixer on the Alana Reid Sochan project which airs on 18th of March.
Dr Phelan said, "While working with Alana and her family I learned about how they live their lives and how they managed with Alana's Butterfly Syndrome. I found their bravery and resilience to be quite inspirational and a huge driving force for developing fixes that would help make their lives a little easier."
He added, "In my line of work I am rarely working so closely with the person who will benefit directly from the devices I make so it was great to meet with Alana and her family over the last year to iterate through all her prototypes. Completing the project wasn't easy, there were a lot of things that simply didn't work or things that didn't work well enough before the final fixes were chosen." He concluded, "It was fantastic to see their reactions when they got the final completed fixes and it's great to know they are being used every day since making a real change in their lives."
The other fixers in addition to Dr McKeown and Dr Phelan are:
- Lorna Ross, formally Group Director of Fjord Design Studio, Accenture's The Dock, and currently Chief Innovation Officer, VHI Health and Wellness Group, who is the fixer on the first programme
- Trevor Vaugh, Assistant Professor Maynooth University, and Principal Investigator Mi:Lab (Maynooth University Innovation Lab)
- Niamh Stockil, Software Engineer, Microsoft Ireland
- Chiara Cavarra, Senior Digital Design Engineer, Xilinx
- James Carrigan, Designer and co-founder, Sugru
- John O'Donnell, Game Designer, IT University Copenhagen.
Made with the support of Science Foundation Ireland, this series marries real problems and human drama with science, proving that with a little bit of ingenuity - nothing is impossible.