Brian’s journey began almost by accident. While working in NC’s electronics labs as a student, he didn’t know there was a research division, until two researchers walked in looking to borrow equipment. Curiosity pulled him into a co-op placement with the Horticultural and Environmental Science Innovation Centre (HESIC). There, he helped design remote-monitoring sensor systems for industry partners and quickly realized how much he enjoyed the hands-on nature of applied research. “I couldn’t believe someone was paying me to come in and do the things I love doing,” he says. Today, as the Research Laboratory Technologist, he’s the lab’s go-to electronics expert, guiding students through designing and assembling circuits, writing firmware, and troubleshooting projects.
Josh’s path winds through a broad mix of industry roles. After completing his mechanical engineering co-op at WAMIC, he moved into tooling engineering at General Motors, expanded into vibration analysis, and eventually took on a manufacturing quality management role overseeing more than 60 employees. These experiences gave him a unique blend of technical insight and leadership. Still, what he remembered most was the open-ended experimentation he first encountered at WAMIC. “[He recalls enjoying] the aspect of figuring out something you’re not sure will work,” says WAMIC’s Research and Development Technologist. Returning to WAMIC allowed him to bring that mindset back to the lab, helping students interpret imperfect drawings, understand manufacturing constraints, and build confidence through real-world problem-solving.
While Brock’s return feels the most ‘full circle,’ he completed two co-op terms at WAMIC as a student and found that applied research blended naturally with his creative interests. Outside of engineering, WAMIC’s Advanced Manufacturing Engineering Specialist has always loved art, sketching, building, and creating by hand, and he approaches mechanical design with that same creative mindset. “There’s a lot of creativity in mechanical design,” he says. After working in machining and later at Airbus Helicopters, where he led technicians and implemented manufacturing processes, he missed the exploratory nature of research and came back to WAMIC. “I’m always drawn back to research,” he says. “This is what engineering is. I have fun doing it and teaching the students.”