Modern apartment blocks with foliage along the walls and balconies, framed by modern office blocks. Photo is cropped to emphasise the modernity and the contrast between the different buildings.

We know an increasing amount about what is not sustainable. But what is? What does sustainability mean for cities and those of us that inhabit them? How do we design cities that are healthy for people as well as healing for the planet?

This alumni panel event will showcase how the Imperial community is defining and shaping our cities of the future. 

From trees and public spaces, to infrastructure and our modes of travel, to the materials our homes and offices are made of – each of these and more will affect the liveability and efficiency of our future cities.

We look forward to gathering with fellow alumni and experts from across the climate, energy, design and sustainability sectors, for a cross-cutting and topical discussion led by Professor Frank Kelly, with opening remarks from President Hugh Brady.

Our interdisciplinary speaker panel will share insights into their industry backgrounds, their views on what sustainability means for the future of cities and their reflections on the chapters ahead.

Attendees can expect a memorable evening of in-person networking plus exclusive insights into the varied careers in demand within the sustainability sector. There will also be alumni founders in attendance, showcasing some of the innovative Imperial start ups in the field of sustainable cities.

Tickets are £10 for alumni and their guests, £5 for students. Book here. Imperial staff who wish to attend – simply email alumnievents@imperial.ac.uk to secure your place.

Refreshments will be served in the reception after the panel event.

About the Chair – Professor Frank Kelly

Headshot of Professor Frank Kelly, cheerfully smiling at the camera against a plain white background. He wears a light blue shirt and patterned tie with a charcoal coloured suit jacket.Professor Frank Kelly, PhD, FKC, FRSB, FRSC, FMedSci, FRCP (Hon) holds the inaugural Humphrey Battcock Chair in Community Health and Policy, within the School of Public Health in a new global centre of air pollution research. 

He is a world-leading expert in air pollution research, spanning everything from toxicology to policy. In recent years amongst other initiatives, Professor Kelly has led studies that have facilitated the introduction of the London Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ). One of his newest areas of investigation is ambient microplastics and their potential impact on biodiversity and health.

He previously served as Chair of Environmental Health at King’s College London, where he was Director of the Environmental Research Group, Director of the NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Health Impact of Environmental Hazards and Deputy Director of the MRC Centre for Environment & Health.

Professor Kelly has published over 450 peer-reviewed papers as well as many conference papers and books (as author or editor) on the toxicology and health effects of ozone, nitrogen dioxide and particulate pollution. He provides policy support to the World Health Organisation on air pollution issues and is a member of the Health Effects Institute (HEI) Review Committee. He is past Chairman of COMEAP, the UK’s Department of Health’s Expert Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollutants, past President of the European Society for Free Radical Research and past Chairman of the British Association for Lung Research.

External speaker

We will have one industry speaker joining our alumni for the panel conversation. To be announced.

The alumni panel

Headshot of Balazs Csuvar smiling. He is against a light grey background and wears a teal t-shirt.Balázs Csuvár (MEng Civil Engineering 2014) – Director of Innovation and Net Zero at DG Cities. His work includes the development of smart city strategies, planning for connected and autonomous mobility, and enhancing the capacity of local governments. Balázs is passionate about leveraging technology to create sustainable, efficient, and liveable urban environments. His recent focus is on exploring the potential of AI to act as a core enabler in delivering more accurate, personalised, and targeted public services.

The full list of alumni speakers will be updated here closer to the event.

Alumni startup showcases 

We are excited to have the following Imperial founders showcasing in the networking reception after the panel discussion:

Untap health logo which consists of 4 water drops in the colours of teal, grey, berry and orangeUntap Health – containing the illnesses of today and preventing the pandemics of tomorrow. Untap Health has developed multi-patent-pending wastewater technology that detects early-stage illness by deploying hardware in outgoing sewage. Co-founded by Dr Claire Trant (PhD Materials 2020).

Treeva logo, which is simply their name in navy blue front on a green backgroundTreeva – providing reliable renewable energy for critical transport infrastructure. To address energy supply risks and reduce emissions, Treeva turbines harness the energy from the airflow of passing transport on the side of roads and railways. Co-founded by Anjali Devadasan and Yu Gu (MEng Materials Science and Engineering 2024).

The Guerrilla logo, which is simply the name in black font on a white backgroundGuerrilla – Founded by Summer Chen, Henry Parkin, Hunaid Nagaria and Adhesh Shenoy (MSc Innovation Design Engineering 2023). The team is currently developing a patent-pending device, Guerrilla, to capture pollution from road runoff, an environmental concern that is reported to mobilise 30% of ocean pollution.

The Phare Labs logo which is simply the name in white font on a charcoal square backgroundPhare Labs – AI-powered smoke alarm and indoor air quality monitoring device. Co-founded by Arnau Donate (MSc Global Innovation Design 2022). 

 

 

Getting here