The Standard (St. Catharines)

Brock students making Lincoln a better place

- ALLAN BENNER STANDARD STAFF

Town of Lincoln buses are expected to begin rolling through the community in November, as part of a pilot project to carry passengers to stops throughout the growing town.

Lincoln chief executive officer Michael Kirkopoulo­s said while municipal staff have spent months planning for the launch of the service, that would also link with GO bus services, much of the work was done by someone who would actually use the service — a student.

Brock University master of sustainabi­lity student Meghan Birbeck “almost single-handedly looked at the route map and said, ‘No, here’s where it should go,’” he said.

He said the 24-year-old student who worked as an intern at town hall during the summer months “uses every sort of bus and active transporta­tion network we have.”

Although “it’s great for us as bureaucrat­s to sit there and tell you, ‘Here’s where the stops should be and here’s the frequency,’” Kirkopoulo­s said Birbeck provided insight into the developmen­t of that transit service that town staff overlooked.

“It’s a user-design as opposed to an experiment and experience design,” he said. “It brings that lens.”

Considerin­g how much Birbeck’s assistance improved plans for the transit service, Kirkopoulo­s said he’s excited to see what other students contribute in the months and years to come.

The town signed a memorandum of understand­ing in February to launch the initiative which has evolved in the months that followed into a “living lab” that was officially launched this week, during an event at Vineland Estates Winery.

It’s a long-term partnershi­p through Brock’s environmen­tal sustainabi­lity research centre that will give students like Birbeck an opportunit­y to use their knowledge in practical applicatio­ns, while also benefittin­g the town and residents by providing access to research and expertise of students.

Brock president Gervan Fearon said the living lab agreement with Lincoln is a first for the university. He hopes it won’t be the last.

“This agreement and the MOU with the Town of Lincoln, as well as the activities that we’ve already conducted through the environmen­tal sustainabi­lity research centre as well as through the living lab, is exactly the kind of relationsh­ip that we’d like to forge with communitie­s across the region,” Fearon said.

“It allows us to bring not only our faculty and staff, but indeed our students to be able to participat­e in real-life, hands-on opportunit­ies to contribute to the betterment of communitie­s. It allows us to partner with communitie­s such as the Town of Lincoln, in order to have them move forward with some of their agenda items and priorities and have a resource for them in supporting community developmen­t.”

As a result of the initiative, Kirkopoulo­s said he hopes to see many more students at town hall as a result of the partnershi­p.

“The more the merrier for us. The more we have the better,” he said.

The work the students are doing transcends the environmen­tal lens, he said.

“It’s everything from shoreline protection to what happens if we put up multi-storey buildings. How does that change the compositio­n of a community?” he said.

Kirkopoulo­s said there will be a strong, visible Brock University presence on the first floor of town hall in the months to come.

He said the challenge and opportunit­y for the town and university will be expanding that relationsh­ip.

“This is for us the start of a further conversati­on,” Kirkopoulo­s said. “We’re going to have a cohort of students working in town hall, sharing space with us and then where it goes from there, those are the opportunit­ies.” ABenner@postmedia.com twitter.com/abenner1

 ?? ALLAN BENNER/STANDARD STAFF ?? Lincoln chief executive officer Michael Kirkopoulo­s, from left, Mayor Sandra Easton and Brock University president Gervan Fearon sign an agreement to start a living lab in Lincoln.
ALLAN BENNER/STANDARD STAFF Lincoln chief executive officer Michael Kirkopoulo­s, from left, Mayor Sandra Easton and Brock University president Gervan Fearon sign an agreement to start a living lab in Lincoln.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada