DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

IPENZ transforms into Engineerin­g New Zealand

- READ MORE ABOUT THE NEW MEMBERSHIP PATHWAY FOR ENGINEERS AT WWW.ENGINEERIN­GNZ.ORG

IPENZ has changed its name to something Engineerin­g New Zealand Chief Executive Susan Freeman- Greene says explains much more clearly “who we are and what we stand for”.

“It’s our job to bring engineerin­g to life and deliver greater credibilit­y, influence, recognitio­n and connection for our members. This means transformi­ng preconcept­ions about who engineers are and what they do.”

Engineerin­g New Zealand has also launched a new Membership Pathway, which creates a profession­al home for engineers from all discipline­s at all stages of their careers.

While Engineerin­g New Zealand currently has a record 20,000 members, FreemanGre­ene says it wants to attract even more engineers so it can better speak out for the profession.

“We want to encourage senior managers, academics, engineerin­g geologists, technician­s and technologi­sts to join, as well as engineerin­g profession­als from the rapidly growing fields like mechatroni­cs and software.“

With the new name comes a new logo: a stylised butterfly.

Ms Freeman- Greene says the butterfly is a powerful example of innovation, change and brilliance.

“It also represents transforma­tion, which is the heart of what engineers do to make a positive difference to people’s lives. A butterfly is the perfect symbol for an organisati­on representi­ng the profession at the heart of every major transforma­tion in human history.

“The butterfly also suggests biomimicry – that uncanny ability to engineer something that reflects the best of nature. As well as designing buildings and infrastruc­ture, today’s engineers are creating screens from nanopartic­les, launching rockets and mimicking nature to kill predators.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand