MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN!
Dear students, alumni, colleagues, and partners of CDE,
The College has much to be proud of. Three years after our formation, we have built a strong foundation together, setting the stage for even more significant growth and success in the future.
One of the most exciting developments in our curriculum is that, in AY2025/2026, the College will welcome its first cohort for the new Bachelor of Engineering in Robotics and Machine Intelligence (BEng RMI) programme. Its interdisciplinary curriculum is designed to provide students with a strong foundation in mechanics, electronics, control systems, and programming while offering training in data analytics and machine learning.
The BEng RMI was developed in response to industry needs and feedback, highlighting the growing importance of intelligent systems in robotics. I would like to express my gratitude to the companies that have supported the launch of this new programme. We look forward to continuing our close engagement to expand opportunities for our students and develop talent to meet industry needs.
It is not only in education that we can expect exciting developments in robotics. Led by its new Director, Professor Cecilia Laschi from our Department of Mechanical Engineering, the Advanced Robotics Centre (ARC) has launched a strategic programme to foster cross-disciplinary research in new robotics areas. In a research-intensive university, the pillars of education and research are closely intertwined. Expanding research in robotics will also mean opportunities for nurturing top talents at the postgraduate level.
Let us look forward to 2025, working to gather to explore new frontiers and opportunities for our College to make a meaningful impact.
Wishing you and your loved ones a joyful holiday season and a new year filled with health, happiness, and new opportunities.
Professor Teo Kie Leong
Dean
College of Design and Engineering (CDE)
HIGHLIGHTS
SEASON'S GREETINGS AND HIGHLIGHTS FROM DEPARTMENTS AND CENTRES
EVENTS
Shaping the Future of Human-Robot Collaboration
Across leading research institutions, robotics research is increasingly focused on extending human capability through meaningful human–robot collaboration. At Stanford University, this work is particularly focused on environments that are hazardous, remote, or otherwise inaccessible to people; by physically distancing humans from danger while still enabling their skills, intuition, and experience to guide robotic systems, they […]
Reflections and Experiments in Contemporary Korean Housing
This talk examines collective housing in contemporary Korea against an ethical vacuum produced in the process of modernisation in East Asia. This condition arises from the destabilisation of family-based ethics and the incomplete formation of civic ethics. Within this condition, the talk reframes the prevalence of apartment housing in Korea—often developed as large, semi-gated communities—not […]


