Every spring and fall, we profile just a few of our amazing graduates in our convocation handout. We proudly feature these stories here on Dal News. Congrats to all our new graduates!
Hailing from Hamilton, Ont., Nick Shaw started his undergraduate degree in environmental science and international development at Dal because of his attraction to the city. 鈥淗alifax is an interesting, colonial, fortress city,鈥 he says. For a future urban planner, the atmosphere and layout of the city helped make his decision an easy one.
Shaw鈥檚 interest in planning emerged during his undergraduate degree, after studying issues of space and the implications of the urban environment. 鈥淚 wanted to approach the bigger problems we have in society, including anonymity between neighbours [and] self-serving individualism. The ultimate goal is to design communities and spaces that encourage you to know your neighbours, to eliminate the silos and build solidarity and community pride.鈥 A master鈥檚 degree in planning proved to be a meaningful way to approach these issues and explore his passion for sustainable transportation and planning.
His independent master鈥檚 research project, 鈥淔actors Affecting Elderly Mobility Issues and Their Residential Location Choice,鈥 was presented at the North American Meeting of the Regional Science Association International in Ottawa. His experiences also included an international transportation conference in Washington, D.C., where he presented his co-authored paper about the integration of a bike-sharing program.
Shaw draws planning inspiration and best practices from the Netherlands and Sweden, where there is considerable public participation in transportation and planning. 鈥淚 am infatuated with Sweden. They have an amazing governance policy on transportation and a high quality of public discourse.鈥
He鈥檚 very interested in studying how people move and encourages others to consider alternative and more sustainable forms of transportation. 鈥淭he less reliant we are on cars the more opportunity we have to reimagine streets to be a place of interaction and not just vehicular flow. If we can reprioritize how we use the streets and place cars near the bottom, then natural urban design will emerge.鈥
While he鈥檚 exploring a few options for what to do following graduation, Shaw admits, 鈥淚f I could do anything, I鈥檇 love to work as a transportation planner for a transportation and design firm in Copenhagen.鈥