Queen's University Belfast has celebrated the relaunch of the Northern Ireland Advanced Composites and Engineering Centre (NIACE), which is integral to the 10x Economy Plan for Northern Ireland.
NIACE is the regional Centre of Excellence for innovative composites manufacturing research and technology and is delivered by a partnership between Queen’s University Belfast, Ulster University and the National Composites Centre.
NIACE is supported by Invest Northern Ireland, Spirit AeroSystems, BEIS and industrial members. During the event to relaunch the centre, an MOU was signed between Queen’s University, Ulster University and the Royal Academy of Engineering in relation to collaboration in innovation and enterprise.
Key national organisations
NIACE is entering a new phase with additional investment and new partnerships with key national organisations. Professor Paul Maropoulos, Queen’s University, is leading the relaunch of NIACE, and said: “NIACE is entering a truly exciting new phase in its development, with a team of core staff recruited to give the Centre the capability to deliver innovation R&D projects tailored to the needs of our manufacturing companies.
“I am especially pleased that NIACE is supported by a new partnership that includes both Northern Ireland universities and the National Composites Centre. This gives NIACE access to the UK-wide High Value Manufacturing Catapult network. The centre is also committed to working with the Royal Academy of Engineering to support its new Enterprise Hub in Northern Ireland.”
The 10x Economy Plan highlights that manufacturing is critical to Northern Ireland’s economic future and that accelerating City and Growth Deals is central to post-Covid recovery.
The Belfast Regional City Deal project, Advanced Manufacturing Innovation Centre (AMIC), will bring together partners, expertise and significant new investment. Existing facilities, including NIACE, will be central to driving innovation across manufacturing businesses within Northern Ireland and beyond.