Students

A Showcase of Student Innovation

Columbia Engineering’s Senior Design Expo featured 60 team projects, with more than 220 students participating this year.

June 11, 2026

More than 220 graduating seniors gathered in Lerner Hall on May 7 to present their senior design projects to faculty, alumni, fellow students, and members of the community.

The 2026 Senior Design Expo featured 60 projects that tackled real-world problems ranging from illness and mobility challenges to urban flooding. 

“We have an incredibly rich and diverse showcase of projects on display,” said Dean Shih-Fu Chang in his opening remarks. “This expo truly exhibits the Engineering for Humanity vision.”

The students relied on math, science, and engineering expertise from their coursework — and experience working on team projects — as the foundation for designing and executing their solutions.

Many of the projects in this year’s expo integrated AI with custom hardware. The Clinical Handwashing Coach, which tracks handwashing sessions, is being tested at a hospital in Pasadena, California. The team of electrical engineering students designed an AI system to ensure that medical professionals comply with handwashing protocols. Other teams from the department used AI to create noise-canceling headphones with real-time language detection and translation (team ANURA) and a wearable device that inexpensively creates digital transcriptions (CLACS).

A couple of projects tackled wheelchair comfort and mobility autonomy. The Mechanical Engineering team STAR (Self-Transfer with Automated Reversing) Lift made moving in and out of a wheelchair easier for wheelchair users with upper-body mobility, allowing them to transfer themselves to a bed without assistance. Team Wheel-E created a specialized seat cushion for wheelchair users that helps alleviate the painful symptoms of prolonged sitting. 

Urban green infrastructure was the main theme for many projects in the Department of Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics. The Morningside Park Rehabilitation Project reimagined the local neighborhood park by proposing two new community centers for public use and an upgraded drainage system that can handle heavier rainfall runoff. 

From AI devices to reimagining a neighborhood park, the Class of 2026 proved that the best engineering goes beyond the classroom and makes an impact in the world.