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From Imagination to Impact: 电车无码鈥檚 $541M reIMAGINE Campaign

What happens when a university dares to reIMAGINE its role in the world? At the University of Ottawa, it leads to lives transformed and ideas unleashed.

Our shared future, reIMAGINED

The reIMAGINE campaign has exceeded its $500 million goal, making it the most ambitious and impactful fundraising initiative in the University of Ottawa's history鈥攁nd it鈥檚 rewriting what鈥檚 possible for students, researchers and the communities they serve.

University of Ottawa grads go on to leave their mark on every continent, in every field. So when we say 鈥渢hank you,鈥 it鈥檚 for more than just helping us to reimagine the future of 电车无码. It鈥檚 in appreciation of your support in building a brighter, better world. We鈥檙e beyond grateful to every donor and partner who helped us reach this goal.

President and vice-chancellor Jacques Fr茅mont announces reIMAGINE campaign results.

Student experience takes centre stage

University is a place of new beginnings鈥攁 time to pursue our boldest ideas, forge lasting memories and find mentors who inspire growth.

The reIMAGINE campaign demonstrated the power of investing in the holistic student experience. With your support, we created spaces for experimentation and exploration, expanded university resources, fostered health and wellness, and created a future-ready mindset for success on campus and beyond.

$90M

Raised for student awards

$22M

Directed towards enhancing the student experience

1,081

Scholarships and bursaries created

Students operating machinery in CEED workspace

Nurturing entrepreneurial mindsets

Creativity and resourcefulness are key, no matter your field. Backed by significant campaign support, the Centre for Entrepreneurship and Engineering Design (CEED) gives students and faculty access to hands-on makerspaces and experiential learning, competitive teams and workshops. From designing wheelchair-accessible fitness equipment to creating startups to engineering a race-worthy concrete toboggan, CEED is where collaborations are sparked and ideas are shaped. 

Impact: 2,500 students benefitted each year and 275+ projects developed in CEED spaces.

Read the story: Centre for Entrepreneurship and Engineering Design: Fostering the next generation of innovators

Student sitting at a piano during a recital.

Hitting all the right keys

The School of Music鈥檚 Piano Renewal Campaign resonated with the community. Thanks to an anonymous legacy gift and other generous donors, the school acquired five grand pianos, seven uprights and its crowning jewel, a concert grand for Freiman Hall. The result? Enhanced opportunities for students to develop their craft and a music program that has greater appeal for prospective students, faculty and visiting artists.

Impact: 13 pianos that will serve generations of talented 电车无码 students.

Read the story: An anonymous donation with a big impact

Interns with CIPPIC Director at the Federal Court

Defending the public interest in a rapidly changing world

From the evolution of artificial intelligence to digital surveillance concerns, the lawyers of tomorrow need all the experience they can get today. The Samuelson-Glushko Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC), based at 电车无码鈥檚 Faculty of Law, is the country鈥檚 first and only public interest technology law clinic. Campaign funding enables JD students to get first-hand legal experience while also advancing the clinic鈥檚 critically important work.

Impact: Crucial support of CIPPIC鈥檚 work that creates experiential learning internships for Faculty of Law students.

Read the story: Samuelson-Glushko Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic: A voice for Canadians in the digital world

Get to know some of our amazing donors

Two-time alumnus finds joy in giving back

鈥淢any of us have benefited from our time at the University of Ottawa, so when it comes to scholarships, there鈥檚 an element of 鈥榣et鈥檚 pay it back.鈥 I was able to benefit from that, and now it鈥檚 immensely rewarding to see other people benefit from it, too.鈥 

Reg Thompson (BSocSci 鈥91, LLB 鈥94), an alumnus donor whose gifts now aid two Indigenous students by covering their full tuition

Read Reg鈥檚 story

Reg Thompson

Opportunity and inclusion: Core values that helped shape a gift

鈥淚 thought it was time to be thankful for what I had achieved through 电车无码 and Telfer, and to try to help others.鈥

Marlene Patrick (BAdm 鈥79, BCom 鈥80), an alumna donor who created an entry scholarship for women from Black, Indigenous or racialized communities newly admitted to an undergraduate program at the Telfer School of Management.

Read Marlene鈥檚 story

Marlene Patrick with Lily Omakor, the 2022 recipient of the Marlene King Patrick Admission Scholarship.

Our collective generosity adds up to deliver major impact!

$10M

The largest contribution to the reIMAGINE campaign, made by Jean and Alex Trebek

13,000

Endowed gifts totalling $88M, which helped to grow our endowment fund to more than $350M

70,000

Gifts of less than $1K raised $30M in support鈥攊t adds up!

Investing in student success

Hands forming the shape of a heart

Investing in mental health and wellness

We care deeply about all dimensions of student health. The reIMAGINE campaign focused on the holistic student experience, recognizing that academic success is underpinned by mental, cultural, and social wellbeing. In support of this mission, $500,000 from the University of Ottawa Alumni Association enabled the Health and Wellness team to extend their hours to ensure no student faces challenges alone. 

Impact: 500 additional sessions per year, enhancing front-line support in the afternoons and evenings. 

Dr. Greenberg

Modelling next-level Gee-Gees pride

Dr. Gary Greenberg (MD 鈥77) is a familiar face around 电车无码鈥檚 athletic facilities. For 45 seasons he鈥檚 been the team physician for the Gee-Gees football and men鈥檚 hockey programs, making him one of the University鈥檚 most committed volunteers. During the campaign, he decided to give back even more, becoming the largest-ever donor to our sports programs.

Impact: 62 annual athletics scholarships.

Students receiving career guidence in the Career Corner

Readying students for the world of work

The transition from university to workplace can be daunting. Enabled by $750,000 in support from RBC, 电车无码 has created resources to prepare students to launch their careers and build their networks. RBC鈥檚 Future Lauch Program helped create the Career Corner and funded the development and launch of the uoCompetencies program for students to learn soft skills.

Impact: 6,000 students per year are better prepared for the world of work.

Explore inspiring donor stories!

Healing through education: Empowering the next generation of Indigenous physicians

鈥淏y supporting Indigenous students in their education, we are contributing to the sustainable transformation of the health-care system.鈥

Dr. Jeffrey Weitz, faculty alumnus (MD 鈥76) and donor to the Indigenous Medical Education Program 

Read Dr. Weitz鈥檚 story 

Dr. Jeffrey Weitz

Furthering good through knowledge

鈥淲e don鈥檛 give to get rid of something. We give to achieve a goal that matters to us.鈥

Marie des Anges Loyer, (BScN 鈥60, MEd 鈥68, PhD 鈥82), founder of the Loyer-DaSilva Research Chair in Community and Public Health Nursing 

Read Marie鈥檚 story 

Julien Sicard, Marie des Anges Loyer, and Claude Drouin at end of campaign celebration
Julien Sicard, Marie des Anges Loyer, and Claude Drouin at end of campaign celebration

Society-wide solutions start here

We鈥檙e a community of problem solvers. Our students and faculty recognize that their studies and research take place in the context of fast-paced change. That鈥檚 why we believe in the power of partnership, collaborating with other experts to identify gaps and co-create solutions.

Thanks to support from the reIMAGINE campaign, 电车无码 is at the forefront of research that鈥檚 building a better society locally, nationally and internationally鈥攂ecause as a university, we measure our success by the positive change we create together.

Faculty of Science student in the lab
$240M

Raised for groundbreaking research

4th

Ranked in research intensity per professor in Canada

$26M

In support of research chairs and professorships

Fruit, vegetables, and a bottle of water

Accelerating the journey from lab to community impact

Globally significant discoveries start with visionary research. Powered by a $5.8 million anonymous campaign donation, 电车无码 researchers at the Faculty of Health Sciences are unravelling one of the great mysteries of the human body, the gut microbiome. The implications and applications of this research are huge鈥攂y uncovering the link between diet, nutrition and the gut, scientists are finding alternative treatments for mental health conditions.

Impact: Promising research points to adding probiotic-rich foods to a patient鈥檚 diet to improve physical and psychiatric recovery.

Polluted skyline with factories

Spurring meaningful climate action

Campaign support strengthened 电车无码鈥檚 commitment to climate action. Matched by the University of Ottawa, a $2 million gift from the Jarislowsky Foundation established the Jarislowsky Chair in Clean Economy and Innovation. Research chair Stewart Elgie now advocates for economic policies that drive the transition to a low-carbon economy in Canada and beyond.

Impact: Successful carbon pricing policy helping Canada transition to a low-carbon economy.

Scientist working in a lab.

Seeking breakthrough treatments for muscle and nerve diseases

The late Dr. 脡ric Poulin, a pioneering chief of surgery and 电车无码 faculty member, left a lasting impact on a generation of young physicians and surgeons. Diagnosed with ALS in 2011, Dr. Poulin passed away five years later. His legacy lives on through the 脡ric Poulin Centre for Neuromuscular Disease (CNMD) supported by generous donations from his wife, Margo Brousseau, to advance ALS research and provide hope for patients and their families.

Impact: CNMD expanded from 12 scientists in 2014 to over 60 scientists and clinicians today.

Feather and sage smudging ceremony

Transforming the future of learning and research in Indigenous health and wellbeing

In 2022, a generous $2.5 million donation from BMO for health sciences infrastructure helped establish the Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Health. This community partnership demonstrates how 电车无码 is taking action to pursue Indigenization in our courses, curricula and research, and in our relationship with communities.

Impact: Part of the University of Ottawa's commitment to truth, reconciliation and Indigenization.

Thank you for making this possible!

Jacques Fr茅mont
reIMAGINE Campaign

鈥淭his generosity doesn't just change our university鈥攊t changes the world.鈥

Jacques Fr茅mont

鈥 President and Vice Chancellor

鈥淧hilanthropy is how we unlock progress, it doesn鈥檛 just build labs or endow scholarships鈥攊t drives discovery, it breaks down barriers, and it fuels bold ideas that solve real problems.鈥

鈥淚n today鈥檚 reality of limited public funding, campaigns like reIMAGINE are not just helpful鈥攖hey are essential. This is about ensuring that brilliant minds鈥攔egardless of background鈥攈ave the tools and the opportunity to lead. Our donors didn鈥檛 just invest in a university. They invested in people, and a better future for all.鈥

鈥淭his generosity doesn鈥檛 just change our university鈥攊t changes the world.鈥

Jacques Fr茅mont, President and Vice Chancellor

Indigenous Affirmation

We pay respect to the Algonquin people, who are the traditional guardians of this land. We acknowledge their longstanding relationship with this territory, which remains unceded. 

We pay respect to all Indigenous people in this region, from all nations across Canada, who call Ottawa home. 

We acknowledge the traditional knowledge keepers, both young and old. And we honour their courageous leaders: past, present, and future. 

Learn more about the Indigenous Affirmation.