Media releases

  • Brock LINCubator announces first cohort of startups

    MEDIA RELEASE: 9 November 2021 – R0123

    They want to make student cards more secure, respirators more efficient, homes quieter, people happier, workplaces more collaborative and local sports easier to find.

    They are part of the first cohort of the Brock University LINCubator business incubation program announced Friday, Nov. 12.

    Founders of the six early-stage businesses will spend the next eight months working with experts from the Brock LINC and beyond.

    “We made a conscious effort to support businesses across different industries, so you’ll see there’s a great mix of tech businesses, using things like artificial intelligence and facial recognition, as well as more traditional product-based businesses, and even a social enterprise,” said Brock LINC Executive Director Farzana Crocco.

    Launched in early 2020, the Brock LINC is the University’s centre for creativity, innovation, research and entrepreneurship. The 41,000-square-foot facility is housed in the Rankin Family Pavilion at the base of Schmon Tower.

    As one of Brock LINC’s programs, the LINCubator will help the early-stage ventures reach their next stage of business development by working in collaboration with Brock Partnerships, Innovation and Intellectual Property Advancement (PIIPA), Goodman Group, Co-op, Career and Experiential Education, as well as external partners such as Innovate Niagara, Haltech and the Niagara Angel Network, a group of more than 50 individual investors from across southern Ontario.

    Crocco said narrowing down the strong applicant pool was challenging — so much so that the original plan for five initial startups was expanded to six.

    “This is a very diverse group of businesses making up the first cohort of the LINCubator and they are all aiming to solve very interesting and compelling problems,” she said. “We ended up expanding the cohort slightly to support all of these great ideas.”

    The entrepreneurs will have access to desk space, meeting rooms, business services and a collaborative community in the Brock LINC space. In addition, there’s no cost for them to take part.

    “What’s next for the group is an intensive eight months,” Crocco said. “We’re already working on onboarding everyone to the program and assessing their businesses, key goals and milestones. We have a really fantastic group of mentors who will be supporting this cohort with their business questions and challenges.”

    Members of the first Brock LINCubator cohort are:

    Adrien Belcastro, Dextrous Technologies
    Founder of ‘Flex Wallet,’ Belcastro has identified a lack of security and outdated policies with physical student cards. With the use of QR codes and facial recognition, Flex Wallet will digitize university student cards, offering an easier and more secure way to pay for meals, access transit and dormitories, and more.

    Hayden Maass, Bornea Dynamics
    Launched in 2020 at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Bornea Dynamics focuses on innovative technologies within military, security and policing applications, which lead to the development of their CDAM-9 Anti UAS technology — a prototype defensive technology that targets and defeats adversarial drones effectively. The company is also developing an inclusive respirator intended for those with facial hair, eliminating current requirements for respirator users to be clean shaven.

    Sean McCann, SereniVent
    A mason by trade, McCann discovered a lack of development in modern soundproofing techniques for existing homes. McCann’s easy-to-produce solution led to the creation of SereniVent, which offers a low-cost, easy-to-install solution to soundproofing ductwork. 

    Vishal Badiani, Millo
    Badiani’s virtual collaboration platform Millo offers companies a way to connect staff across an organization, breaking silos and creating better conversations. Using artificial intelligence technology, Millo collects data from users to make relevant connections to co-workers based on preferences from interests, hobbies and mentorship, and helps newly-onboarded individuals find connections in their place of employment.

    Joe DeLuca and Pat Kelly, Melody Minds
    Melody Minds is a non-medical service that offers fun, inclusive music and multimedia programs for brain injury survivors and people with intellectual disabilities. DeLuca and Kelly have extensive backgrounds in social work and occupational therapy support work, garnering skills that have allowed them to tailor a non-traditional approach to using music and multimedia as vehicles to achieve growth in social, emotional, cognitive, physical and spiritual health.

    Kyle Chiki, Local Sport Search
    Local Sport Search is an online platform that combines all things sports into one place — from intramural sports to adult sport leagues, events and fitness centres. The platform provides personalized search filters to find an activity based on a number of factors such as days of the week, type and competition level. Targeting athletes and parents, the site offers organizations and league owners exposure to potential clients.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, BrockUniversity ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock collections from World Wars help Niagara remember

    MEDIA RELEASE: 9 November 2021 – R0122

    As Remembrance Day approaches, Brock University’s archival collections bring history to the forefront.

    The Brock University Library’s Archives and Special Collections houses some of the most unique and valuable records representing all aspects of Niagara’s history, including a wide range of historical items related to the First and Second World Wars.

    David Sharron, Head of Archives and Special Collections, said although each collection is significant in its own way, the records that cover the World Wars and other modern conflicts evoke a different reaction.

    “There is an immediate reverence for both the individuals who fought the battles and those who supported the war effort from home,” he said. “These records remind us of a time when people and organizations made sacrifices and pitched in to do their part. It was difficult and often tragic, but as a community, Niagara made it through.”

    Collection highlights include a letter from a father serving oversees to his young daughter; a trench helmet and rucksack used in the First World War; documents on the City of St. Catharines’ war preparations and measures; photographs of fundraising parades to support the war; oral histories from the Niagara Mennonite community; and postcards from a military training camp in Niagara-on-the-Lake.

    Sharron said with some of the wars happening so long ago, many of the people who experienced them are no longer alive to share their story.

    “Their history and voices held in these records help us remember,” he said. “It’s why we preserve them and make them available.”

    While many of the collections are digitized and available online for anyone to access, including the records Sharron curated below, there are millions of documents and artifacts housed in the physical archives.

    “The online collections are just the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “There is always more to the story; a fuller history unfolds as you sift through a box of documents or flip through books from that era.”

    Brock University’s Archives and Special Collections is open to the Niagara community as well as Brock students and researchers. The public is invited to access the physical collections on the 10th floor of the James A. Gibson Library in Brock University’s Arthur Schmon Tower Monday to Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Writing ahead of a visit to archives@brocku.ca is recommended in case a class is occupying the space or the reading room is full. Vaccination and mask protocols are in effect.

    Digitized records related to the World Wars

    Arthur Albert Schmon
    Arthur Albert Schmon, one of Brock University’s founders and the Schmon Tower’s namesake, fought for the United States Army during the First World War before coming to live in St. Catharines.

    Laura de Turcynowicz (nee Blackwell)
    Laura de Turcynowicz was a famous opera singer from St. Catharines who married a Polish Count and was living in Poland when the First World War began. The Prussian Army occupied her home for several months before she escaped to the U.S. She wrote a book about her ordeal and raised money for the suffering people of Poland. In 1918, de Turcynowicz was instrumental in promoting the training and education of young American women of Polish descent to help with war relief efforts in Poland. The group became known as the Polish Grey Samaritans.

    Percy Carruthers Band
    Percy Carruthers Band was a decorated First World War soldier who earned the Military Cross with two bars and the French Croix de Guerre with Palm. He was also the former caretaker of the Brock Library’s Woodruff and Post Office collections. Among other records in this collection are letters from his sweetheart Margaret Woodruff from St. Catharines, photographs, military documents, a trench helmet and rucksack from the First World War, and medals he received for courage and determination.

    Samuel DeVeaux Woodruff
    The Woodruff family of St. Catharines came to Canada from the U.S. in 1795. They were an integral part of the Village of St. Davids and played an active role in the battles fought in Upper Canada. Samuel DeVeaux Woodruff was killed in action during the First World War as a member of the 116th unit of the Queen’s Battalion of the Canadian Infantry (Central Ontario Regiment).

    Niagara Camp
    Niagara Camp was a military training camp in Niagara-on-the-Lake that was used as a summer training grounds for infantry, cavalry and artillery. Postcards of Niagara Camp were common. This collection features postcards from the early years of the First World War.

    Orville James (Jimmy) Manson
    Orville James (Jimmy) Manson was an amateur photographer from Niagara who brought his camera with him while serving for the Canadian Navy during the Second World War.

    Mennonites of Niagara
    Oral history interviews of members of the Mennonite community who came to Niagara from Europe after the upheavals of the First and Second World Wars.

    Interesting parts included in large, digitized collections:

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970 

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    Categories: Media releases