Episode 109: Sadé Akinbami P.Eng, Civil Engineer & Artist
We're talking STEAM in this episode - Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math - with Sadé Akinbami. She joins host and producer Vanessa to talk about how music and STEM intertwine, how to survive university, and how we have come a long way when it comes to equity among all people in STEM, but we still have a long way to go.
(Please excuse any audio hiccups in this remotely recorded interview.)
Guest: Sadé Akinbami, P.Eng ()
Sadé Akinbami is a multifaceted Nigerian-Canadian artist and practicing civil engineer. Sadé’s heritage has played a major role in the carving of her path thus far; a path which intertwines both the sciences and the arts. Having graduated with a degree in Civil Engineering - Concentration in Management, Sadé has since then followed an unconventional path by being a Project Engineer, Project Manager and also a singer, song-writer, and producer.
Inspired by her Yoruba and Ibo heritage and a family of multitalented individuals, Sadé found her artistic expression in music that ranges from afro-soul to conscious alternative r&b, neo-soul and contemporary r&b. Her music is certainly in a category of its own.
One of Sadé's long-term aspirations is to use her knowledge of building materials to influence the construction standards and building codes in Nigeria & parts of Africa, and to influence the Nigerian real estate with affordable, modern, multi-purpose buildings.
Subscribe to us on these platforms:
Or wherever you get your podcasts!
Relevant Links:
Hosted by:
Theme Music: “Positive and Fun” by Produced by:
We acknowledge that Best of the WWEST is hosted and produced on the unceded territories of the (Musqueam), (Squamish), and (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. Best of the WWEST is also produced on territory. Best of the WWEST has featured many guests and has been hosted and produced by people of different lands, countries, and cultures, but we also acknowledge that we are settlers on this land. We are grateful for the privilege to be working as visitors on these unceded and ancestral territories of all the , , First Nations, and Indigenous people that call this land home. We acknowledge and reflect on the harms and mistakes of the past and to consider how we are and can each, in our own way, try to move forward in a spirit of reconciliation and collaboration.