Elspeth Finch | |
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Alma mater | University of York University College London |
Employer | Indigo& |
Known for | City design and planning |
Elspeth Finch MBE FREng (born December 1975) is the founder and CEO of IAND (Indigo & Limited). She won the 2013 Royal Academy of Engineering Silver Medal and was appointed MBE in 2018.
Finch's mother was a medical physicist and her father was a physics professor. She likes to say that her engineering career 'is about removing friction'. [1] She studied chemistry at the University of York when she was only 17. [2] [3] She completed a masters in transport and planning at the Newcastle University. [2] She started a career in research and lecturing at University College London. [2]
Finch's career journey spans government policy and transport engineering to software product design. [1] At the age of 24, she founded her first business Intelligent Space Partnership, a transport consultancy that integrated the needs of pedestrians and cyclists into town planning. [4] Here she developed software that uses technology to analyse how people move. [5] She worked on the Boston Downtown Crossing and Regent Street strategy. [4] She worked with the Metropolitan Police Service and Notting Hill Carnival. [3] She sold Intelligent Space to Atkins as a FTSE 250 global infrastructure company in 2007. [6]
After selling her company to Atkins she joined as a lead of the Futures team, identifying changes in populations' environments and societies and assessing their impact on infrastructure. [7] She was the youngest ever director of Highways and Transportation. [8] Finch was appointed UK Innovation Director of Atkins, where she was responsible for the 2009 redesign of London's Oxford Circus. [5] [9] She was responsible for Future Proofing Cities, a report looking to identify challenges in global urbanisation using evidence from 129 cities. [9] [10] In 2009 she was nominated as Management Today's 35 Women Under 35. [8] She is the cofounder and CEO of the start-up Indigo&, a digital supplier management platform. [11]
Finch is an advocate for more diversity in science and engineering. [12] In 2013 she was awarded the Royal Academy of Engineering Silver Medal for her contributions to UK engineering. [13] [6] She was only the fourth woman ever to win the award. [2] That year she was named as one of the Royal Society of Chemistry's 175 Faces of Chemistry. [14] She is a member of the Royal Academy of Engineering Diversity and Inclusion panel. [15] She is a judge for the Royal Academy of Engineering Launchpad competition for budding entrepreneurs. [16] In January 2018 she was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire. [6] [17] In 2021 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering. [18]
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