Ata M. Khan
Professor Emeritus in Transportation Engineering
- B.Eng., M.Eng. (A.U.Beirut), Ph.D. (Waterloo), P.Eng., F.CSCE., F.ITE.
- 7064 Minto Centre for Advanced Studies in Engineering, Carleton University
- 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, ON, K1S 5B6
- ata.khan@carleton.ca
Prof. Khan’s mailbox is located in room 3432 C.J. Mackenzie Building, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6 Canada
Teaching Assignment 2022-2023
- CIVE 5305 Traffic Engineering
Previous Assignments
- ECOR 3800 Engineering Economics
- ECOR 4995 Professional Practice
- CIVE 3304 Transportation Engineering and Planning
- CIVE 3999 / ENVE 3999 Co-op
- CIVE 4303 / GEOG 4303 Urban Planning
- CIVE 4907 Research Project
- CIVE 4400 Construction/Project Management
- CIVE 4918 Design Project
- CIVE 5304 Intercity Transportation
- CIVE 5305 Traffic Engineering
- CIVE 5307 Urban Transportation
Research Interests
Policy and planning challenges of increasing automation in driving, trustCAV, shared mobility and automated vehicles, transition to electrification, eco-drive, risk in infrastructure investment, resilience of traffic network, resilience of transportation supply chain.
Application: urban and intercity transportation. Multimodal transportation. Traffic management and control. Road safety. Sustainable development. Urban planning.
Current/recent sponsors: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), Transport Canada, Industry Canada, City of Ottawa, Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO), AUTO21 Network of Centres of Excellence (NCE), Nuclear waste management organization (NWMO).
Video and recent press article
Prof. Khan speaks at the PEO Infrastructure Forum
Honours and Awards
- Lifetime Achievement Award, Canadian Institute of Transportation Engineers CITE
- Fellow, Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE).
- Fellow, Canadian Society for Civil Engineering.
- Life Member, American Society of Civil Engineers.
- Carleton University Academic/Research Award.
- Ron Rice Award for Best Conference Paper, Canadian Transportation Research Forum (CTRF) (with graduate student Sarah Taylor).