Jo da Silva


Joanna Gabrielle Da Silva is the Director of International Development at Arup Group.

Early life and education

Da Silva was born to John Burke Da Silva and Jennifer Jane Da Silva. She studied engineering at the University of Cambridge where she was a student at Trinity College, Cambridge. She graduated in 1988 and moved to central India to work on emergency management.

Career

Da Silva joined Arup Group as a graduate engineer in 1989. She was part of the development of the Hong Kong International Airport and National Portrait Gallery, London. She began to work in post-disaster engineering in 1991. In 2001 she was selected as one of Management Today's 35 Women Under 35. She has investigated the relationship between populations and the built environment, in particular the role of infrastructure in reducing vulnerability.
In 2009 Da Silva founded the Arup International Development group, a non-profit subsidiary of Arup Group which works with organisations that look to improve the coordination of infrastructure development in the developing world. She is a member of RedR, Engineers for Disaster Relief, a charity who have thousands of engineers that will respond quickly after a disaster. Arup encourage humanitarian efforts to build back better, preventing homes being destroyed when floods or disasters return. Da Silva is a specialist in disaster reduction and has worked with various humanitarian groups. She worked with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Sri Lanka after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami. She coordinated the efforts of over 100 humanitarian agencies and the building of over 60,000 shelters in six months. From 2008 to 2017, Da Silva worked with Sabre Education to develop a series of early-years learning facilities in Ghana. The work was supported by the Institution of Civil Engineers. She has since been working with the World Bank on a Global Program for Safer Schools. Da Silva worked with Tower Hamlets Council on Ideas Stores, a way to bring IT facilities to communities in East London.

Awards and honours

Da Silva was elected as Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 2009. In 2011 da Silva was appointed an Officer of the British Empire in 2011, recognising her contributions to engineering and humanitarian relief. In 2012 she became the first woman to deliver the Institution of Chemical Engineers Brunel International Lecture, discussing the role of engineers in responding to disaster. She was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Technology degree from Coventry University in 2014. She was featured in a 2015 Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering and 2016 Victoria and Albert Museum campaigns describing her career in engineering. She is part of the Lloyd's Register Resilience Shift which applies performance-based design across construction; ensuring engineers are aware their projects have social outcomes as well as physical ones.
Da Silva was awarded the Gold Medal of the Institution of Structural Engineers in 2017 for her work in urban resilience. She delivered her Gold Medal lecture at Trinity College Dublin in 2018, talking about Design, Disaster and Development. She delivered the 2018 Judith Neilson Lecture at the University of New South Wales.