News
» Go to news main2025 Engineering Golf Tournament
It’s time for our 16th Annual Engineering Golf Tournament! 🏌️♀️⛳️
Date
📅Monday, September 8, 2025
Time & Location
⏰7AM – 3:00PM ADT
📍Glen Arbour Golf Course
40 Club House Lane,
Hammonds Plains, NS B4B 1T4 - See Location Map
Join Tech, TUNS and Dalhousie Engineering alumni and friends for a day of golf and fun at Glen Arbour Golf Course.
Meet our engineering students as they host exciting activities and showcase their innovative design projects. All proceeds raised support the faculty’s Engineering Student Experience Fund. This fund supports engineering students pursuing experiential learning opportunities including team design‐build competitions.
You can either register as a team of four, or individually and in smaller groups to be matched with a team.
Registration includes:18-hole round of golf on a championship course, shared power cart, breakfast, lunch, guaranteed participant prize, and the chance to win exciting door prizes. Competition prizes include 1st and 2nd place, most honest team, longest drive, closest to the hole, and a chipping and putting competition.
Run of Play:
7AM - 8:15AM: Breakfast & registration
8:30AM: Shotgun start
1:30PM - 2:30PM: Lunch and prizes
Registration (after July 31st): $215 plus HST (per person)
For any questions about the tournament, or to learn more about our sponsorship opportunities, please contact Alisha Johnson.
We hope to see you on the green!
💛 All proceeds support the Engineering Student Experience Fund, helping students access hands-on learning and design-build competitions.
Register by July 31 for early bird pricing!
Recent News
- 2025 Engineering Golf Tournament
- Dr. Craig Lake Receives Sexton Award for Teaching Excellence
- Creating Space and Support for Women in Engineering at Dal
- Grad profile: Shipped with purpose
- Megan Bellemare: A Journey Through Chemical Engineering
- Dalhousie Engineering’s Tetra Society Makes a Real Impact on Real Lives
- Arad Gharagozli engineers the future of space exploration
- Dal Engineering Student Lights the Way to New Heart Treatment