Ali Abolmaali, a civil engineer and former chair of the civil engineering department at the University of Texas at Arlington (UTA), has been selected as the next dean of Wayne State University College of Engineering, effective Aug. 15.
Abolmaali also is a Dr. Tseng Huang Endowed Professor in structural engineering and applied mechanics, the founding director of UTA Center for Structural Engineering Research, and the professor-in-charge of the Structural Simulation Laboratory at UTA.
“We are extremely pleased to recruit this strong leader to Detroit,” says Mark Kornbluh, provost and senior vice president for academic affairs. “Ali has a proven track record of growing student enrollment, recruiting diverse faculty and growing research. Most important, he’s accomplished this with a leadership philosophy that embraces collaboration and genuine care for others.”
Abolmaali succeeds Farshad Fotouhi, who has led the WSU College of Engineering as dean since 2011.
At UTA, Abolmaali has increased his department’s enrollment significantly. In fall 2021, it grew to more than 1,600 students — the highest civil engineering enrollment in Texas, and one of the largest in the nation. In the process, he increased the number of doctoral students by 300 percent to 125, all of whom are fully supported by research and teaching appointments.
He also established degree programs in construction management and architectural engineering and pioneered online classes for both undergraduate and graduate students. Now, both graduate and undergraduate UTA civil engineering department courses are offered online and attract students from around the nation.
To meet the needs of more students, Abolmaali has recruited 44 faculty and staff members with a focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion. These hires include more than 30 percent underrepresented and female faculty. As a fundraiser, he has secured multiple endowed professorships and scholarships, as well as an endowment for naming a laboratory.
Fotouhi joined the department of computer science faculty at Wayne State in 1988 and served as chair from 2004 to 2011. Under his watch, the student body of the college grew by more than 40 percent, retention and graduation rates improved dramatically, and enrollment among females and historically marginalized groups saw significant increases.
Fotouhi guided the college in the development of academic and research programs in such areas as electric-drive vehicle engineering, data science, robotics, artificial intelligence and machine learning, cybersecurity, and advanced mobility. Affiliations with institutions around the world opened doors to global experiences for students, and corporate partnerships created more positive career outcomes for graduates while narrowing industrial skills gaps.
His stewardship included $25 million to establish the James and Patricia Anderson Engineering Ventures Institute, which supports the entrepreneurial dreams of students, alumni, and faculty.