McLaren Automotive welcomes new Bruce McLaren engineering scholars sixty years on from McLaren’s founding

Sixty years after Bruce McLaren made the journey from New Zealand to England to establish the company that still bears his name today, two young engineers have followed in his footsteps as part of a scholarship established in his honour.

University of Auckland (UoA) mechanical engineering students Sabrina Yarndley and Joshua Cates are the latest Bruce McLaren engineering scholars to be welcomed to McLaren to hone their skills at the Woking-based supercar company.

They were greeted at the McLaren Technology Centre (MTC) in Woking by former UoA alumna Lizzy Grant, herself a former Bruce McLaren engineering scholar in 2019 and now working on battery technologies crucial to the company’s future electrified powertrains. They were also joined by fellow Kiwi Piers Scott, the company’s Executive Director of PR, and Jim Marsh, Chief Transformation and People Officer.

“We are delighted with the continued collaboration with the University of Auckland that will allow Joshua and Sabrina to see first-hand what goes into creating our supercars and for them to make a contribution to real-world projects,” commented Marsh. “I’m sure Bruce would be proud of the internship which continues to celebrate the strong links between Britain and New Zealand that he epitomised.”
Joshua and Sabrina will be completing a three-month scholarship that will see them working in multiple departments across the company.

Born in Auckland, New Zealand, Bruce McLaren studied there and went on to become an accomplished engineer and innovator as well as a successful racing driver.

He arrived in England in 1958 on a ‘Driver to Europe’ scholarship and founded the racing team that remains one of the world’s most successful names in motorsport. In the 1960s, Bruce also unveiled the first McLaren supercar in the M6GT.

McLaren Automotive was established in 2011 and both Sabrina and Joshua share a passion for high performance engineering and supercars which Bruce encapsulated.

The company has produced some of the world’s most iconic supercars and hypercars such as the P1TM and most recently the Speedtail, Solus GT and Elva roadster which celebrates the M1A and McLaren-Elvas of the 1960s that Bruce helped create.

Sabrina and Joshua will be based at the iconic MTC and McLaren Production Centres where they will have stints with designers and engineers, as well as with marketing and aftersales teams to gain a unique insight into the workings of the 3,000-strong workforce.

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