07 March 2025

Roma Agrawal MBE speaks at The Shard for International Women’s Day

On Thursday 6 March 2025, Mathys & Squire hosted Roma Agrawal MBE, prominent engineer and advocate for women in science, in our London office, in honour of International Women’s Day this weekend.

Roma Agrawal is a structural engineer who has worked with signature architects to design a wide range of important structures, from bridges to skyscrapers. Most famously, as part of her fourteen-year career, she spent six years working on our office’s building, the Shard, designing the foundation and the ‘Spire.’

She is also an author and a broadcaster with five published books and her own podcast, Building Stories. Cited as “the new voice of women talking about science […] and making it cool” by the Telegraph, she imparts her knowledge of the structures around us. Her first book, Built: The Hidden Stories Behind Our Structures, looks at the broad, and often unexpected, impact of engineering and architecture on humanity, whilst How Was That Built?: The Stories Behind Awesome Structures is one of her illustrated books aimed at younger readers, illuminating the engineering ingenuity behind famous landmarks.

Through her platforms, and talks at universities, schools and other organisations, she hopes to inspire everyone to be curious about the world around them, as well as raise awareness for engineering and technical careers among young people, particularly those from underrepresented groups.

Roma Agrawal speaking in The Shard today

Roma gave a talk which covered a fascinating range of topics: from the large, delving into the science behind the tallest building in Western Europe, to the very small, revealing how something as seemingly inconsequential as a spring allowed us to measure time.

Calling attention to International Women’s Day, Roma shared the story of the inspiring woman behind the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge, Emily Roebling. She then discussed how her gender impacted her own career, talking about the lack of awareness of women in engineering, as well as the difficulties she faced due to being one of only a few women on the Shard building site.

You can read more about Roma Agrawal on her website here