A Scottish company has designed a new textile that can stop bullets, be used automotive manufacturing and construction.
Representatives from engineering companies and manufacturers in East Anglia will get together to network, share expertise and train at the Exhibition of Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering 2007.
Engineering was among one of the sectors to see positive job growth in July, according to one online employment index.
Manufacturing in Britain is experiencing a "renaissance" as it hits its best period in the last eight years in spite of difficulties companies face as a consequence of the strong pound.
Figures released by the Office for National Statistics revealed an output rise of 0.2 per cent in June, the fourth monthly increase in a row.
While basic manufacturing companies have struggled with competition from China, high-value added areas such as aerospace and pharmaceuticals have thrived on the demand from China's markets.
"There is a renaissance in manufacturing going on. A lot of the dead wood has gone to the wall but what is left is robust and innovative," Geoff Ford, chairman of Ford Component Manufacturing told the Guardian.
He added that 60 per cent of UK manufacturing companies were set to hire more people and offer more jobs.
Engineering Employers Federation senior economist Jeegar Kakkad told the newspaper that mechanical and electrical engineering firms were doing well and pointed at Rolls Royce as an example of companies that moved basic production abroad.
He said: "Many firms have shifted basic production into lower-cost countries in the far east and Middle East but have retained the design work, the R&D, the high-value-added stuff in Britain."
A new factory on the outskirts of Norwich, which represents an investment in engineering skills, is part of one company's plan to treble its £35 million-a-year turnover.Search our engineering news archive below.