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A leading research university in Belgium is offering an interdisciplinary PhD position focused on developing user-centric wireless networks and urban co-creation. The role involves analyzing spatial contexts, conducting hands-on prototyping, and utilizing sensing technologies. Ideal candidates should possess a Master's degree with strong interests in architecture or engineering and participatory design methodologies, along with excellent English skills. The position is full-time for a maximum of four years, with room for professional development.
KU Leuven is an autonomous university. It was founded in 1425. It was born of and has grown within the Catholic tradition.
The PhD will be hosted within the Department of Electrical Engineering (Waves:Core Research and Engineering) and the Department of Architecture (Design and Engineering of Construction and Architecture) at KU Leuven.
The primary research home will be the DRAMCO group, under the supervision of Prof. dr. ir. Gilles Callebaut. DRAMCO specializes in low-power wireless communication, distributed networks, sensing technologies, and experimental validation using advanced infrastructures such as the Techtile testbed.
The Faculty of Architecture brings expertise in spatial design, public space, and human–technology interaction. This interdisciplinary environment provides access to state‑of‑the‑art measurement equipment, prototyping facilities, and a vibrant network of researchers working on wireless systems, urban design, and citizen‑centred innovation.
A unique aspect of this position is its connection to the Creative Makers (CM³) initiative, a long‐running interdisciplinary program that brings together engineering, architecture, and the arts through hands‑on making, prototyping, and experimental design. CM³ has traditionally focused on education, offering students a platform to explore technology and spatial design through creative and collaborative processes. In this PhD, you will have the opportunity to investigate how making, prototyping, and cross‑disciplinary design methodologies can be integrated into scientific inquiry. You will transform these hands‑on, creative processes, into a research‑oriented framework for developing adaptive wireless networks.
The PhD candidate will operate across these units, combining solid engineering foundations with architectural perspectives to develop pioneering concepts for user‑centric wireless networks.
Website unit
This PhD explores how citizens, spatial context, and devices jointly shape the behaviour of future wireless networks. Building on the Cocoon project’s ambition to rethink mobile infrastructure beyond static, top‑down deployments, the research studies how low‑height, lightweight, adaptable access points can become meaningful elements of public space.
The project has two core research pillars:
1. Spatial, Architectural, and Human‑Space Analysis
Using insights from spatial and technical studies, you will contribute to new design principles for adaptive, energy‑efficient, and citizen‑driven networks. This involves:
Across these pillars, your work spans measurement campaigns, wireless experimentation, spatial analysis, prototyping, and the development of participatory design methodologies. The final aim is to build a methodological and scientific foundation for a new type of wireless infrastructure that is open, adaptable, energy‑conscious, and architecturally embedded in the city.
General:
We welcome candidates from Architecture or Engineering (Electrical/ICT) with a strong interest in the complementary domain.
1. Candidates from Architecture
You are motivated to work with:
2. Candidates from Engineering
You are motivated to engage with:
Across both profiles, you are hands‑on, curious, comfortable iterating between theory and experiment, and interested in fieldwork and real‑world prototyping. You can translate insights between technical and spatial domains and are eager to develop new interdisciplinary research methodologies.
For more information, please contact Prof. dr. ir. Gilles Callebaut, mail: [emailprotected] .
KU Leuven strives for an inclusive, respectful and socially safe environment. We embrace diversity among individuals and groups as an asset. Open dialogue and differences in perspective are essential for an ambitious research and educational environment. In our commitment to equal opportunity, we recognize the consequences of historical inequalities. We do not accept any form of discrimination based on, but not limited to, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, age, ethnic or national background, skin colour, religious and philosophical diversity, neurodivergence, employment disability, health, or socioeconomic status. For questions about accessibility or support offered, we are happy to assist you at this email address.
Title
Interdisciplinary PhD: User-Centric Wireless Networks and Urban Co-Creation
2026-03-27 23:59 (Europe/Brussels)
2026-03-27 23:59 (CET)
Closing on: 2026-02-19 (Europe/Brussels)
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Closing on: 2026-01-16 (Europe/Brussels)
Closing on: 2026-01-20 (Europe/Brussels)