The Institute of Landscape and Urban Studies (LUS) at the ETH Zurich Department of Architecture invites applications for two doctoral fellowship positions. The fellowship will start on 1 October 2026, with a 100% workload, based in Zurich, and is fixed-term for three and a halfyears.
Working across sociocultural, political-economic, and theoretical contexts, the LUS Doctoral Program fosters critical discourse and encourages independent, innovative, and interdisciplinary approaches to the urgent spatial, socio-ecological, and political challenges.
Participating Chairs at the LUS
The LUS Institute currently consists of seven chairs, each contributing uniquely to its diverse research landscape:
The LUS Instituteinvestigates landscapes, territories, and settlements—and the human and more-than-human relations that shape them—across scales and geographies, from Switzerland and Europe to diverse contexts throughout the so-called Global North and Global South.
Its research examines the spatial, environmental, political, (geo)historical, and more-than-human relations through which contemporary environments are produced, contested, and continually reshaped. The Institute engages with a broad set of interconnected themes that explore how these environments evolve. Core areas of inquiry include territorial and urban transformation; post-industrial and resource-affected territories; and the global–local entanglements that drive ongoing urbanisation processes. These interests are complemented by research into more-than-human and multispecies spatialities, foregrounding ecological interdependencies within changing landscapes.
Research projects address topics such as designed ecologies, energy transitions, housing, agroecology, hydrology, biodiversity and ecosystem processes, regenerative systems, and adaptive territorial infrastructures. Additional areas of focus include more-than-human landscapes, Indigenous territorialities, and socio-ecological and socio-economic transitions, and climate adaptation—together offering a comprehensive lens on the challenges and potentials of present and future development of landscapes, territories, and settlements.
The doctoral program adopts an inter- and transdisciplinary approach, integrating architecture, landscape architecture, urban and territorial design, planning, urban theory and history, as well as the social sciences. It welcomes a wide range of methodological approaches, spanning (geo)historical research into landscape and urban form, participatory and community-engaged methods, qualitative and ethnographic inquiry, as well as cartographic, spatial, and mapping techniques.
The LUS fellowship will start on1 October 2026, with a 100% workload, based in Zurich, and is fixed-term for three and a halfyears.
While it is advantageous for proposed research to align with the individual and/or collective research agendas of the participating chairs at the LUS Institute, candidates are also encouraged to apply with independent research topics that resonate with the Institute’s broader areas of expertise and competencies.
We are seeking individuals with a background in:
In line with our values , ETH Zurich encourages an inclusive culture. We promote equality of opportunity, value diversity and nurture a working and learning environment in which the rights and dignity of all our staff and students are respected. Visit our Equal Opportunities and Diversity website to find out how we ensure a fair and open environment that allows everyone to grow and flourish. Sustainability is a core value for us – we are consistently working towards a climate-neutral future .
Applications should be addressed directly to the Institute of Landscape and Urban Studies (LUS), rather than to individual professors. Please note that applications will be evaluated solely based on their content; applicants are therefore requested not to contact individual professors prior to applying.
We look forward to receiving your online application by 2 March 2026, 23:59 CET. Your application should include the following documents:
This document must include:
The main content must adhere to the 4-page limit, using 11 pt font and single-spacing. Supplementary pages may include up to three illustrations (maps, drawings, images), a bibliography, and a project timeline.
Applications missing required documents or exceeding page limits will not be considered for evaluation.
Please do not includeLanguageCertificates, Transcripts, orotherdocumentnotlisted.
The program exclusively accepts application documents submitted through the ETH online application portal . Applications submitted via email or postal mail will not be considered.
Application Timeline
Further Information
Applicants are asked to consult theFrequently Asked Questions (FAQs) before reaching out. If your question is not covered, you may contact the doctoral program coordinator, Nazlı Tümerdem, at tuemerdem@arch.ethz.ch. Requests sent to any other email addresses will not be considered.
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