Projects
The impact of public procurement law on horizontal and vertical teaming of economic operators in construction pro-jects. Reconciling effective and undistorted competition and the free market Hasselt University
Pre-allocated professorship in construction law Ghent University
A position as pre-allocated professor grants one the privilege of focusing primarily on research for a period of maximum of 5 years with a teaching load limited to no more than 8 ECTS per semester on average over a period of 3 years.
Recycled raw materials from processed construction and demolition waste in products and applications for the construction sector (RecyMaBuild). KU Leuven
This project involves improving the quality of recycled sand and the objective is to create high-quality applications of recycled aggregates and sand.
Found in Translation. Translators and the Construction of Literary Authority in the 18th-Century Low Countries. KU Leuven
Through the lens of translators, this project seeks to shed new light on the construction of authority in the literary field of the 18th-century Low Countries. It will compare, for the first time, the Southern and Northern Netherlands in a large-scale systematic study of the previously overlooked but substantial share of translations. Combining quantitative data analysis with qualitative textual analysis, we will innovatively chart the ...
Bio Fabrication, Fermentation and Construction Lab KU Leuven
Found in Translation: Translators and the Construction of Literary Authority in the Eighteenth-Century Low Countries KU Leuven
Revealing Female Participation in Literary Culture: Construction of an Online Database of Manuscripts Related to Women in the Low Countries (c. 1250–1600). University of Antwerp
Assessment of the environmental and socio-economic impact after dam construction in the Mekong estuarine system: the case of the Ba Lai estuary. Ghent University
Fragments of Order. Constructing Renaissance Architecture in the Low Countries KU Leuven
This PhD project will revisit the first developments of ‘Renaissance’ architecture of the Low Countries by focusing on the architectural fragments in early sixteenth-century painting in its interaction with the print medium. Interest in antiquity led to creatively combining classical elements of architecture in paintings, prints, and tapestry. However, once the theory of the Five Column Orders developed in Rome, art theorists from Italy and ...