152 phd-in-architecture-interior-design-built-environment positions at UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Program
-
Field
-
Imagine a resilient built environment; designed to be able to withstand climate impacts – and how to work to create them About us The School of Engineering is one of the UK’s largest with 2700
-
cost savings in aerospace manufacturing. We aim to develop a life cycle-informed design approach that enables rapid assessment of the cost and environmental impacts of recyclable and recycled materials
-
-intensive universities. Our research-intensive environment and international student body provide a rich ground for interdisciplinary thinking and making at the nexus of art, science, technology, and culture
-
cost savings in aerospace manufacturing. We aim to develop a life cycle-informed design approach that enables rapid assessment of the cost and environmental impacts of recyclable and recycled materials
-
creep, fatigue, oxidation, and thermal aging. This complexity makes fully rational design of materials based on physical principles, using the “bottom-up” multi-scale approach, a formidable challenge. To
-
Senior Learning Designer Team Lead to support the Faculty of Medicine’s development of new curricula to meet the need for increased numbers of medical professionals over the coming years. With significant
-
cognition and emotion processing. We invite applications from individuals with a background in human experimental psychology (participant recruitment, experimental testing, data analysis) and with a PhD in
-
including demand & emissions reductions and their future projections for various projects in the built environment. Undertake coordination of research including field work and projects’ outcomes with internal
-
Science in the University of Southampton. ActivATOR will develop novel machine learning models that enable robots to leverage the motion of their own bodies (‘egomotion’) to make sense of acoustic environments
-
Environment Research Council (NERC) project, led by Professor Justin Sheffield, aims to transform understanding of temperature-health relationships in vulnerable populations and identify evidence-based risk