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For more than 50 years, the Vrije Universiteit Brussel has stood for freedom, equality and solidarity, and this is very much alive on our campuses among students and staff alike.
At the VUB, you will find a diverse collection of personalities: innovators pur sang, but above all people who are 100% their authentic selves. With some 4,000 employees, we are the largest Dutch-speaking employer, in the private sector, in Brussels; an international city with which we are only too happy to connect and where (around) our 4 campuses are located.
Add to this our principle of free research - in which self-reflection, a critical attitude and an open, creative mind around scientific and social issues are central - and you have a university that is fundamentally groundbreaking and pioneering in education and research. In short: the VUB all over again.
Moreover, the VUB is a member of EUTOPIA, an alliance of like-minded European universities, all ready to reinvent themselves.
The Faculty of Engineering, Department Architectural Engineering, is looking for two PhD-students with a doctoral grant to conduct research on the Brussels construction sector as an urban-environmental system undergirded by flows of people, materials, and capital. These two positions are part of the interdisciplinary research project ‘Flows in the Construction Sector. Urban-Environmental Histories of Labour, Materials, and Money’, which investigates how labour, materials, and money have shaped the construction of Brussels, and how these intertwined flows continue to influence the city today.
More concretely your work package, for the preparation of a doctorate, contains:
Within this project, several PhD trajectories are possible. Candidates are invited to indicate in their research proposal which trajectory best matches their profile, interests, methodological expertise and ambition. Each trajectory can be approached from different disciplinary backgrounds and will be jointly supervised by supervisors from at least two of the participating research groups, with expertise in construction history, social history, material histories, and building culture (Architectural Engineering Research Group – AE; Prof. Stephanie Van de Voorde and Ine Wouters), financial geography, circular economy, global production networks, urban metabolism and just transition (Cosmopolis Centre for Urban Research – COSM; prof. David Bassens and Fabio Vanin), environmental history, social-economic history, urban and migration history, history of social policy and gender history (Social History of Capitalism – SHOC; prof. Bob Pierik and Anne Winter). Candidates are not expected to master all these perspectives at the start of the research. We are looking for researchers who can formulate a strong proposal from their own expertise, and who are willing to develop their research in dialogue with other disciplines. The final research focus will be developed in dialogue with the supervisors and the wider interdisciplinary team.
Possible PhD trajectories
The three trajectories below should be understood as possible entry points into the broader project. All trajectories are situated within the long-term development of the Brussels construction sector, from the nineteenth century to the present. Candidates are not expected to cover this entire period, but are encouraged to define a focused and feasible research scope, for example around a specific period, transition, actor group, material flow, spatial configuration, or set of cases.
1. Mobility, migration, and entrepreneurship: who builds the city?
This trajectory examines the people, firms, and networks involved in the construction of Brussels, from the nineteenth century to the present. It may focus on labour mobility, migration, access to work and technical knowledge, construction entrepreneurship, subcontracting, or the spatial organisation and infrastructure of building-related activities. The aim is to understand the construction sector as both a space of opportunity and a site where social inequalities, dependencies, and forms of exclusion are produced.
2. Risk, precarity, and responsibility: under what conditions is the city built?
This trajectory investigates how social, economic, technical, and material risks are organised and distributed in the construction sector. Possible themes include workplace accidents, occupational health and safety, liability, insurance, labour conflicts, financial uncertainty, subcontracting, delays, material shortages, or the management of uncertainty on building sites. The trajectory connects the everyday realities of construction work with broader questions of regulation, responsibility, protection, and vulnerability.
3. Extraction, circulation, and sustainability: where do building materials come from, how do they circulate and at what cost?
This trajectory follows building materials through their wider networks of extraction, production, transport, use, reuse, and disposal. It may focus on specific materials, infrastructures, trade networks, construction and demolition practices, reuse circuits, or moments of scarcity, transition, and transformation. By studying materials as technical, economic, social, and ecological carriers, the trajectory contributes to a better understanding of the construction sector as a material system with impacts that extend far beyond the building site.
Across the three trajectories, the development of a shared interdisciplinary framework is central. Rather than treating labour, materials, and capital as separate domains, the project will examine how these dimensions interact in concrete building practices, institutional arrangements, markets, regulations, and spatial configurations. The PhD projects will therefore not be carried out in isolation, but in close collaboration with the wider interdisciplinary team, with shared attention to historical sources, spatial analysis, case studies, and theoretical reflection.
More concretely, your work, in preparation of a doctoral dissertation, will include the following:
For this function, our Brussels Humanities, Sciences & Engineering Campus (Elsene) will serve as your home base.
What do we expect from you?
In your research vision, we ask you to:
Your proposal does not need to be a fully developed PhD project. We will use it primarily to gain insight into your research potential, your way of thinking, and the way in which you can bring your own expertise into dialogue with the broader project.
Do you have questions about this position? Contact [email protected] Architectural Engineering Research Group), David Bassens (Cosmopolis Centre for Urban Research - COSM), or Anne Winter (Social History of Capitalism - SHOC) (Cosmopolis).
This vacancy specifically targets recent graduates willing and eligible to apply for externally funded research grants (such as FWO fellowships or other schemes). Candidates should therefore meet the relevant eligibility criteria, including requirements regarding time since graduation and previous paid scientific research experience.
The VUB wants to be a reflection of the society where everyone's talent is valued, regardless of gender, age, religion, skin color, migration background, disability and neurodiversity.
Are you going to be our new colleague?
You’ll be offered a full-time PhD-scholarship, for 12 months (extendable up to max. 48 months, on condition of the positive evaluation of the PhD activities), with planned starting date 01/11/2026.
You’ll receive a grant linked to one of the scales set by the government.
IMPORTANT: The effective result of the doctorate scholarship is subject to the condition precedent of your enrolment as a doctorate student at the university.
At the VUB, you’re guaranteed an open, involved and diverse workplace where you are offered opportunities to (further) build on your career.
As well as this, you will also enjoy various other benefits:
Is this the job you’ve been dreaming of?
Then apply, at the latest on 08/07/2026, via jobs.vub.be, and upload the following documents:
Our application process is as follows (subject to change):
Do you have questions about the job content? Contact Stephanie Van de Voorde at [email protected] or on 0486 76 84 57.
Would you like to know what it’s like to work at the VUB? Go to jobs.vub.be, and find all there is to know about our campuses, benefits, strategic goals and your future colleagues.
Would you like more information about EUTOPIA? Go to eutopia-university.eu, and read more about the role of the VUB in the development of the EUTOPIA alliance.
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