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The Chair of Infrastructure Management, led by Professor Dr. Bryan T. Adey within the Institute of Construction and Infrastructure Management of the Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geomatic Engineering, has an opening for a PhD student in transport infrastructure resilience. The position is part of the EU Horizon project SHIFTIN, which aims to accelerate the transition towards climate-neutral, resilient, and biodiversity-friendly transport infrastructure by 2050.
The doctoral research will focus on developing AI-supported stress-testing and surrogate-modelling methodologies to assess the resilience of interdependent transport infrastructure systems under climate-related and multi-hazard scenarios. The work will support rapid, evidence-based evaluation of design, retrofit, maintenance, and recovery strategies at asset, corridor, and network scales.
SHIFTIN is an EU Horizon project that aims to accelerate the transition towards climate-neutral, resilient, and biodiversity-friendly transport infrastructure by 2050. Roads, railways, and ports are essential for European mobility and economic activity, but they also consume large volumes of raw materials, generate greenhouse-gas and air-pollutant emissions, fragment habitats, and are increasingly exposed to climate-related hazards such as floods, landslides, and heatwaves.
To address these challenges, SHIFTIN will demonstrate and combine circular low-carbon construction materials, nature-based solutions, advanced monitoring technologies, and digital decision-support tools. Full-scale pilots on four TEN-T corridors will cover road, rail, and port contexts, integrating infrastructure monitoring, satellite and on-board sensing, IoT-enabled structural health monitoring, and AI-supported analytics.
A Digital Twin-based Integrated Decision Support Platform will convert monitoring and modelling outputs into transparent whole-life indicators for carbon, circularity, resilience, biodiversity, and costs. These outputs will support robust business cases, maintenance planning, green public procurement, and the wider uptake of sustainable and resilient infrastructure solutions across European transport networks.
Within this broader project, the PhD research will focus on AI-supported stress-testing and surrogate modelling for transport infrastructure resilience. The goal is to enable rapid assessment of many hazard, disruption, recovery, and intervention scenarios, supporting practical decision-making for climate-resilient and sustainable transport systems.
This doctorate aims to advance the state of the art in simulation-informed, AI-supported resilience assessment for transport infrastructure. Working closely with academic, industry, infrastructure, and public-sector partners across Europe, the candidate will contribute to the development of stress-testing frameworks, surrogate modelling algorithms, and decision-support tools for climate-resilient and sustainable transport systems. The candidate’s core tasks will include:
We look forward to receiving your online application before 31 July 2026, with the following documents:
Further information about the Institute of Construction and Infrastructure Management can be found on our Website. Questions regarding the position should be directed to Ms. Nathalie Dietrich, [email protected] (no applications).
Please note that we exclusively accept applications submitted through our online application portal. Applications via email or postal services will not be considered.
The screening of applications starts on 1st August 2026. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled.
The preferred starting date is 1st November 2026, although other dates are negotiable.
ETH Zürich is well known for its excellent education, ground-breaking fundamental research and for implementing its results directly into practice.
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