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Regulations, Statute, and Disciplinary Boards – new and updated legal acts

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The following internal legal acts have been issued as part of recent updates:
  • Circular letter of the Rector of Gdańsk Tech No. 37/2025 of 24 June 2025 regarding: announcement of the consolidated text of the Statute of Gdańsk University of Technology,

  • Circular letter of the Chancellor of Gdańsk Tech No. 3/2025 of 17 June 2025 regarding: introduction of the Rules for Staying on the Premises and in the Facilities of Gdańsk University of Technology,

Electro-Summer 2025 – Where Additive Manufacturing Empowers

electro summer 2025
Join us for a unique Polish–Brazilian hybrid summer school focused on the latest advancements in additive manufacturing applied to electrochemistry and electroanalysis. Discover cutting-edge 3D printing solutions from leading experts across two continents.

Organized by the Faculty of Applied Physics and Mathematics, and Advanced Materials Centre with support from the team of Scientific Club RedOx, Poland’s first Electrochemical Society  affiliated science club.

TECoNaut: A "Forgotten" Yacht Gets a New Lease on Life

yacht
The yacht MicroPolo, which never sailed and remained under a tarp in a garden for over a decade, is set to embark on a new “eco-life” as part of the TECoNaut project. This small yacht was originally designed in the 1980s by Jacek Centkowski, PhD, Eng. and Jan Młynarczyk, PhD, Eng.

As a partner in the TECoNaut project, Gdańsk University of Technology aims to demonstrate that sustainable sailing encompasses more than modern materials and eco-friendly propulsion systems. It also involves rescuing and revitalizing yachts that have been forgotten for years whether in marinas or simply left behind houses.

ENHANCE Research Internship Programme 2025/2026

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Seeking international, research-based experiences within ENHANCE universities? Apply!

New programme offers three-month cross-border research internship at ENHANCE partner institutions, which include:

  • 4 for Gdańsk Tech PhD students (to go abroad)
  • 4 for incoming PhD students to Gdańsk Tech

Each intern (doctoral student) is required to work under two academic mentors—one from the home, one from the host university. Find a mentor and apply!

New Erasmus+ mobility opportunities for Gdańsk Tech students

international students sitting on the bench in front of the builiding
In the 2025/26 academic year, Gdańsk Tech students will be able to go on Erasmus+ study and internship programmes to countries not associated with the programme.

Which countries are these? All countries in the world, except for EU and EEA members, Turkey and North Macedonia – mobilities to these countries were already possible before.

What do you need to do? You must:

  1. obtain the consent of your faculty/nomination

  2. in the case of a study mobility - submit a declaration from the host university that it agrees to sign a cooperation agreement with Gdańsk Tech under the Erasmus+ programme

A Decommissioned Wind Turbine Blade Turned into a Bicycle Shelter

In the photo, from left to right: Marzena Kurpińska, PhD, Eng., Mikołaj Miśkiewicz, PhD, DSc, Eng., Professor at Gdańsk Tech, Jakub Zembrzuski, MSc, Eng., Prof. Magdalena Rucka, PhD, DSc, Eng., Agnieszka Sabik, PhD DSc, Eng., Professor at Gdańsk Tech, Łukasz Pyrzowski, PhD, Eng., Prof. Jacek Chróścielewski, PhD, DSc, Eng., Ryszard Chabros, MSc, Eng., Szymon Kowalski, MSc, Eng., Arch., Farzam Omidi Moaf, MSc, Eng., Bartosz Sobczyk, PhD, Eng., Daniel Mulawa. Photo: Krzysztof Krzempek / Gdańsk University of Te
A research installation in the form of a bicycle shelter, constructed from a decommissioned wind turbine blade and innovative concrete incorporating… ground blade fragments, has been erected on the campus of Gdańsk University of Technology. This is the outcome of a project carried out at the Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering in collaboration with the Faculty of Architecture. The researchers are currently working on a pedestrian bridge span made from this novel material.

– The service life of wind turbine blades is approximately 20–25 years. After that, they are most often sent to landfills or buried underground. Other disposal methods are also employed, such as pyrolysis – thermal decomposition at high temperatures in the absence of oxygen – or solvolysis, which involves dissolving materials in appropriate solvents. However, these methods are relatively energy-intensive. Therefore, we proposed a solution that utilizes the natural load-bearing capacity of the blade – says Prof.

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