Gerald Kozicz

Gerald studied architecture at TU Graz and completed his PhD in 2001. In the course of his master and PhD programs, he had several scholarships for Japan and Hong Kong and was also involved in research on Buddhist architecture in the Western Himalaya. Since 2005 he has been leading three stand-alone-projects funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) on topics related to Indo-Tibetan architecture and art, as well as cultural studies in the Himalayan context. In addition, he was an instructor at the TU Graz (Institut für Raumgestaltung und Institut für Architektur und Medien) as well as a lecturer at the University of Vienna (Institut für Südostasienkunde, Tibetologie und Buddhismuskunde).

Gerald Kozicz is a member of the International Association for Buddhist Studies (IABS), the International Association for Tibetan Studies (IATS), the International Association for Ladakh Studies (IALS), the European Association for Asian Art and Archaeology (EAAA) and the European Association for South Asian Art and Archaeology (EASAA). His interest in interdisciplinary research is reflected by several articles co-authored with scholars from the fields of art history, restoration and Asian studies.

By following THIS LINK, you can find related publications written by Gerald Kozicz.




Milena Stavrić

Milena holds the position of Assistant Professor for Architectural Geometry and Digital Presentation at Graz University of Technology. She was project leader of FWF research project in the field of architectural geometry, co-author of two FWF research projects in the field of digital fabrication and digital heritage and she was Management Committee member in two COST Actions. Milena was also visiting scholar at the Harvard University – Graduate School of Design (GSD) joining Material Processes and Systems Group (MaP+S) where her research focused on 3D fabrication process with a 6 axes industrial robot and composites material. She is the author of the book published by Springer “Architectural Scale Modelling in the digital Age”. She lectured at the Academy of fine Arts in Vienna, University of Applied Science in Graz (FH Joanneum), University of Banja Luka, Universidad Anáhuac, Mexico City, University in Novi Sad and University of Applied Science in Zagreb. The focus of her work is on architectural geometry, digital methods and presentation, robotic in architecture, parametric modeling and digital fabrication.




Marina Đurovka

Marina is an architect, with a master’s degree in the field of digital techniques, design and production in architecture and urban planning, gained at the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning, Faculty of Technical Sciences, University of Novi Sad, Serbia. She has experience in teaching as well as in architectural practice.

She is currently working on her PhD on the topic of Interactive Web Media as an Aspect of Digital Preservation and Presentation of Historical Architecture, and as a University Project Assistant on FWF research project: “Nagara Architecture of Himachal: Form, Geometry, Construction“.




Ludwig Grimm

Ludwig is assistant in the FWF research group, being responsible for the digitalization processes. Besides studying architecture with a focus on contemporary tools, he is working as a freelancer in the field of digital object visualization and also physical modeling.