
Engineer and Gaudi Expert
Daniel Klausner
Daniel Klausner, born 1988 in Austria, graduated from the Higher Technical College with a major in structural engineering and project management, among other projects like: Museum am Bergisel (2003-2008).
He completed his Bachelor's and Master's degree (2011 and 2023 respectively) at the Leopold- Franzens University of Innsbruck. As part of his bachelor's thesis "A retirement home for the heroes of architecture" at the Institute for Architectural Theory and History, Department of Architectural History, he examined the design approaches of Gaudi, Gray, Melnikov and Mendelsohn. For his master's thesis, he worked on the project "Dallas Oasis Hub - a future vision of the train station as a link between two city districts", focusing on the topics of transportation (especially the means of transportation of the future), urban planning and interior design.
As an exchange student, he spent a semester at the University of Texas at Arlington, USA (2012), and also worked on the topic of bird-friendly planning and building at the EURUFU Summer University (2013).
During his studies, he worked as a student assistant at the Institute for Architectural Theory and History, Department of Architectural History (2013 - 2018). He was responsible for various preparatory activities, participation in various conferences, participation in courses and teaching content in theory and practice and is still responsible for the institute today, among other things as an IT representative.
In 2022, he was an external lecturer for a master's degree class at the Institute of Urban and Spatial Planning at the University of Innsbruck.
Since 2008, Daniel Klausner has been an employee in an Austrian architectural office, responsible for planning, realization, construction management and project management and has already worked on numerous realized projects such as single and multi-family houses, residential complexes, commercial and industrial buildings as well as various hotel projects and various smaller and larger conversions.
Since 2015, he has been working together with Bea Fröis on numerous projects around Gaudi and the digitization of the collected and compiled materials and data.