Adrienne Grêt-regamey
Professor
Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
Switzerland
Biography
Adrienne Grêt-Regamey has been Professor at the Chair of Planning Landscape and Urban Systems (PLUS) at the Institute for Spatial and Landscape Development, ETH since 2014 and was Associate Professor from 2008-2014. Born in 1973 in Bern, Switzerland, Adrienne Grêt-Regamey earned her diploma degree in 1998 from the Department of Environmental Sciences at ETH and an ETH diploma as a biology and environmental sciences teacher in 1999. Between 1999 and 2002, A. Grêt-Regamey worked as a consultant for Stratus Consulting, a company located in Washington, D.C. and Boulder, Colorado, conducting natural resource damage assessments. In 2003, she won a Marie-Heim-Vögtlin stipend from the Swiss National Science Foundation to conduct her doctoral thesis at the U.S. National Center of Atmospheric Research in the Environmental and Societal Impact Group and returned to ETH for completion. A.Grêt-Regamey was awarded twice the ETH silver medal for both the diploma and the PhD thesis. In 2006 she was offered a position as a scientist officer at the Swiss Federal Office for Environment and returned to ETH as a Post-doctoral Research Fewllow in 2007.
Research Interest
Interactions and/or actions of humans shape landscapes at various temporal and spatial scales.
Publications
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Brunner, Sibyl H, Grêt-Regamey A (2016). Policy strategies to foster the resilience of mountain social-ecological systems under uncertain global change. Environmental Science & Policy 66: 129-139.
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Rewitzer, Susanne, Robert H, Grêt-Regamey A, Barkmann J (2017) Economic valuation of cultural ecosystem service changes to a landscape in the Swiss Alps. Ecosystem services 26: 197-208.
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Ribe, Robert G, Manyoky, Hayek UW, Pieren R, Heutschi K (2018) Dissecting Perceptions of Wind Energy Projects: A Laboratory Experiment Using High-quality Audio-visual Simulations to Analyze Experiential Versus Acceptability Ratings and Information Effects. Landscape and urban planning 169: 131-147.