

Client: Faculty of Applied Sciences, communication departmentCamera Operator: Celine van Benten, Hector Nieman, Boris Swaen, Luna GiessenSound Engineer: Vincent GroenVideo Technician: Sander van Duijn

Director: Christian KasiusCamera Operator: Jörgen Langedijk, Hector Nieman, Boris Swaen, Rob Maas

Client: TUDelft Corporate CommunicationDirector: Christian Kasius Video Technician: Boris SwaenSound Engineer: Vincent Groen

The Radioactivity project uses VR to make learning safe and immersive, letting students explore radiation through realistic experiments while teachers guide remotely. By overcoming safety limits and instructor shortages, this innovative VR app democratizes access to hands-on science, transforming how students experience and understand radioactivity across classrooms everywhere.

How do students discover who they want to become? At TU Delft, the Mechanical Engineering faculty paired with the New Media Centre’s Graphics team to address that question through animated storytelling. By developing eight distinct “Engineer of the Future” personas—each with its own narrative, style, and personality—students could see relatable career paths. Hand-drawn illustrations and concise two-minute videos translated complex concepts into engaging scripts, creating a compelling blended learning experience that inspires and informs.

At TU Delft, Jeroen Boots bridges architecture and immersive technology. Driven by how spaces shape human experience, he uses VR to turn abstract ideas into environments students can step inside—designing not flashy demos, but meaningful learning moments that truly resonate and last.