| type = Public
| rector = Krzysztof Wilde
| city = Gdańsk
| province = Pomeranian Voivodeship
| country = Poland
| address = Narutowicza 11/12<br />80–233 Gdańsk Wrzeszcz
| undergrad = 11,490 (2023)
| postgrad = 3,644 (2023)
| CWTS_W = | CWTS_W_year = | CWTS_W_ref =
| QS_EECA = 78 | QS_EECA_year =2022 | QS_EECA_ref =| QS_W = 801-850 | QS_W_year =2026 | QS_W_ref =
| THE_W = 1001-1200 | THE_W_year =2025 | THE_W_ref =
| USNWR_W = 989 | USNWR_W_year =2025 | USNWR_W_ref =
|QS_N= 5|QS_N_ref=|QS_Europe= 302|QS_Europe_year=2025|THE_N= 5|THE_N_ref=|THE_Europe_year=2025|ARWU_N= 3|ARWU_N_ref= Founded in 1904
The university comprises eight academic faculties that provide higher education in 40 fields of study across 14 scientific disciplines. Its campus, located in the Wrzeszcz borough of Gdańsk, covers an area of .
World War II (Nazi Germany, 1939–1945)
At the outbreak of World War II, the city of Gdańsk had been annexed into the Nazi Germany. The university was subjected to Berlin authorities in 1941, resulting in the introduction of stricter regulations. The number of students and staff decreased significantly during the war, and by 1944, the university had been converted into a 3000-bed hospital, with much of its valuable equipment and documents evacuated to Germany.
In response to the fall of communism in Poland, the Gdańsk University of Technology underwent significant organisational and infrastructural transformations between 1990 and 2010. Infrastructure expansions included new laboratories and facilities funded by the European Union, such as the Nanotechnology Centre, the Pomerania Centre of Advanced Technologies, and modern educational spaces, alongside the introduction of three-cycle degree studies (BSc, MSc, PhD), the European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS), and a quality assurance system. All the buildings were designed in the style of the Northern Renaissance with elements of Art Nouveau. The images above the eastern side gate are a lighthouse and the tower of St. Mary's Church. The ornamental gutters are decorated with copper spouts in the shape of four male figures holding water monsters. The Clock Tower destroyed in 1945 was restored to the roof of the main building on 13 May 2012. The tower is 18 metres in height. The main building encloses inner courtyards that were covered by glass domes.
In 2012, the South Courtyard was officially renamed in honour of Johannes Hevelius. It is named after the French physicist who first performed a similar experiment at the Paris Pantheon in 1851. The Foucault pendulum is designed to show the rotation of the Earth on its axis. An electromagnet fixed at the point of suspension powers the movement of the pendulum. Reliefs in the window niches above the Foucault pendulum show the design of a reflective sundial (on the left) and a rotating map of the sky with a sextant.
Faculties
thumb|250px|Faculty of Electronics, Telecommunications and InformaticsThe university's faculties are:
- Faculty of Architecture
- Faculty of Electronics, Telecommunications and Informatics
- Faculty of Electrical and Control Engineering
- Faculty of Applied Physics and Mathematics
- Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering
- Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
- Faculty of Ocean Engineering and Ship Technology
- Faculty of Management and Economics
Chemical Faculty
thumb|Student laboratory
The Chemical Faculty was one of the four original faculties of the university and one of five faculties that began operational research and teaching in 1945 as a result of the decree by the Polish government transforming technical universities active in Gdańsk since 1904 into the Polish Gdańsk University of Technology.
At the faculty, there are projects financed by the State Committee for Scientific Research and the European Commission. The Centre of Excellence in Environmental Analysis and Monitoring operates within the faculty. Additionally, there are research programmes financed by the European Commission under the EU’s V and VI framework programmes.
Academic Computer Centre
The Academic Computer Centre in Gdańsk (CI TASK) has operated since 1992 under an agreement between the Tri-City’s chief higher education institutions. It was initially established to serve all higher education establishments and local branches of the Polish Academy of Sciences.
Library
The library holds over a million volumes, including electronic publications. It features 16 reading rooms and has contributed to the development of the Universal Library.
Notable alumni
- Bodo von Borries (1905–1956), German physicist, co-inventor of electron microscope
- Krystyna Chojnowska-Liskiewicz (1936-2021), naval engineer, first woman to have sailed single-handed (i.e. solo) around the world
- Zygmunt Choreń (born 1941), naval architect
- Jaroslaw Drelich (1957), surface engineer, professor at the Michigan Technological University
- Abraham Esau (1884–1955), German physicist
- Andrzej Gwiazda (born 1935), anti-communist activist and physicist
- Richard B. Hetnarski (born 1928), Polish-American mechanical engineer
- Tomasz Imieliński (born 1954), Polish-American computer scientist
- Michał Kalecki (1899–1970), Marxian economist, "one of the most distinguished economists of the 20th century"
- Włodzimierz Julian Korab-Karpowicz (born 1953), philosopher and political theorist
- Alar Kotli (1904–1963), Estonian architect
- Janusz Liberkowski (born 1953), inventor
- Lâm Quang Mỹ (born 1944), Polish-Vietnamese physicist and poet
- Jacek Namieśnik (1949–2019), chemist
- Janusz Pawliszyn (born 1954), chemist
- Marek Piechocki (born 1961), civil engineer, co-founder of LPP Group
- Kazimierz Piechowski (1919–2017), engineer
- Krystian Pilarczyk (born 1941), hydraulic engineer
- Marianna Sankiewicz-Budzyńska (1921–2018), electronics engineer
- Janusz Smulko (born 1964), electronics engineer
- Wojciech Szpankowski (born 1952), computer scientist
References
External links
- Official website
- The buildings of the university
