Yes. Most analysis, mapping, modeling, technical writing, and proposal-support projects can be completed remotely through video meetings, email, and shared project workspaces. On-site fieldwork or workshops can be discussed separately when they are necessary and feasible.
Working With Me
I work with research teams, environmental organizations, public agencies, NGOs, and small project groups on clearly defined geospatial and environmental tasks. A collaboration may begin with a focused map, technical review, data analysis, monitoring question, or proposal need and can expand only when the scope and available information support it.
Frequently Asked Questions
A useful starting point is a short description of the environmental question, the project location or area of interest, available datasets, the expected output, the intended audience, and any important deadline or funding requirement. An initial review can also identify missing data or unrealistic expectations before a larger commitment is made.
A focused technical review, visualization, or pilot may take approximately one to three weeks. A defined analysis or mapping project commonly requires several weeks, while larger modeling, dashboard, monitoring, or proposal collaborations may require multiple phases. The schedule is confirmed after the scope and available data are reviewed.
Deliverables depend on the project and may include GIS-ready rasters or vectors, GeoPackage or CSV files, figures in publication and presentation formats, reproducible notebooks or scripts, methods and QA/QC notes, short technical reports, map briefs, dashboards, or proposal-ready technical material. The delivery package is agreed during scoping.
Yes, when the project requirements and technical environment allow it. The approach emphasizes data minimization, controlled access, de-identification where appropriate, and local or privacy-preserving workflows when suitable. Raw data are not reused, published, or shared outside the agreed work without written permission. Confidential files should not be submitted through the public contact form.
Yes. Collaboration may involve technical analysis, geospatial methods, environmental monitoring design, proposal development, work-package planning, figures, methods documentation, or contribution to an existing research workflow. Roles, deliverables, timelines, data responsibilities, and any authorship expectations should be agreed at the beginning.
Yes. Remote collaboration is possible with organizations and research teams in different countries and time zones. Work can be conducted in English or Greek. Travel, field participation, and on-site workshops depend on project needs, timing, and logistical feasibility.
Yes. A limited pilot is often the most practical way to begin a new collaboration. A pilot should use a clearly bounded area, dataset, environmental question, and deliverable so the organization can assess the value and feasibility of a larger project before expanding the work.
Projects can be structured as a fixed pilot, a defined delivery package, an advisory engagement, or a phased collaboration. The estimate depends on data condition, geographic coverage, technical complexity, expected documentation, urgency, and the number of review rounds. A preliminary range is provided after the initial scope is understood.