Three suprising love stories on Campus Groningen › Campus Groningen

Three suprising love stories on Campus Groningen

Three suprising love stories on Campus Groningen

Three suprising love stories on Campus Groningen

Fri, 13 February 2026

Campus full of love!

Campus Groningen is not only a place where innovations are created, but also where all kinds of love blossom: romantic love, family love, love for the profession, and the power of collaboration. Just before Valentine's Day, we share three stories straight from the heart of the campus.

 

Ruby & Marcel - Love via an Outlook ticket
Sometimes love starts in the most unexpected place: with an IT ticket. Ruby (who works at Triade on the Healthy Ageing Campus) was struggling with a persistent Outlook problem that ended up with Marcel (UMCG) after months of wandering around. After countless phone calls, the mystery was solved and Ruby, as promised, showed up at his department with a box of ice cream. That's when the spark really ignited. They have now been together for 9.5 years.

 

Saskia & Ton – partners in life, innovation, and the fight against implant infections
Saskia and Ton run TVH Life Science Partners together, where they guide early-stage biotech and medtech startups toward sustainable growth. They are also the founders of Sabiad, which has been based at the Healthy Ageing Campus since 2026. Sabiad develops groundbreaking technology to detect implant infections more quickly—crucial for hip and knee prostheses where every day counts. Their joint mission is as personal as it is professional: to accelerate innovation that can help patients worldwide faster, safer, and better. Love for each other and for impact, united in one company.

 

Erik & André Heeres – brotherly love in the materials transition
Erik (University of Groningen) and André (Hanze University of Applied Sciences) work together as brothers on the materials transition: away from fossil raw materials, towards renewable materials and better reuse. Their hybrid research group combines fundamental chemistry with applied research and trains students who will soon be making a difference in a circular economy. Their strength lies in their complementarity: Erik with his analytical eye, André with his creative thinking: a duo that reinforces each other at exactly the right moment.