CHARITY (2021–2024) placed AR, VR, and holography at the centre of its cloud-based cross-reality platform, directly matching ORAMAVR's company name and apparent core product focus.
ORAMAVR SA
Greek SME specialising in AR, VR, and holographic media systems built on edge and cloud-continuum infrastructure.
Their core work
ORAMAVR SA is a Greek technology SME based in Heraklion specializing in immersive media technologies — augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), and holographic content systems. Their work sits at the intersection of advanced media production and the distributed computing infrastructure needed to deliver it in real time. In the ACCORDION project they contributed to adaptive edge and cloud-continuum architectures, while in CHARITY they focused on holography and cross-reality experiences that demand extremely high bandwidth and ultra-low latency. In practice, they are a company that builds or integrates the software and media pipelines that make immersive experiences technically feasible at scale.
What they specialise in
CHARITY explicitly targets holography and advanced media solutions for bandwidth-demanding services, indicating hands-on expertise in volumetric and holographic media pipelines.
ACCORDION (2020–2023) addressed adaptive compute distribution across heterogeneous edge infrastructure, giving ORAMAVR practical exposure to edge orchestration as an enabling layer for their media work.
CHARITY keywords include 'orchestration platform' and 'extremely interactive and bandwidth demanding services', pointing to competence in managing real-time media delivery pipelines.
How they've shifted over time
ORAMAVR entered H2020 in 2020 through ACCORDION, contributing to the infrastructure problem: how to distribute compute intelligently across sparse edge nodes and cloud resources. By 2021 their second project, CHARITY, shifted attention firmly to the application layer — holography, AR/VR, and cross-reality experiences that require exactly the kind of low-latency edge infrastructure they had just been working on. The trajectory is coherent: they appear to have used edge-computing participation as a technical foundation, then pivoted toward the immersive media products that infrastructure enables.
ORAMAVR is moving up the stack — from distributed compute infrastructure toward immersive media applications — suggesting future collaborations in XR content platforms, holographic telepresence, or 6G media delivery are a natural fit.
How they like to work
ORAMAVR has participated exclusively as a consortium partner, never as coordinator, across both projects. Despite a small project count, they have engaged with 24 distinct partners across 10 countries, suggesting they are active contributors rather than passive token members. This breadth of partners relative to only two projects indicates a willingness to work in large, diverse European consortia typical of RIA grants.
ORAMAVR has built connections with 24 unique partners spanning 10 countries through just two projects, which is a notably wide network for a small company. Their partners are spread across Europe, consistent with the multi-country RIA consortium structure of both ACCORDION and CHARITY.
What sets them apart
ORAMAVR occupies a specific niche that few Greek SMEs hold: they combine hands-on AR/VR/holography product experience with direct participation in edge-computing research, making them credible at both the infrastructure and application layers of immersive media systems. For a consortium building around 6G media, XR platforms, or holographic telepresence, they offer the rare combination of a media technology company that understands the compute architecture underneath. Their Heraklion base also provides geographic diversity for proposals seeking southern European or island-region representation.
Highlights from their portfolio
- CHARITYThe higher-funded project (€350,000) and the one most directly aligned with ORAMAVR's core identity — holography and cross-reality — making it the clearest signal of what the company actually builds.
- ACCORDIONTheir entry into H2020 and an unusual pairing for a media company, demonstrating willingness and capacity to contribute to foundational distributed-infrastructure research.