4. KM: Patchwork Leipzig West
Project information
submitted by
Jannik Petry
Co-Authors
Luna Anhalt, Anna Emma Babick, Miriam Tabea Baier, Helena Becker, Leonie Christiane Bernert, Bruno Cassano Nogueira, Bettina Cretu, Luca Feßenmayr, Amelie Gerhardt, Erin-Jair Gonzalez, Maja Liesa Christa Gössinger, Benedikt Götze, Jan Bruno Groening, Perla Haffar, Leonie Hermann, Sophia Jung, Romy Johanna Klose, Gianna Sophia Kraut, Frederike Landt, Merkt Lange, Anna-Sophie Leipfinger, Meret Lewis, Florian Litzelmann, Magdalena Loeschke, Lasse Marten, Farida Tamer Ali Abobakr Metwalli, Khiem Nguyen Nadler, Anneke Sophie Pastoor, Leonie Pfau, Casimir Yusuki Probst, Cosima Riese, Richard Sachau, Lotta Schroeder, Livia Schümann, Lucas Schütze, Greta Steinbach, Lisa Sophie Marie Stürmer, Julia Thron, Lennart Uecker, Lara Sophie Vieth, Konrad Vogel, Hannah Wesseling, Lauritz Christian Wiehl
Mentors
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Sigrun Langner, Elisabeth Peters, Jannik Petry, Dr. Mara Trübenbach, Till Pulst (Tutor)
Faculty:
Architecture and Urbanism
Degree programme:
Architecture (Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.)),
Urban Planning (Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.))
Type of project presentation
Exhibition
Semester
Summer semester 2024
- Geschwister-Scholl-Straße 8 - Hauptgebäude / Main Building
(R 204)
Available during summaery opening hours
Links
https://www.uni-weimar.de/de/arc...
Contributors:
Stadtplanungsamt der Stadt Leipzig
Project description
The urban and landscape design project deals with the unused potential of the interfaces within the “Patchwork Leipzig West”. The patchwork is characterised by different building typologies from diverse urban development eras. The aim of the project is to create high-quality connections and links within the urban fabric, considering post-fossil forms of mobility and a climate-adapted qualification of the urban spaces. The focus is on the future development of the residential complex II as part of the housing estate Grünau-Ost at the connection to the districts of Lindenau and Plagwitz.
The integration and consolidation of fragmented structures, the qualification of intermediate spaces and the merging of open space and high-rise neighborhood structures can create a connecting urban fabric. This urban fabric contributes to transforming the large housing estate into a sustainable, dynamic and diversely mixed district. Places of production and places of living, as well as places of community, cultural and social nodes are linked with each other and thought together in multidimensional relationships.