summaery2025: Projects

2. Kernmodul EXFORMA

Project information

submitted by
Juliane Steffen

Co-Authors
Sophia Katharina Amend, Meike Bihr, Henrik Friedrich Bitz, Theo Buchelt, Fabian Diedrich, Milan Josef Donner, Cäcilia Katharina Marie Engelhardt, Mara Franke, Jule Gaerisch, Felicia Pia Glei, Ilja Nepomuk Guthmann, Sophia Hampel, Felina Hecht, Raphael Markus Kaballo, Emilia Charlotte Käufler, Lena Kernchen, Karoline Charlotte Klandt, Liuba Lehr, Anna Lenz, Marlene Liebetrau, Jette Ida Luckau, Anne Sophie Lina Matrisch, Helene Anna Mccowen, Eva Lotta Müller, Ronja Johanna Müller, Helen Ochs, Felix Ortmann, Anastassia Rudkowski, Isabella Petra Schmidt, Mathis Paul Schött, Thea Lara Schüler, Celine Sieber, Lilli Rosa Jolina Madita Sommer, Caspar Johann Michael Steinke, Oskar Wolf Thadeus von Schönfels, Ayla Sofie Vosgerau, Dina Wacker, Maja Weiprecht, Oskar Woithe

Mentors
Carla Ferrando, Pablo Garrido Arnaiz, Eva Charlotte Pfrommer, Loic Cao

Faculty:
Architecture and Urbanism

Degree programme:
Architecture (Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.))

Type of project presentation
Presentation

Semester
Sommersemester2025

Exhibition Location / Event Location
  • Belvederer Allee 1a - Kubus
    (202)
  • Belvederer Allee 1a - Kubus
    (202)

Available during summaery opening hours


Project description

EXFORMA


explores the notions of Reuse, Repurposing and Recycling. These processes serve as methods for reclaiming waste, challenge established production processes and combat obsolescence, while giving a second life to components and materials. They also provide another reading on the environments in which we live


 


EXFORMA


seeks alternative perspectives on Reuse, questioning our modes of construction and consumption by considering the economy of means, materials and energy. As such, buildings are the material evidence of a social and economic history and cannot be understood as autonomous forms. During the semester we focus on the physical act of construction. Circular economy and diverse Reuse strategies will guide us through this process, seeing architecture as a technical, cultural and political act rather than a purely design exercise.