Routinen: Typologien und ihre Spielräume am Berkaer Bahnhof
Project information
submitted by
Noa Akosua Josephine Wilhelmi
Co-Authors
Sean Luca Bernhardt, Vincent Cugat Schoch, Bruno Genilke, Ida Lautenschläger, Jasmin Leibrich, Zihan Pan, Julius Plag, Maya Schmitz, Nancy Schuchort, Thea Simond, Charlotte Sprenger, Josi Steingräber, Thorben Stürmer, Joy-Victoria Tardel, Florian Wimmer, Thomas Wolfinger, Noemi Dengel, Lucia Dück, Tobias Gebhardt, Emilia Goldener, Liv Heinert, Ella Margarethe Hemmann, Samuel Rohlfing, Milan Schwaab, Jan Bruno Groening
Mentors
Dorothee Rummel, Nelli Fritzler, Noa Wilhelmi
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
Sommersemester2025
- Geschwister-Scholl-Straße 8 - Hauptgebäude / Main Building
(Raum 203, 2.OG)
Available during summaery opening hours
attractive to children
Links
https://www.uni-weimar.de/en/arc...
Contributors:
Stadt Weimar, Stadtentwicklungsamt
Project description
Urban spaces are largely shaped by the routines of their inhabitants. Daily life in the city emerges from the interaction of countless processes taking place on streets, squares, and within buildings. It is not solely the built structures that define urban space—rather, the city comes into being through interaction, through actions, habits, and encounters that occur within it. These everyday routines form the link between urban typologies and the people who inhabit and activate them. At the same time, our cities face new ecological and social challenges that require the rethinking and adaptation of existing structures. Climate change, social fragmentation, and changing models of living and working call for flexible and sustainable concepts. The goal is to identify leeway and potential in both entrenched and transient routines and spatial configurations, and to use them strategically for the transformation of our cities.
How can urban interventions positively influence the daily lives of residents? Which routines and processes shape the area, and how can new structures meaningfully complement and transform what already exists? What potential might arise from a mix of typologies and programs within the neighborhood?