Art. Architecture. International Politics: Transit Spaces
The 2019 Bucerius Summer School workshop examines questions regarding 'Transit Spaces' on spatial, social, artistic and political levels through input presentations and participatory workshops. Partners: Partners: Bucerius Summer School, Zeit-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius, Hamburg
Science. Fiction. International Politics: Visible and Invisible Borders
The Bucerius Summer School workshop examines questions regarding visible and invisible borders on spatial, social, cultural, technical and economical levels through the fictional narratives and places of science fiction films. Partners: Bucerius Summer School, ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius, Hamburg
MIT & TUB | Migrating the City: Designs and Strategies for User-Driven Habitats
The workshop, involving students from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Technische Universität Berlin, challenges Berlin's post-1990s 'critical reconstruction' by proposing a vision where inter-community groups lead projects that address immigration, human mobility, and economic opportunity. Partners: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and TU Berlin
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta | ARRIVAL CITY – BERLIN II
Students from Georgia Tech Undergraduate International Design Studio in Berlin focus on creating innovative refugee housing solutions in Germany. This design studio explores sustainable and integrative urban design, addressing migration, urban density, and social integration. Partners: Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta
Politics, Public Space and the Arts: Strategies of Knowledge Production
Using Berlin and Jerusalem as examples, the workshop investigates the public spaces of the city, while critically analysing and devising artistic and architectural strategies for knowledge production and subsequently applying them to the city, with a focus on strategies that explore the public space and do not stop short of intervening. Partners: TU Berlin; Technion Haifa; DAAD
BERLIN WALLS
In the wake of the Berlin Wall's removal is a residue of interstitial spaces. Some can still be experienced in their original state while others have developed their own character. For the most part, their integration into larger urban developments has eliminated them. What to do with those spaces? Partners: École Spéciale d'Architecture, Paris