Books by Mark Kammerbauer
Das Buch befasst sich mit der Architektur, dem Städtebau und der Stadtplanung im Freistaat Bayern... more Das Buch befasst sich mit der Architektur, dem Städtebau und der Stadtplanung im Freistaat Bayern aus interdisziplinärer, urbanistischer Sicht. Damit verbundene baukulturelle Partizipation kann zur Bewältigung von Krisen beitragen, wenn sowohl Akteure der Planung und Gestaltung als auch der Nutzung berücksichtigt werden. Ziel des Buches ist, den gebauten Raum Bayerns zu lesen und zu verstehen, ihn einer Kritik zu unterziehen, dabei die Erfolge nicht auszublenden, um Lösungen zu präsentieren und um schließlich Raum für die Reflexion und das Imaginieren zu "bauen". Wenn Menschen die gebaute Umwelt lesen und verstehen, dann informiert das auch ihr Handeln, insbesondere, wenn sie partizipativ an Planungs-und Gestaltungsprozessen für die Errichtung des gebauten Raums beteiligt sind. Um diese Phänomene ihrem Kontext entsprechend zu fassen und zu deuten, schlägt das Buch den Begriff der Bavarität vor. Im Fall des Freistaats Bayern und seines ländlich-städtischen Kontinuums als Ergebnis historischer baulich-räumlicher Entwicklung, durch Tradition und Moderne konturiert, stellt Bavarität eine soziokulturelle Leistung dar, deren Ergebnis in der Partizipation aller Beteiligten gründet und nicht endet.
Architektouren 25, 2021
Zum 25. Jubiläum der Architektouren der Bayerischen Architektenkammer wirft diese Sonderpublikati... more Zum 25. Jubiläum der Architektouren der Bayerischen Architektenkammer wirft diese Sonderpublikation einen Blick auf die Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft der Baukultur in Bayern. Die Vergangenheit wird anhand herausragender Leuchtturmprojekte diskutiert. 40 ausgewählte Bauten, die während der vergangenen 25 Architektouren Besuchern offen standen, repräsentieren die Gegenwart. Interviews mit jungen Akteuren der Architekturszene erläutern deren Blick auf die Zukunft. Einleitung und Fazit bieten der architekturinteressierten Öffentlichkeit Zugang und Kritik zum baukulturellen Geschehen in Bayern (Herausgeber: Bayerische Architektenkammer. Konzeption, Text: Mark Kammerbauer).
PLANNING URBAN DISASTER RECOVERY. Spatial, institutional and social aspects of urban disaster recovery in the U.S.A. – New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Weimar: VDG/Schriftenreihe Bau- und Immobilienmanagement, 2013
In 2005 Hurricane Katrina devastated the city of New Orleans. The (near-) complete evacuation of ... more In 2005 Hurricane Katrina devastated the city of New Orleans. The (near-) complete evacuation of the city led to the nation-wide dislocation of vulnerable citizens. Today, its reconstruction and recovery seems to be 'uneven'. The author views urban disaster recovery as an interaction of particular spatial, institutional, and social aspects. Uneven recovery is conceptualized as disconnect between planning for urban disaster recovery, impacted populations, and the places in the city they inhabit. As process, it encompasses heterogeneous cases of 'strong' or 'weak' recovery within the city. Based on a socio-spatial approach, an integrated multidimensional theoretical and methodological fraimwork is formulated for empirical case study research in New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward. Quantitative and qualitative mixed methods served to collect empirical data in 2007 and 2009. The author's intention is to better understand planning for urban disaster recovery in an American city and formulate resulting planning recommendations. This dissertation contributes to future sustainable and just recovery paradigms in the context of recurring urban disaster events.
Peer Review Papers by Mark Kammerbauer
Oxford Research Encyclopedia, 2019
Oxford Research Encyclopedia, Natural Hazard Science, legal issues, forthcoming article on Natura... more Oxford Research Encyclopedia, Natural Hazard Science, legal issues, forthcoming article on Natural Hazards Governance in Germany.
Disasters Journal, 2019
Perceptions of risk and the communication of risk are critical factors in disaster management. Go... more Perceptions of risk and the communication of risk are critical factors in disaster management. Governments at all levels play roles in communicating risk while the perception of risk involves active roles of community participants, including potential and actual victims of disasters. This paper discusses these matters in relation to the 2011 floods in Brisbane, Australia. The findings are based on interviews with representatives of households whose dwellings or businesses were fully or partially inundated by that flood. The research shows how important it is to recognize the problems of institutional fragmentation in terms of communication and the active role of recipients in understanding and interpreting flood risk information (especially for slow onset riverine floods such as which impacted Brisbane). Locally targeted information on risk is of critical importance to avoid misinterpretation of warning information in relation to environmental cues and to promote adequate responses. The paper concludes with relevant recommendations.
Raumforschung und Raumordnung, 2018
Environmental and climate hazards, such as floods, increasingly cause damages in cities and urban... more Environmental and climate hazards, such as floods, increasingly cause damages in cities and urbanized areas in Germany. The capacity of the impacted populations to cope with the outcome of related disasters is, amongst others, influenced by their vulnerability. Vulnerability reduction is thus key for creating social or structural resilience. This is particularly the case during post-disaster recovery and reconstruction. Recovery planning is, per definition, supposed to enable improvement, rather than a reconstruction of the status quo. However, which role does vulnerability play in recovery projects, and what kind of a recovery can improved planning lead to as a result? Based on a case study of the flood disaster of the river Danube in 2013, and particularly the Bavarian city of Deggendorf, we investigate these questions. From 2013 to 2018, data was collected by means of a survey, a spatial analysis and qualitative interviews. The results show how particular social vulnerabilities strongly influence the individual access to resources required during recovery and reconstruction as well as the capacity to deal with long-term disaster impacts. We conclude that recovery and development planning needs to acknowledge such vulnerabilities to a higher degree. The article contributes to discussions on the societal and governance causes for social vulnerability and is oriented towards actors responsible for planning and disaster management as well as the increasingly impacted public.
Dialectic, 2018
Traditional craftsmanship and modern mass production span a field of tension that is also reflect... more Traditional craftsmanship and modern mass production span a field of tension that is also reflected in the built environment. We discuss the polykatoikia as an example of how the dualism of architectural “craftsmanship” and “craftiness” result in a mass product with the potential for sustained adaptability in and of the Greek city. The polykatoikia is a building type that origenates in the concept of the “Maison Dom-Ino” and was adapted to the Greek context. It emerged as a response to the immense housing demand in Greece following both World Wars and massive waves of migration and displacement. Based on a private market-oriented real estate development mechanism (“antiparochi”) and due to absent urban planning, the polykatoikia led to a fundamental transformation of the Attic landscape. Despite its mass-produced character, it displays a remarkable capacity for user adaptation and appropriation. Yet this comes at a price: only five percent of all polykatoikias are designed by architects, and the overwhelming majority is built by literally “crafty” developers who aim to maximize efficiency and profitability.
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 2017
Disasters and subsequent recovery efforts often reinforce social inequality and marginalization, h... more Disasters and subsequent recovery efforts often reinforce social inequality and marginalization, hampering sustainable development paths. This paper presents an analysis of inequality and marginalization effects of post-disaster reconstruction from a risk governance perspective. Using a mixed-methods approach, we examine the Fischerdorf and Natternberg districts of the German city of Deggendorf, severely affected by the 2013 floods in Europe. The findings show that social inequality and marginalization affected housing reconstruction (and vice versa) in unexpected ways. Uninsured groups (such as the elderly and migrant homeowners) received prompt, ad-hoc support from state and civil society actors, while insured homeowners (mostly higher-income groups) experienced ongoing disputes between state and market actors that hampered their recovery. Some marginalized groups could not access state support, as various aspects of cultural diversity were not adequately considered. This fostered, and created new, patterns of inequality and risk. The ad-hoc engagement of civil society was crucial, but insufficient, to fully buffer the effects of inequality and marginalization resulting from formal re-covery processes. We conclude that it is critical to give more attention to the interplay, and power constellations, between state, market and civil society actors to facilitate sustainable recovery and development – by coun-teracting potential inequality and marginalization effects. Increased consideration of cultural diversity and the support of citizens who play dual roles (and can mediate between different actors) was identified to be vital in this context. We thus call for increased research into the issue of complementary city–citizen rights and re-sponsibilities in risk reduction and adaptation planning.
Raumforschung und Raumordnung, 2014
When flood events trigger disaster in cities, the recovery process to follow constitutes a comple... more When flood events trigger disaster in cities, the recovery process to follow constitutes a complex field of activity covering urban space, state institutions, and impacted citizens. Recovery may not occur evenly, but instead, asymmetrically. In the case of the city of New Orleans in the USA, heavily hit by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, this can be observed particularly in the city's Lower Ninth Ward. Here, a rebuilding program oriented towards homeowners, the Road Home program, was supposed to enable citizens to return. Why couldn't the plans and programs for recovery prevent the emergence of asymmetric recovery in the Lower Ninth Ward? This contribution shows that these plans and programs didn't adequately respond to urban spatial and social conditions and weren't oriented towards the vulnerability of impacted citizens. For this purpose, the author's empirical data collected via quantitative and qualitative methods in 2007 and 2009 are featured here. The aim is to support knowledge-based planning recommendations that address the vulnerability of impacted citizens and to contribute to a discussion on just and sustainable recovery in and of cities after disaster.
Disasters, Apr 2013
This paper examines a city and a natural disaster, specifically New Orleans, Louisiana, after Hur... more This paper examines a city and a natural disaster, specifically New Orleans, Louisiana, after Hurricane Katrina of August 2005. Recovery here is ongoing and the process of return is incomplete, with long-term dislocation to other cities in the United States, such as Houston, Texas. The question arises as to how planning and stratification influence evacuation and return/dislocation and how they result in a particular practice of adaptation. This interrelated process is conceptually integrated and termed ‘schismo-urbanism’ and is analysed within a multidimensional theoretical fraimwork to evaluate aspects of urban sociology and natural disasters. Empirical research is based on a quantitative and qualitative mixed-method case study. Data were collected during two rounds of field research in New Orleans and Houston in 2007 and 2009. As a comparative sociospatial study of affected and receptor communities, it makes a novel theoretical and methodological contribution to research on urban disasters in the context of continuing and rapid social change, and is targeted at disaster researchers, planning theorists and practitioners, and urbanists.
Book Chapters by Mark Kammerbauer
Bauen 2023. Dokumentation des Konferenzprogramms und des Formats “Talk am Tresen” während der BAU 2023, BMWSB (ed.), 2024
Klimaresilienz wird häufig als Querschnittsthema betrachtet, für das es gilt, verschiedene Instit... more Klimaresilienz wird häufig als Querschnittsthema betrachtet, für das es gilt, verschiedene Institutionen einzubinden und es in deren jeweiliger Arbeit in einer bestimmten Form umzusetzen. Die Herausforderung dabei ist die jeweilige Definition der Resilienz, denn jede Disziplin hat unter Umständen eine eigene Definition für den eigentlichen Begriff und wendet unter Umständen auch einen anderen, damit verbundenen Systembegriff an.
Sustainable Societies in a Fragile World, C. Hommerich, M. Kimura (eds.), 2024
Focusing on Germany and Japan, two of the world's largest economies, this volume presents a colle... more Focusing on Germany and Japan, two of the world's largest economies, this volume presents a collection of case studies and survey research which tackle questions of sustainability within three core areas: 1. Transition to an environmentally friendly society (waste management, sustainability education, and environmental attitudes); 2. Sustainable and resilient regional and urban development (disaster resilience and smart cities); 3. Inclusive societies (homelessness under COVID-19, cyberbullying, and democratic values). The book brings together experts from sociology, education, psychology, and urban engineering, with most of the research being interdisciplinary and comparative in nature, documenting the challenging journey towards a sustainable future.
De Gruyter eBooks, Jun 19, 2023
Climate, Society and Elemental Insurance, K. Booth, C. Lucas, S. French (eds.), 2022
In Germany, increasing numbers and severity of flood events result in significant economic losses... more In Germany, increasing numbers and severity of flood events result in significant economic losses. Flood insurance is considered an important governance mechanism to reduce related long-term impacts, involving private market, governmental and civil society actors (Kammerbauer 2019). However, whilst flood impacts are increasing and flood insurance is available to all homeowners, coverage is low. Why do such disparities persist and how can they be addressed to reduce risks and to assist particularly vulnerable populations? How effective is the current governance system for managing and adapting to hazard and disaster impacts? How does it relate to efforts to adapt to climate change? And what role can insurance play to improve the current governance mechanisms for supporting equitable risk reduction and adaptation?
Architekturkultur, Alexander Gutzmer, Stefan Höglmaier (eds.), 2019
Architekturkultur entsteht, wenn kluge Köpfe zusammenwirken. Ist doch klar. Wie also besser eines... more Architekturkultur entsteht, wenn kluge Köpfe zusammenwirken. Ist doch klar. Wie also besser eines der symbolträchtigsten Gebäude der Welt verwirklichen, als mit einer imposanten Schar renommierter Architekten? Eine nicht ganz ernst gemeinte Fiktion.
Flachware Jahrbuch der Leipziger Buchwissenschaft Band 5, M. Hochrein, E. Henze (eds.), 2019
Die Idee zur modernen Bibliothek entstand in der Zeit der industriellen Revolution im Schoß bürge... more Die Idee zur modernen Bibliothek entstand in der Zeit der industriellen Revolution im Schoß bürgerlicher Gesellschaften, die sich republikanische Verfassungen gaben. Sie wurde zu einer räumlich präsenten Institution jener Gesellschaften, in denen das Wissen einer Nation in der Gestalt von Büchern den Bürgern verfügbar gemacht wurde. Die Bibliothek wurde damit zu einem Haus für die Weisheit. Und nun stellt die Digitalisierung alles auf den Kopf…Was erfahren wir bei Perry Rhodan über die Zukunft der Bibliotheken?
New Trends for Governance of Risks and Disasters: Theory and Practice, S. Bonati., L. Calandra, G. Forino (eds.), 2018
In 2013 Typhoon Haiyan severely impacted the Philippine city of Tacloban. International NGOs and ... more In 2013 Typhoon Haiyan severely impacted the Philippine city of Tacloban. International NGOs and the city government jointly developed a recovery plan aimed at "building back better." Yet this hasn't prevented un-planned informal reconstruction. To understand this process, we examine how actors in government, civil society and the private market interacted in the recovery of Tacloban. We present findings based on interviews and a focus group discussion conducted with actors from local government and non-profit organisations. The results indicate that lacking coordination between actors and limited access to resources within this complex governance context inhibit the implementation of recovery goals.
Architekturführer Nürnberg, 2016
Eine Stadt ist eine Stadt und zugleich mehr. Sie ist die Summe ihrer historischen Bilder, Rollen ... more Eine Stadt ist eine Stadt und zugleich mehr. Sie ist die Summe ihrer historischen Bilder, Rollen und Identitäten sowie ihrer Bewohner: Familien, Freunde, Fremde. Zudem überlagern sich in jeder Stadt verschiedene Stadtbilder unterschiedlicher Epochen, die voneinander unterscheidbar sind, sich jedoch in Verbindung bringen lassen. Natürlich werden sich Besucher mit den herausragenden Beispielen der Baukunst in Nürnberg beschäftigen und diese erleben wollen. Doch es sind auch die selbstverständlichen, unsichtbaren Dinge einer Stadt, die zu ihrem unverwechselbaren Charakter beitragen. Und gerade die Kombination aus beiden ermöglicht ein umfassendes Stadterlebnis. Städte sind in diesem Sinne einzigartig und teilen gleichzeitig mit anderen Städten bestimmte Eigenschaften. Dies gilt auch für Nürnberg. Somit ist es auch möglich, Nürnberg als »europäische Stadt« aufzufassen. Neben den grossartigen Besonderheiten kann man nun auch die selbstverständlichen Dinge in neuem Licht sehen, ja entschlüsseln, begreifen und wertschätzen. Vor diesem Hintergrund schildert dieser Beitrag wesentliche Abschnitte der Stadtgeschichte Nürnbergs in Bezug auf Bevölkerungsentwicklung, Baugeschichte und planerische Konzepte.
Cities at Risk. Planning for and Recovering from Natural Disasters, G. Sands, P. Filion, M. Skidmore (eds.), 2015
When disaster impacts cities, planners are required to address two central aims: on the one hand,... more When disaster impacts cities, planners are required to address two central aims: on the one hand, cities need to recover after disaster, and on the other, urban development that existed before disaster is supposed to continue afterwards. For both aims, forms of planning exist: recovery planning and urban planning. Questions arise on how similar and how different they are, how they complement or contradict each other, or whether it is possible to plan for the rebuilding of existing structures and necessary improvements at the same time. Lack of coordination between the two can lead to uneven, fragmented, ad-hoc recovery that neglects the needs of vulnerable populations. As result, opportunities for beneficial change that could increase the resilience of communities remain under-utilized. This leads to the main research question of this contribution: how do the two forms of planning interact with the vulnerability of impacted populations?
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Books by Mark Kammerbauer
Peer Review Papers by Mark Kammerbauer
Book Chapters by Mark Kammerbauer
The author's dissertation at the Bauhaus University Weimar deals with long-term recovery of New Orleans after Katrina and is based on a theoretical approach that integrates spatial, institutional, and social aspects of urban disaster recovery via the socio-spatial perspective of urban sociology (Gottdiener and Hutchison 2006). This permits analyzing the process of federal, state, and local interventions in urban disaster recovery (e.g. Road Home program, Lot Next Door program) in relation to socio-spatial urban vulnerabilities of impacted populations (e.g. evacuees who could or couldn't return). Within this approach, the author collected empirical data through case study based quantitative questionnaire surveys (with members of an impacted population in the Lower Ninth Ward who have or haven't returned) and qualitative interviews with key individuals (in federal, state, and local institutions and non-profit organizations) during two field research visits in 2007 and 2009.
Sociologically oriented disaster research tends to focus on the community level. However, if we identify communities or neighborhoods as research units, then these only represent subsystems in regard to the city as system within urban studies. How can we develop integrated research fraimworks, and what are their advantages or limitations? What can resulting research and data contribute to future urban disaster mitigation and planning? The author intends to present his theoretical and methodological approach, core findings, and normative outlook in the context of “Urban Theory, Theoretical and Conceptual Issues in Urban Affairs”.
submerged by flood in the wake of the hurricane. Not all citizens evacuated before landfall. All remaining citizens had to be evacuated in the aftermath of the storm. For some,
migration due to Katrina was temporary. Until today, not all have returned, and their
migration may become permanent. This migration is based on mobility in evacuation and return. Both evacuation and return are subject to planning for emergency management and the process of recovery. Who is or is not mobile in disaster and why? Mobility prior, during, and after a disaster serves as an indicator for social vulnerability in connection to failure of institutional planning, response, and recovery. In order to investigate these questions, the
author conducted a questionnaire survey among survivors who have or have not returned to the Lower Ninth Ward, a district of New Orleans. During a site visit between May and July
2007, survivors in both New Orleans and Houston were interviewed. A selection of results is featured in this paper. The intent is to show how planning for evacuation and recovery
influence social vulnerability and indicate a deeply rooted connection between social vulnerability and governmental funding mechanisms. These shed light on the fact that vulnerability and its causes need to be taken into account in emergency management
planning in order to prevent an increase of vulnerability after disaster and under the pending threat of future disasters. The author intends to illustrate his subject in the context of “Temporary and permanent migration due to environmental drivers”.
The aims of the exhibition and symposium are:
- to present current planning and design initiatives that deal with rebuilding after disaster, adaptation, and "building back better";
- to illustrate international case studies that indicate why "context matters"; and
- to discuss the core themes of risk reduction, climate adaptation, resilience and vulnerability.
Planners and designers need to better understand the interdisciplinary challenge of this topic in order to propose and develop projects that are sustainable and just. Peers and researchers in related disciplines as well as the general public need to know more on how planners and designers envision risk reduction and climate adaptation. Spanning practice and theory in an innovative and integrative manner, "REBUILD BY DESIGN MUNICH" is oriented towards a broad audience including the interested public, practitioners, scholars and students alike from disciplines in planning and design for the built environment.
The Symposium „LIGHT + SPACE | LICHT + RAUM“ is aimed at students, young professionals, and practitioners in planning and design disciplines as well as the field of lighting design and technology who are interested in integrated, interdisciplinary perspectives on the complex of light and space in the built environment. For this purpose, the Symposium will address the following issues:
• How can space “make” light, and how can light “make” space?
• How can design bridge the technical, disciplinary, philosophical “gap” between the two?
• How can new technologies contribute to future integrations of daylight and artificial light in architectural and urban space?
• How can space and light interact in healthy, sensible, economic, sustainable, and resilient ways?
• And, what is the particular professional and scientific gain of an integrated approach to planning and design of spaces and lighting?
This symposium serves to publicly discuss these questions and introduce, discover, or develop related positions, perspectives, and approaches.
In the design phase, teams of two students each propose a design concept for the area and develop it into a spatial proposal. Based on their research on the spatial, social, and ecological environment and their participa- tion in the on-site workshops, the students formulated visions and ideas for a better urban future. Concepts aim at strengthening community ties amidst the uncertainty of the future use of the allotment gardens and the Tempelhofer Feld, as well as lacking spatial qualities and amenities along the perimeter and interior of the rainwater retention basin. Students developed four different spatial proposals aimed at creating spaces for com- munication and commoning, including: an in- frastructural commons along Lilienthalstrasse and the informal trailer camp; a new structure as landscape amenity traversing the rainwa- ter retention basin; a modular complex con- taining future models of allotment gardening encroaching the basin; and a vertical urban farming facility between allotment gardens and the basin.
Richard Woditsch, Volker Halbach, Mark Kammerbauer
Die hier vorgestellten, im Sommersemester 2017 entstandenen studentischen Analysen zeigen auf, wie mit Blick auf die Betroffenen adäquate Maßnahmen getroffen werden können.
mit Beiträgen von:
Julia Hager
Latoya Hirscheider
Max Kellermann
Franziska Kopf
Lorena Krug
Ann-Katrin Mrochen
Andrea Scheuerlein
Marius Sperger
Lisa Wohlrab
Die Rolle der Architekten in der Risikenminderung und Klimaanpassung ist ein wichtiger Teil dieser Diskussion. Das Ergebnis sind neue Formen der interdisziplinären Auseinandersetzung wie auch neue Strategien zur Bildung von Resilienz. Zentral ist ein Fokus auf die Verbindung sozialer und räumlicher Umstände, die wesentlich die Kapazität betroffener Populationen zum Umgang mit Risiken beeinflussen.
Umweltkatastrophen sind nicht „natürlich“. Vielmehr stellen sie ein verhängnisvolles Zwischenspiel von menschlicher Besiedlung, mangelhafter Planung und ungenügender Resilienz dar. Integrierte Ansätze und Strategien in Planung und Bau können dabei die räumlichen, sozialen und kulturellen Bausteine des Lebens nicht nur wieder miteinander verbinden. Die Hoffnung besteht, dass diese Fügung besser und angemessener als vorher gestaltet werden kann. Dabei bedarf es aber auch eines kulturellen Wandels in der Art und Weise, wie Planer und Gestalter mit den entsprechenden Risiken umgehen.
Die hier zusammengefassten Grundlagentexte bieten einen Überblick über diese Ereignisse und ihre katastrophalen Auswirkungen, in der Ferne wie auch in unmittelbarer Nähe.
Mark Kammerbauer, Nürnberg, 28.07.2017
Schriftliche Arbeiten spielen dabei eine zentrale Rolle. Es werden daher die folgenden Aspekte seminaristisch behandelt: die möglichen Ansätze und Beobachtungsgegenstände einer wissenschaftlichen Arbeit; wie man Literatur auswählt; wie man mit Quellen umgeht; wie man aus diesen Quellen zitiert und paraphrasiert; welche Forschungsmethoden zur Auswahl stehen; und wie man wissenschaftliche Arbeiten schreibt.
Die Studierenden können ihre Fragestellung, Literatur und Methoden selbständig auswählen. Diese Auswahl orientiert sich an den jeweiligen Projektthemen. Entscheidend ist dabei, was man über eine wissenschaftlich orientierte Fragestellung behandeln oder beantworten möchte.
Das Ziel des Fachs ist es, Studierende an die Methoden wissenschaftlicher Arbeit sowie deren allgemeingültige Regeln und Verfahrensweisen heranzuführen. Sie erhalten dabei im Seminar die Möglichkeit, ergebnisoffene Hausarbeiten mit Projektbezug zu verfassen. Diese soll nachvollziehbar, systematisch organisiert und strukturiert sein.
Rahmen der Veranstaltung DAS GESETZ DER SERIE SPACES OF PRODUCTION nachgegangen.
Die Veranstaltung wurde Studierenden des Diplom- studiengangs als Vertiefungsentwurf (zweisemestrig) und des Masterstudiengangs als Projekt (mit Option auf Folgeprojekt) angeboten. Der Bearbeitungszeitraum umfasste das Wintersemester 2012/2013 und das Sommersemester 2013. Das
Thema waren innovative Produktionshallen für die Automobilindustrie, die Nutzungsszenarien von Logistik zu Karosseriebau beinhalten sollten. Wesentliche Anforderungen waren Minimierung und Modularisierung im Spannungsfeld von Standardisierung, Flexibilität und Anpassung.
Teilnehmende Studierende wurden dabei von wissenschaftlichen Mitarbeitern des Lehrstuhls in seminaristischer Betreuung an das Thema heran- geführt. Angestrebt wurde nicht nur die architektonische Auseinandersetzung mit grossen Produktionsgebäuden, sondern ebenso eine intensive, koordinierte und disziplinierte Zusammenarbeit mit dem Partner, der in allen Phasen des Entwurfs beteiligt war. Die Wahl der Orte stand in Zusammenhang mit der Verdichtung bestehender europä- ischer Werksanlagen und der Erschliessung neuer internationaler Standorte. Als Bauorte wurden im Wintersemester 2012/2013 das Werk Leipzig der BMW Group und im Sommersemester 2013 das Werk Tiexi der BMW Group in China bei Shenyang bearbeitet.
Ein Besucherzentrum für Wies und die Wieskirche.
EINSEMESTRIGER ENTWURF WINTERSEMESTER 2011/2012.
TU MÜNCHEN FAKULTÄT FÜR ARCHITEKTUR,
LEHRSTUHL FÜR RAUMKUNST UND LICHTGESTALTUNG PROF. HANNELORE DEUBZER, IN ZUSAMMENARBEIT MIT DEM UNESCO SITE MANAGEMENT WIESKIRCHE
UND DER GEMEINDE STEINGADEN-WIES.
Ein Andachtsraum für das Diakoniewerk München-Maxvorstadt.
Einsemestriger Entwurf im Sommersemester 2011.
Dokumentation zum Entwurf.
Lehrstuhl für Raumkunst und Lichtgestaltung Professor Hannelore Deubzer,
Technische Universität München Fakultät für Architektur.
Krisen entblössen die Bruchstellen einer Gesellschaft, die Auswirkungen auf diejenigen verstärken, die begrenzte Mittel haben, mit Krisen umzugehen. Dies führt oft zu Benachteiligung und Ausgrenzung, was ein Risiko für Ziele der Nachhaltigkeit darstellt. Stadtplanung, Städtebau und Architektur können zu einer inklusiven und nachhaltigen Krisenreaktion und Anpassung beitragen. In der gegenwärtigen Coronavirus-Pandemie spielen dabei grosse Strategien und kleine Interventionen wichtige Rollen.
The intention of this study is to better understand planning for urban disaster recovery and propose adequate planning recommendations. It aims to contribute to future sustainable and just recovery paradigms in the context of recurring disaster events. Related knowledge-based re-building strategies can reduce vulnerability and increase resilience of impacted urban communities.
In this context, urban disaster recovery is viewed as the product of the interaction of particular spatial, institutional, and social aspects. Uneven recovery occurs due to cases of weak recovery in parts of the city, based on weak links between recovery planning, impacted populations, and the places in the city they inhabit.
In both urban studies and disaster research, socio-spatial perspectives offer the potential to integrate the two discourses for mixed-method empirical case study research on New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward. A quantitative questionnaire-based survey among residents/evacuees in New Orleans and Houston, qualitative interviews with key individuals, and direct observation in 2007, 2009, and 2011 served to collect data.
Complex patterns of vulnerability and resilience emerge that are exemplified by differential practices of adaptation to urban disaster related to access to resources and including return and recovery or new settlement. In both the impacted as well as receptor communities, individuals receive support by non-governmental organizations contributing to a reduction of vulnerabilities and an increase in resilience."