Wahlfach Frühlingssemester 2021

Territorium der Stadt: Bern

Wahlfach Territorium der Stadt, FS 2021: Bern. Bern-Bümpliz (1981) © ETH-Bibliothek Zürich, Bildarchiv/Stiftung Luftbild Schweiz / Fotograf: Swissair Photo AG / LBS_L1-811880 / CC BY-SA 4.0

Landschaft als Ressource

Die Wahlfachreihe «Territorium der Stadt: Landschaft als Ressource» befasst sich mit aktuellen Transformationsprozessen metropolitaner Landschaften in Europa und führt in das landschaftsarchitektonische Entwerfen im territorialen Massstab ein. Auf Basis eines Fieldtrips und kartografischer Analysen mittels GIS entwickeln die Studierenden konkrete Strategien für die Entwicklung urbaner Landschaftsräume in unterschiedlichen geografischen Kontexten.

Im Frühlingssemester 2021 fokussiert der Kurs auf das Territorium der Bundesstadt Bern, das sich im Schweizer Mittelland zwischen Jurasüdfuss und dem Alpenraum erstreckt und von einer grossen landschaftlichen und kulturellen Vielfalt zeugt.

Organisatorisches

Assistenz: Amalia Bonsack
Wahlfach (052-0718-21G – 2 KP) und mögliche Wahlfacharbeit (063-0630-21 A – 6 KP) oder Vertiefungsarbeit (063-0752-21 A – 6 KP).
Die Reise nach Bern findet am Wochenende vom 06.03.21 – 07.03.21 statt.* Der Unkostenbeitrag beträgt max. CHF 100.
* Wichtiger Hinweis: Je nach der epidemiologischen Lage und laufenden Massnahmen kann die Reise zwischenzeitlich angepasst oder abgesagt werden.

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City Territory

The type and the extent of the use of the landscape have changed fundamentally in the last few decades. One reason is that the landscape as a resource is much more intensively used, as illustrated by the strong increase in the destruction of raw materials and material transport as well as the massive build up of infrastructures. At the same time, the level of use in particular areas is also being extensified, which causes fallow land and eventually a return to wilderness. In addition, landscapes are increasingly subordinated to fast-paced and, in part, globally effective changes in mobility, climate, energy and free-time activities. The result is a radical transformation of landscapes, whereby the change takes place inconsistently and unequally.

The historical coexistence and spatial separation of the uses of the landscape up to this point, e.g. agriculture, transport or tourism, are increasingly disappearing. In their place, an operationalized landscape appears in which the informal recreational and sport uses of a metropolitan context are also increasingly enlisted. New forms of ‘parks’ emerge that are no longer clearly comprehensible and classifiable, instead, they spread out temporarily and are spatially diffused over the urban territory.

The driving force behind these developments can be placed on the build-up of the infrastructure network of public transportation as well as on the often chronic overuse on inner city free spaces. The number of recreation seekers expands as a result of the action-radius, i.e. the nearby and quickly reachable available recreational landscapes. This process often takes place informally and results in the overburdening and interweaving of partially contrasting interests.

However, the resulting friction and conflicts carry a lot of potential: Landscapes will no longer function only as economic resources, but will be increasingly recognized as a public resource. A future debate about the kind and modality of their use and the possibility of an integral, democratic development of the landscape as a public good will make this possible.