Projects and Events
The aim of the interdisciplinary approach in the study programme is to provide students with a holistic view of integrated approaches to urban development and to apply appropriate methods. This is implemented in a "Study Project" in the second semester, which is interdisciplinary in nature and where students practice their acquired skills on current topics with the guidance of professors. The study project focuses on a specific problem solution and combines scientific analysis methods with design and creative skills. The students' teamwork skills are promoted through collaboration in international teams. This page shows projects results, as well as excursions and events that took place within the scope of the Study Project. Furthermore, other events and smaller workshops are listed here.
Project results, events, excursions
Integrated Frequencies
Integrated Frequencies - Decoding Urban Space in Vienna: From Wien to Aspern
Integrated Frequencies - Decoding Urban Space in Vienna: From Wien to Aspern
In the discussion about “liveable cities”, urban space is mostly perceived as either a form of vital neighbourhoods in vibrant areas or as neglected or unattractive areas that are emptied out and deprived of urban life. Depending not only on the situation of the built environment or the uses in a single location, but rather depending on the context of a place in a grid of flows and movement patterns, there are different methods that help us understand why we perceive space as “working” or not. The perception of a location and its surroundings depends on several parameters that influence each other and finally make us read it as an urban text.
The study project aimed to decode and understand how functions and uses are interconnected with the idea of the urban morphology that constitutes our imagination of the ‘European City’. For this purpose, we were studying four existing neighbourhoods (Mariahilfer Straße, Ottakring, Großfeldsiedlung Am Spitz) in Vienna and the master plan of the new urban development “Seestadt Aspern” with parts of the plan currently under construction. We were trying to understand in how far a masterplan can incorporate urbanists’ ideas and visions. This analysis and visualisation comprised the question in how far the creation of urban space is related to movement patterns and in how far those can be integrated in planning the urban realm.
The project with 45 students in the Masters programmes ‘European Urban Studies’ and ‘Advanced Urbanism’, and with Erasmus exchange-students was held as pilot project “International Blended Learning II .” of Bauhaus-University’s participation in the German Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) project “Offene Hochschulen” with its programme “Professional Bauhaus ”.
In collaboration of IfEU and InfAR with the chairs of
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Bernd Nentwig, (Project Development)
Prof. Dr. Dirk Donath (Informatics in Architecture)
Prof. Dr. Frank Eckardt (Social science in urban research)
Dr. Sigrun Langer (Landscape Architecture and Planning)
external partner:
Space Syntax, London (Model Project Partner of the Master’s programme ‘European Urban Studies’)
Abdelrahman Hegazy
Adam Chappell
Aisha Aman
Aleksandra Blazhevska
Ana Rita Estevão
Ana Sofia Jimenez Gutierez
Anikesh Ashwin
Bibhup Telenga
Carla Rafaela Ebel
Carolina Santinhos
Dilara Hakyemez
Diomira Cuomo
Fang Yao
Fatemeh Nouri
Gabriela Torres Morales
Gerti Gogu
Hai Yen Nguyen
Hoai Phuong Tran
Iana Korolova
Iana Samakaeva
Iman Hegazy
Ion Alexandru Retegan
Jack Miller
Jan Dierk Stolle
Joshua Raff
Jun Liu
Kaike Li
Ksenia Nikolaeva
Lukas Krönert
Mazen Alazazmeh
Minglei Chen
Monika Markova
Prijambada Das
Qian Liu
Seymur Mammadrza
Tofeek Sulieman
Vaishali Anavatti Satyamurthy
Xiaochun Sun
Xuan Duong Bui
Ya Goa
Yan Gao
Ying Tian
Yu Wang
Zein MahmoudBetreuer
Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Philippe Schmidt M.Sc. / Dipl.-Arch. Martin Bielik / Dr. Adél Gyimóthy