Visiting real estate, playing on the computer - 360-degree technology is becoming increasingly common in everyday life. But what can such recordings achieve in teaching and research? Dr. Heinrich Söbke and Florian Wehking from Bauhaus-University Weimar explained this in their workshop and gave practical advice on how 360-degree images can be used. was
Weimar sounds different when you are blindfolded: It smells different, noises that are otherwise not noticeable thud in the ears, noises from traffic feel threatening. One's own footsteps grope through the space, the body has to reorientate itself. With perception exercises like these, Prof. Nathalie Singer and Francis Zeischegg from the Real.Sense.Lab sensitised the participants in their workshop. was
What is the most attractive means of transport in Weimar's city centre? What is the fastest and safest way to get from A to B? How can the traffic turnaround/a change in transport policies in Weimar succeed? Questions like these were discussed in detail in the workshop by Lena Klopfstein and Julius Uhlmann.
Beanie cap or shopping bag? That was the first crucial question at the workshop «Turn old to new». The workshop at Schlossplatz was initiated and offered by the textile workshop of the Bauhaus-Universität Weimar in cooperation with Studio.Stich. The aim was not only to give old fabrics new shapes with patterns and sewing machines, but also to learn more about the sustainable use of textiles. was
As part of a walk, Mats Werchohlad gave the participants of the workshop «Ways to an Ecological Bauhaus» access to and insights into the park along the Ilm. On the one hand, it was about the development of the historical Bauhaus, which was shaped by intensive and continuous confrontations with and about nature. On the other hand, there was the new ecological Bauhaus, for which the Ilmpark in particular offers potential as a model and learning space. lud