In conversation with Wolfgang Schück about the role of landscape architecture, design processes and the work on the Hambach Palace Gardens.
Wolfgang Schück proved his staying power with the Hambach Castle park. After 15 years, the project is expected to be completed in 2017. In this interview, he explains how to deal with such an important historical site and what role landscape architecture should now play.
Garten + Landschaft: Mr. Schück, what does it take to design good landscape architecture?
Wolfgang Schück: When I come to a place, I try to be impartial, mistrust my standards and preconceived attitudes, and let myself be inspired on site by what is already there and what the place is willing to tell me.
Since it was founded, LOMA has worked across disciplines and professional boundaries. Are you a visionary?
As specialization continues to advance, I see myself more as an anachronist, because our office is a spin-off of the Kassel School, so to speak. This was a university attempt to combine landscape architecture, urban planning and architecture in one subject. In the 16th and 17th centuries, people were already working in such a way that science and art were inseparable. They went hand in hand and thus created innovation. As the amount of data increased in the 19th century, the disciplines drifted apart. I think the 21st century has to bring the disciplines back together across their boundaries. For landscape architecture, I would like to see it become the leading discipline, spreading out like a permeable envelope and constantly capturing and connecting its sisters, urban planning and architecture. Similar to what happened in the humanities with the rise of cultural studies.
You have been working with the same partners since 1994. What is the secret of your business partnership?
We come from different disciplines and there is always a lively exchange. This morning I come into the office, which is on the roof of a bunker, and it’s like a dovecote. We can help each other by bringing a new perspective into play. I’m barely in the door when one of my partners wants to talk about digital design methods, then another joins me and we discuss his building construction project. At the end of the day, we leave the office with the knowledge that we have found a solution together – on an equal footing.
You studied landscape architecture and urban planning. Do you feel more like an urban planner or more like a landscape architect?
To be honest, I no longer feel any difference.
Do you feel more comfortable working on historical sites such as Hambach Castle or when you have a completely free hand?
History, geography and archaeology are related disciplines, so when you talk to each other it’s nice to listen to you. In a way, I sit down in front of the castle, listen to these voices and let them inspire me. That really fulfills me. When I think about it, I have never had a “free hand” in this sense with any project.
In a nutshell: What advice would you give students today?
A job description is like a dress that doesn’t fit, you stand in front of the mirror and it’s always tight and unflattering. I therefore wish all students that they tailor several professional “dresses” for themselves and think outside the box.
Profile
Name: Wolfgang Schück
Year of birth: 1965
Study: Landscape architecture and urban planning
Profession: Landscape architect, urban planner and partner at LOMA architecture.landscape.urbanism, Kassel
Current project: Hambach Castle Gardens, Neustadt an der Weinstraße












