Balingen Garden Show 2023

Building design
The State Garden Show in Balingen will take place from May 5 to September 24, 2023 Image source: lohrer.hochrein office / Balingen Garden Show

The State Garden Show in Balingen will take place from May 5 to September 24, 2023 Image source: lohrer.hochrein office / Balingen Garden Show

The Balingen Garden Show will take place from May 5 to September 24, 2023. The town in Baden-Württemberg is hoping for a permanent upgrade by redesigning and redesigning parks and improving river access. Everything about the garden show here.

The Balingen Garden Show will take place from May 5 to September 24, 2023. The town in Baden-Württemberg is hoping for a permanent upgrade by redesigning and redesigning parks and improving river access. Everything about the garden show here.

The garden show will take place in Balingen between May 5, 2023 and September 24, 2023. The town hopes that measures such as the creation and redesign of green parks, improved access to the Eyach and Steinach rivers and the creation of new recreational areas near the town center will lead to a lasting improvement. Flood protection measures are also being implemented on the banks of the Eyach.

The city began creating a permanent and near-natural floodplain landscape as early as 2022. This will be a focus of the Balingen 2023 garden show. New playgrounds and an intergenerational activity park with a skate park, trampoline fields, ball games, a chess field and exercise equipment are also planned. The Eyach terraces and the new water gardens will provide access to the River Eyach. They will also offer a view of the Zollern Castle and Little Venice landmarks. The city also wants to revive its sulphur bath gardens and showcase their history.

Over 1,000 art and cultural events are planned in the 13 districts as part of the Balingen Garden Show. Around 35,000 inhabitants live in the heart of the Zollernalb district, all of whom should benefit from the 2023 garden show.

The Balingen 2023 Garden Show will take place on an area of around six hectares along the River Eyach. This is a tributary of the Neckar. The Steinach, which flows into the Eyach from Endingen, also borders the event site. In addition to the garden show, both the town and many other places in the region offer events as part of the garden show.

The Steinachterrassen at the waterfall, the Schwefelbadgärten, the Rappenturm, the Stadtbalkon with Zollernschlosssteg, the Wassergärten, the Eyachterrassen and the Kulturmeile are some of the most important venues of the Balingen Garden Show. The Etzelbach Playground, the Zwinger Garden, the City Garden, the Active Park, the Parkufersteg and the Adventure Meadows are also included.

A large number of exhibitions cover a wide range of topics. The exhibitors aim to raise awareness of local nature and inclusive, fair gardening. Regionality and sustainability are further focal points of the 143-day garden show. Among other things, events by ministries and state authorities will take place every 14 days. With many hands-on activities, their aim is to report on their work and shed light on the state of Baden-Württemberg from different angles.

Exhibitors from the region will be on site during the garden show in Balingen and contribute to the events with a wide range of products. There will be numerous pavilions, changing flower gardens, floristic exhibitions, showplaces and other green areas. Beekeeping, textile culture and groups such as the regional rural women will also be represented.

In addition, the Balingen 2023 Garden Show will be accompanied by numerous art events. From life-size swimmer figures, stone sculptures, planted staircases, bronze carvings and towers to graffiti, paintings and hands-on activities, there is a wide range on offer.

The town hopes that the entire summer of 2023 will become a major festival in Balingen. Historical rediscoveries and new recreational areas by the water are just as important as inclusive gardening and play. The water gardens and the new Eyachterrassen will be among the highlights.

The cultural mile will connect the city center with the Stadthalle and at the same time complement the garden show. Year-round events complete the program, as well as in the Aktivpark with the new youth center opening in 2021.

The location of the Balingen 2023 Garden Show in the city center is a challenge, but also a great opportunity to further develop the city. Previously unused areas are to be given new functions, which could strengthen Balingen’s external image. The city center is to be linked more intensively with the existing and new green spaces along the two bodies of water. This should invite people to use urban and natural open spaces to linger. At the same time, active offers are to be created.

The plans for the garden show are based on the results of various workshops to which the city’s citizens were invited. They were able to put their ideas and suggestions into practice. Together with them, the city would like to celebrate the first year of the new open spaces, which will be in place for decades, in summer 2023.

These are the most important goals of the Balingen 2023 Garden Show:

  • Making water bodies tangible and creating qualities of stay by the water
  • Linking the city center with the rivers through green interfaces
  • Improving the ecology for native flora and fauna
  • Creating continuous footpath and cycle path connections
  • Planning areas for both activities and relaxation
  • Involving all generations – from young to old

The planners lohrer.hochrein from Munich and Planstatt Senner from Überlingen worked closely with the city to achieve these goals. A season ticket for the Balingen 2023 Garden Show costs 90 euros (80 euros in advance). Day tickets are available for 14 euros. They will be available from spring.

By the way: a garden show will also be held in the Bavarian town of Freyung in 2023.

You can find an overview of all state garden shows and BUGA Mannheim 2023 here.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Gardens of the World – Belo Horizonte

Building design

Arte is currently showing the documentary series “Amazing Gardens”, which portrays extraordinary gardens around the world. The series presents projects from Germany, Mexico and China, among others. This week the journey takes us to Brazil. A sculpture park in the middle of the rainforest? That’s what you’ll find if you travel to Brazil. More precisely: to the south-east of Brazil, not far from the metropolis of Belo Horizonte. There, […]

Arte is currently showing the documentary series “Amazing Gardens”, which portrays extraordinary gardens around the world. The series presents projects from Germany, Mexico and China, among others. This week the journey takes us to Brazil.

A sculpture park in the middle of the rainforest? That’s what you’ll find if you travel to Brazil. More precisely: to the south-east of Brazil, not far from the metropolis of Belo Horizonte. There, in the hills of the city of Brumadhino, lies the Inhotim jungle garden. The Portuguese name Brumadinho literally means “little fog”. But in the decades of iron ore mining, the dust from the mines replaced the legendary clouds of mist.

All pictures: Cineteve

In the 1980s, the mine owner set out to save the destroyed nature. In 2007, art and plant lovers opened the largest open-air museum in Latin America. The design of the garden was inspired by the landscape architect, plant collector and painter Roberto Burle Marx. He was close to the architect Oscar Niemeyer and is considered the founder of modern Brazilian garden architecture. His interpretation of how man and art work together changed the relationship between Brazilians and their native nature.

Statues in harmony with nature

The Inhotim concept is an alternative to the classic practice of simply decorating parks with statues. Instead, it ties in with the credo of so-called Land Art of the 1970s: a passionate call to artists to leave museums behind and instead go out into nature and create something new in harmony with it.

Naturkundemuseum Stuttgart: Architecture meets nature experience anew

Building design
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Modern building with striking yellow roof on the waterfront, photographed by Dominik Ferl

The new Natural History Museum Stuttgart is more than just another museum building. It is the manifesto of a future in which architecture is no longer just a shell for exhibits, but a catalyst for the experience of nature itself. At a time when biodiversity exists mainly on PowerPoint slides and sustainability has degenerated into a buzzword, Stuttgart dares to strike a balance between high-tech architecture, ecological responsibility and digital staging. Here, concrete meets biodiversity and AI meets beetles – welcome to the next evolutionary step in building for nature.

  • Analysis of the current status quo of the Naturkundemuseum Stuttgart in comparison to similar institutions in Germany, Austria and Switzerland
  • Explaining the architectural and conceptual innovations of the new museum
  • Examination of the role of digitization and AI for exhibition, visitor guidance and building operation
  • Critical reflection on the sustainability strategy and its practical implementation
  • Discussion of the technical requirements for planners, building owners and operators
  • Discussion of the impact on the professional profile of architects and engineers
  • Overview of controversies, visions and the global classification of the project
  • Conclusion on why the Stuttgart Natural History Museum could be a blueprint for future museum buildings

Architecture as a natural space – status quo and aspirations

Let’s start with the initial situation: natural history museums are normally the domain of staid showcases, dusty dioramas and educational signage that oscillate somewhere between “Please do not touch” and “Attention, alarm system”. But the days when dinosaur bones and butterfly boxes were the height of museum sentiment are over. In Stuttgart, it has been understood that a natural history museum in the 21st century must do more than simply present collectibles. It is about nothing less than the radical reinvention of the experience of nature in space – and this in a region that is not exactly known for architectural avant-garde in the cultural sector. An international comparison shows: While Vienna relies on digital mediation with its Haus der Natur and Zurich reinterprets its collections in the context of urban biodiversity, Germany often sticks to the conventional approach. Stuttgart wants to break out of this corset – with architecture that not only exhibits nature, but makes it tangible.

The new concept is based on a spatial dramaturgy that transports the visitor into an architectural biotope from the very first step. It is not a linear sequence of exhibition halls, but a course that plays with space, light, materials and acoustics. The boundary between inside and outside becomes permeable, the transitions flow. The building – a hybrid of high-tech façade, low-tech climate control and landscape architecture – does not see itself as a neutral box, but as an active player in the natural world. Here, the architecture itself becomes an exhibit. In Germany, Austria and Switzerland, this is not yet standard, to put it mildly.

But aspirations and reality tend to diverge – especially in large-scale public projects. In Stuttgart, the bar is high because the museum has to deliver not only architecturally, but also museologically, technically and ecologically. The architectural challenge is to create spaces that are both flexible and highly specialized, in which scientific precision and emotional immersion are not contradictory. This calls for planners who not only draw floor plans, but also think in terms of narrative spaces. Operational staff must also master the balancing act between an affinity for technology and communicating nature. In short, anyone who wants to get involved here needs more than traditional construction expertise.

In an international comparison, the Stuttgart project is therefore exemplary of a paradigm shift that is only slowly gaining acceptance. Architecture is becoming a mediator, a translator between man and nature. It is no longer enough to catalog biodiversity – it must become tangible, smellable, audible and (almost) touchable. An aspiration that is still far too rarely fulfilled in the DACH region, but which has the potential to fundamentally change the museum landscape.

Reactions to this approach are predictably divided. Some celebrate the break with museum conventions, while others warn against eventization and the loss of scientific respectability. But the debate is necessary – it shows how much the new Natural History Museum Stuttgart acts as a catalyst for a profound discussion about the relationship between architecture, nature and society. Anyone looking for the future of museum architecture should take a closer look here.

Digital museums, real experiences – digitalization and AI as game changers

It would be naïve to believe that the new Natural History Museum Stuttgart could score points with architectural means alone. In the age of TikTok and virtual reality, the public expects more than just beautifully placed fossils. Digital transformation here doesn’t just mean a touchscreen next to the display case, but the consistent integration of data, simulation and artificial intelligence into all levels of museum operations. This starts with visitor management: sensor technology and AI-supported analyses enable dynamic control of visitor flows, prevent overcrowding and create individual experience spaces. Anyone who still assumes rigid opening hours and printed admission tickets has long since missed the boat.

Digitalization is also radically rethinking the exhibition itself. Interactive exhibits, augmented reality and data-based presentations are transforming the museum into a laboratory for environmental education. Visitors can interact in real time with digital twins of extinct species, simulate ecological relationships or navigate through the building using AI-controlled guides. For planners and architects, this means that spaces must not only function in analog form, but also be designed as an infrastructure for digital experiences. Network architecture, media technology and data management are becoming central planning categories.

The exciting thing is that digitalization is not only transforming the exhibition, but also building operation. Intelligent control systems optimize energy consumption, lighting control and air conditioning in real time. Building technology is no longer hidden away in the basement, but is becoming an integral part of the museum architecture. AI-based monitoring tools enable predictive maintenance and reduce the ecological footprint. This turns museum construction itself into a demonstrator for sustainable building technology – an approach that has so far only been pursued tentatively in the DACH region.

Another field: open data and citizen science. The museum is not only opening its doors to the public, but also its databases. Scientific collections are digitized, made accessible to researchers and amateur biologists worldwide and linked to current research projects. The architecture must reflect this new openness spatially and technically. Anyone who believes that museums are static repositories of knowledge will be proven wrong in Stuttgart.

Of course, there are also downsides. The danger of over-staging, algorithmic bias and data monetization is real. Anyone who thinks the digital transformation through to the end must ask themselves how much technology the experience of nature can tolerate without degenerating into a mere show. The discussion is open – and Stuttgart provides the perfect testing ground.

Sustainability Reloaded – sustainability as a compulsory architectural exercise?

Sustainability has been the big mantra of museum architecture even before Fridays for Future. However, there is a gap as big as the hole in Stuttgart’s main railway station between rhetoric and building practice. The new Natural History Museum promises a lot: energy-efficient construction, use of renewable energies, resource-conserving materials, a well thought-out climate concept and maximum flexibility. Sounds good – but what’s behind it? The entire life cycle of the building was simulated during the design phase. From the extraction of raw materials to the construction phase and later dismantling – everything was cast in life cycle assessments that left the planners little room for excuses. The façade is made from a mix of recycled materials, the building services work in conjunction with natural ventilation and shading systems. Rainwater is collected, the roofscape is used as a biotope and the green spaces are designed according to ecological principles.

But sustainability is more than just technology. It is a question of attitude – and of operation. The museum relies on a circular utilization concept: exhibitions are modular, materials can be reused and the infrastructure can be flexibly adapted. Digital control enables precise analysis and optimization of resource consumption. Visitors are not seen as passive consumers, but as part of an ecological system. Educational programs and participative formats promote awareness of sustainability – far beyond the museum visit.

Compared to other museums – such as the Natural History Museum in Vienna or the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin – Stuttgart is more courageous. While elsewhere there are still discussions about energy-efficient refurbishment, here the focus is on a prototype for the sustainable museum building of the future. Of course, criticism remains: the high technical outlay and complex systems make operation challenging, the investment costs are considerable and the ecological impact must first be proven in long-term tests. But anyone who only looks at the status quo is missing the opportunity to see the museum as an experimental space for sustainable building.

The tension between ambition and feasibility is obvious. Sustainability must not be allowed to degenerate into mere image cultivation. The Stuttgart approach is convincing because it considers sustainability not as an add-on, but as a basic principle – spatially, technically and organizationally. For planners, engineers and operators, this means that anyone who wants to survive in this segment needs in-depth expertise in building physics, building technology, materials science, data management and, of course, the art of managing complexity. Museum construction is therefore becoming a stress test for the entire industry.

The real innovation, however, is the combination of sustainability, digitalization and nature education. The museum is not just green because it saves energy. It is sustainable because it enables people to understand nature and its fragility. Architecture as environmental education – that is the new standard. Let’s hope that the DACH region picks up on this impulse instead of continuing to hide behind renovation backlogs and DIN standards.

Technical expertise and new job profiles – what architects need to learn now

Anyone who thinks that a natural history museum is a classic cultural building with a few showcases has not taken the new technical requirements into account. The architecture of the Stuttgart Natural History Museum is a prime example of how the job profile of architects, engineers and museum planners is changing radically. It is no longer enough to draw plans and manage construction. Hybrid skills are in demand: Building technology, digital media systems, data management, sustainability certifications and user experience are merging into a new job profile. Anyone who does not keep up with this will be overwhelmed by the complexity of building for nature.

Even the planning phase is a digital minefield. BIM-supported processes, simulations of user flows, material flow analyses and lifecycle considerations are standard. In addition, there are interfaces with exhibition curators, media technicians and environmental scientists. The architect becomes the coordinator of an interdisciplinary team that goes far beyond traditional architecture. Stuttgart is an example of how the architect becomes an orchestrating generalist who has to combine technical, creative and social skills.

It doesn’t get any easier in operation. The integration of AI into building automation, the control of air conditioning and lighting systems, the integration of visitor apps and digital learning platforms – all of this requires technical understanding and ongoing training. The requirements for IT security are growing, as are the expectations for data protection. If you want to maintain an overview, you need solid basic training in data technologies and system integration.

The view of the tasks of museum operators and curators is also changing. Digital mediation, open access strategies and participatory formats require communication skills and an understanding of digital communities. The technical infrastructure is becoming the backbone of museum operations – and therefore a task for everyone involved. The times when architects and operators inhabited separate worlds are over. In Stuttgart, we are currently learning how difficult – and how exciting – this symbiosis can be.

The training landscape must react. Universities and chambers are called upon to integrate new teaching content, promote cooperation with technical and environmental subjects and prepare the next generation of planners for the challenges ahead. Anyone who works at the Natural History Museum Stuttgart today is writing the professional biography of the future. And for all its complexity, that’s a pretty attractive prospect.

Global impulses, local controversies – the Naturkundemuseum Stuttgart in the architectural discourse

By global standards, the Naturkundemuseum Stuttgart is an ambitious statement. At a time when museums are torn between digitalization, sustainability and social relevance, Stuttgart is opting for radicalism instead of mediocrity. The discussion surrounding the building reaches far beyond the region and strikes a chord in the international architectural debate. Museums are becoming forums for social dialog, fields of experimentation for new technologies and showcases for dealing with the planetary crisis. The Stuttgart project is part of a movement that sees museums as actors in ecological and digital change.

However, as the claim grows, so does the resistance. Critics complain about the high costs, the complexity of the technology, the risk of over-staging and the question of whether a museum building can really make a contribution to sustainability. The debates are not new, but they have been rekindled by the Stuttgart project. The local public is divided, experts are tense, politicians are cautiously optimistic. The discourse is characterized by the search for a balance between innovation and feasibility, between narrative and science, between technology and nature.

What do we learn from this? Architecture is no longer an end in itself or an expression of aesthetic preferences. It is becoming a tool for social transformation – and a measure of how serious we are about combining technology, nature and education. The Naturkundemuseum Stuttgart is not a finished product, but an open process that allows for mistakes, demands experiments and breaks with expectations. It is not perfect – but it is courageous.

The international response shows: There is great interest in new forms of building for nature. Museums in London, New York and Copenhagen are keeping a close eye on what is being created in Stuttgart – and what mistakes are being made. The global architecture scene is looking for answers to the question of how spaces can be created that convey knowledge, protect nature and inspire people. Stuttgart is making an exciting contribution – and setting standards by which others must be measured.

At the end of the day, the realization is that the future of museum construction will be decided at the interface of architecture, technology and ecology. Those who boldly lead the way here can set impulses that have an impact far beyond their own walls. The Naturkundemuseum Stuttgart is such an impulse – and will continue to generate discussion for a long time to come.

Conclusion: Architecture for nature – a radical change of perspective

The new Naturkundemuseum Stuttgart is more than just a building. It is a laboratory for the future of construction, an experimental space for digital and sustainable architecture and a source of courage for an industry that too often hides behind tradition. The combination of high-tech, nature experience and social relevance is not a sure-fire success – but it is necessary. Stuttgart shows how architecture can become a catalyst for new forms of learning, experience and action. The challenges are immense, the risks real, the opportunities enormous. Anyone who sees the museum as a static repository of knowledge has not understood anything. It is time to rethink architecture – as a stage for nature, as a platform for innovation and as a driving force for a sustainable society.