21-year-old Viviane Vu is the first of this year’s Baumeister Academy winners to start her internship at one of three internationally active architecture firms in 2018. To get the chance of an internship, the applicants first had to solve a challenging task: a standing-grip design for mobile living and sleeping spaces for the homeless. Viviane Vu impressed us with her competition entry […]
21-year-old Viviane Vu is the first of this year’s Baumeister Academy winners to start her internship at one of three internationally active architecture firms in 2018. To get the chance of an internship, the applicants first had to solve a challenging task: a standing-grip design for mobile living and sleeping spaces for the homeless. Viviane Vu won us over with her competition entry, the rolling shelter for the homeless. We introduce you to Viviane and her design.
This week, Viviane starts her internship at MVRDV as the youngest of this year’s Baumeister Academy round, moving from Stuttgart to Rotterdam for six months. Before she started studying architecture and urban planning at the University of Stuttgart, she completed a voluntary social year at the Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe. Viviane Vu is looking forward to sharing her impressions and experiences with the Baumeister Academy from mid-March, and so are we.
Viviane VU entered the competition with her project ‘Heimfahrt’. Based in Stuttgart, where she lives, Viviane looked at a problem that is typical of large cities: in winter, many homeless people flee from the cold to subway and suburban train stations. In her design, the night does not end at the train tracks, but the one ‘ride home’ picks up the homeless. At first glance, it looks like a normal streetcar carriage, but when you get on, you see that the benches have been replaced by sanitary facilities, sleeping cabins or communal areas. The ‘Heimfahrt’ offers homeless people a warm place to sleep at night and a place to meet other people in need of help, citizens and social workers during the day. Viviane’s design therefore not only provides a safe place to sleep, but also a place that contributes to integration into society.












