After four years, Hamburg will once again award the International Ideas Prize in February 2023. All about the conditions of participation for students and young graduates
The blue-green district of tomorrow
The City of Hamburg awards the Otto Linne Prize every three to four years. In 2023, the overarching theme is climate adaptation in urban and open space planning. The task involves a neighborhood from the 1960s with typical row buildings in Hamburg-Harburg. In the Eißendorf area, there are special needs for climate adaptation, as the settlement area is in a peripheral location.
Students and young graduates of landscape architecture can apply with innovative ideas. They should develop a position on urban landscape architecture and its current challenges. The City of Hamburg will open applications from February 2023.
The Otto Linne Prize is an invitation to students and young graduates to engage with current topics in landscape architecture and open space planning. The name of the prize refers to the first Hamburg garden director Otto Linne (1869-1937). The first phase of the competition focuses on future tasks and visionary ideas for the competition area. This is followed by the second phase, in which up to five selected teams take part. They will flesh out their ideas in a workshop with local residents.
Otto Linne Prize 2023: The brief
Under the title “Between the lines: The blue-green quarter of tomorrow”, the Otto Linne Competition 2023 is about the Lühmannstrasse quarter in Hamburg-Eißendorf. It is around 21 hectares in size and serves as an example. This is because there are many similar districts in Hamburg from the post-war years that are in urgent need of renovation. The typical row development with generous spaces in between offers the opportunity to develop solutions for contemporary, climate-adapted open spaces.
Participants in the competition should come up with ideas that go beyond purely functional aspects. It is important to develop a position that stands for forward-looking, urban landscape architecture. The solution should address the challenges of climate protection and climate adaptation. In addition to landscape architecture and open space planning approaches, the jury therefore also welcomes urban planning, architectural, traffic, sociological, ecological and artistic perspectives. The ideas should have a clear reference to the location, but should also be transferable to similar environments.
Accordingly, the first phase of the Otto Linne competition is about thinking on a large scale at the neighborhood level. Climate adaptation measures such as the greening of buildings and streets, rainwater management, the reorganization of traffic areas and the use of plants are particularly important here. In the second phase, the ideas are fleshed out with a view to implementation. Practical solutions are developed in cooperation with residents and housing companies.
Who can apply?
The Otto Linne Prize is an international prize for ideas. It is primarily aimed at students and young graduates of landscape architecture. However, other faculties are also eligible if there is a chair for landscape architecture or open space planning at the university. Supervision by a professor is required.
Participants should work in interdisciplinary teams and team up with experts in urban and transportation planning, architecture, economics and design, for example. The participants should include a lead person from the field of landscape architecture. They must have graduated no more than two years ago. If desired, the competition task can be used as a term paper or student project.
Registration takes place online and is free of charge. Participants should summarize the core content of their work on two DIN A0 sheets in portrait format. Other forms of presentation such as models, storyboards or films are also permitted as long as the medium is thematically appropriate. Registration for the Otto Linne Prize 2023 will begin in February 2023. The first jury meeting will take place in June 2023 and the second in November. The first prize is endowed with prize money of 5,000 euros as well as travel expenses to Hamburg.
Read more: Hamburg is also offering a prize for green buildings under the title “Greening the City”











