Refine
Document Type
- Article (24) (remove)
Keywords
- 3D urban planning (1)
- Aerospace Engineering (1)
- Agile administration (1)
- Autofähre (1)
- Baden-Württemberg (1)
- Balancing energy (1)
- Baugrundverbesserung (1)
- Binnenflotte (1)
- Building with earth (1)
- CSV Verfahren (1)
Institute
- Fakultät Bauingenieurwesen (24) (remove)
Infolge des Klimawandels sind entlang der Gewässer Baden-Württembergs verschärfte Niedrigwassersituationen zu erwarten, die unter Umständen zu Wassernutzungskonflikten der lokalen Akteure führen. Anhand des Kochers und der Murg wurden mit Hilfe einer Stakeholder-Analyse solche Konflikte identifiziert sowie erste Handlungsoptionen für eine Niedrigwasservorsorge bzw. ein Niedrigwassermanagement erarbeitet. Den Erhebungen zufolge treten Wassernutzungskonkurrenzen in fast allen Nutzergruppen auf, jedoch mit unterschiedlicher Ausprägung. Hierbei stehen bestimmte Sektoren teilweise mit mehreren Stakeholder-Gruppen im Widerstreit, andere Gruppen haben dagegen keine Erfahrung mit Konkurrenzsituationen. Weiterhin ist auffällig, dass Niedrigwasserereignisse an beiden Flüssen lediglich einen Teil der Nutzungskonflikte auslösen. Ein Großteil der Streitfragen wird durch anthropogene Einflüsse verursacht.
Multi-faceted stresses of social, environmental, and economic nature are increasingly challenging the existence and sustainability of our societies. Cities in particular are disproportionately threatened by global issues such as climate change, urbanization, population growth, air pollution, etc. In addition, urban space is often too limited to effectively develop sustainable, nature-based solutions while accommodating growing populations. This research aims to provide new methodologies by proposing lightweight green bridges in inner-city areas as an effective land value capture mechanism. Geometry analysis was performed using geospatial and remote sensing data to provide geometrically feasible locations of green bridges. A multi-criteria decision analysis was applied to identify suitable locations for green bridges investigating Central European urban centers with a focus on German cities as representative examples. A cost-benefit analysis was performed to assess the economic feasibility using a case study. The results of the geometry analysis identified 3249 locations that were geometrically feasible to implement a green bridge in German cities. The sample locations from the geometry analysis were proved to be validated for their implementation potential. Multi-criteria decision analysis was used to select 287 sites that fall under the highest suitable class based on several criteria. The cost-benefit analysis of the case study showed that the market value of the property alone can easily outweigh the capital and maintenance costs of a green bridge, while the indirect (monetary) benefits of the green space continue to increase the overall value of the green bridge property including its neighborhood over time. Hence, we strongly recommend light green bridges as financially sustainable and nature-based solutions in cities worldwide.
Cities around the world are facing the implications of a changing climate as an increasingly pressing issue. The negative effects of climate change are already being felt today. Therefore, adaptation to these changes is a mission that every city must master. Leading practices worldwide demonstrate various urban efforts on climate change adaptation (CCA) which are already underway. Above all, the integration of climate data, remote sensing, and in situ data is key to a successful and measurable adaptation strategy. Furthermore, these data can act as a timely decision support tool for municipalities to develop an adaptation strategy, decide which actions to prioritize, and gain the necessary buy-in from local policymakers. The implementation of agile data workflows can facilitate the integration of climate data into climate-resilient urban planning. Due to local specificities, (supra)national, regional, and municipal policies and (by) laws, as well as geographic and related climatic differences worldwide, there is no single path to climate-resilient urban planning. Agile data workflows can support interdepartmental collaboration and, therefore, need to be integrated into existing management processes and government structures. Agile management, which has its origins in software development, can be a way to break down traditional management practices, such as static waterfall models and sluggish stage-gate processes, and enable an increased level of flexibility and agility required when urgent. This paper presents the findings of an empirical case study conducted in cooperation with the City of Constance in southern Germany, which is pursuing a transdisciplinary and trans-sectoral co-development approach to make management processes more agile in the context of climate change adaptation. The aim is to present a possible way of integrating climate data into CCA planning by changing the management approach and implementing a toolbox for low-threshold access to climate data. The city administration, in collaboration with the University of Applied Sciences Constance, the Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS), and the University of Stuttgart, developed a co-creative and participatory project, CoKLIMAx, with the objective of integrating climate data into administrative processes in the form of a toolbox. One key element of CoKLIMAx is the involvement of the population, the city administration, and political decision-makers through targeted communication and regular feedback loops among all involved departments and stakeholder groups. Based on the results of a survey of 72 administrative staff members and a literature review on agile management in municipalities and city administrations, recommendations on a workflow and communication structure for cross-departmental strategies for resilient urban planning in the City of Constance were developed.
Weder für moderne Recycling-Betone gemäß Regelwerk noch für Ziegelsplittbetone der Nachkriegsjahre bestehen prinzipielle Bedenken gegen deren Einsatz oder die Weiternutzung im Hochbau. Die Autoren wünschen sich mehr Akzeptanz und Vertrauen in Recyclingbaustoffe und dass sich für "Vintage" im Baubereich irgendwann ein ähnliches Interesse herausbildet wie für Vintage-Möbel oder Used-Look-Kleidung - und dies nicht nur hinsichtlich der Wiederverwendung gebrauchter Türen und Treppen, sondern auch für mineralische Massenbaustoffe wie Beton. Der Beitrag veranschaulicht anhand erfolgreich realisierter Objektbeispiele, wie Hochhäuser (z.B. das Studentenwohnheim Max-Kade-Haus in Stuttgart, 1953, aus Bauschuttbeton) oder Sakralgebäude (Fatima-Kirche in Kassel aus Sichtbeton mit Ziegelbruch, 60 Jahre alt) sowie auch Verwaltungsbauten (Technisches Rathaus in Tübingen aus den 1950er Jahren) erfolgreich und nachhaltig mit Recyclingmaterialien errichtet wurden.
Von wegen Bauschutt
(2020)
RC-Betone sind keine Neu-Entwicklungen, aber sie erleben seit circa 15 Jahren in Deutschland eine Renaissance mit Materialzusammensetzungen, die den heutigen Anforderungen an Normalbetone gerecht werden. Es gab immer wieder Abschnitte in der (Bau-)Geschichte, in denen Gebäude aus Ziegelsplitt-Betonen errichtet wurden, wie das Max-Kade-Studentenwohnheim in Stuttgart und das Technische Rathaus in Tübingen. Beide stammen aus der Nachkriegszeit und weisen einen guten Erhaltungszustand auf. Sie sind Beispiele für die Bewährung "historischer" Ziegelsplitt-Betone in der Baupraxis und ihre lange technische Lebensdauer.
Purpose
In order to combat climate change and safeguard a liveable future we need fundamental and rapid social change. Climate communication can play an important role to nurture the public engagement needed for this change, and higher education for sustainability can learn from climate communication.
Approach
The scientific evidence base on climate communication for effective public engagement is summarised into ten key principles, including ‘basing communication on people’s values’, ‘conscious use of framing’, and ‘turning concern into action’. Based on the author’s perspective and experience in the university context, implications are explored for sustainability in higher education.
Findings
The article provides suggestions for teaching (e.g. complement information with consistent behaviour by the lecturer, integrate local stories, and provide students with basic skills to communicate climate effectively), for research (e.g. make teaching for effective engagement the subject of applied research), for universities’ third mission to contribute to sustainable development
in the society (e.g. provide climate communication trainings to empower local stakeholders), andgreening the campus (develop a proper engagement infrastructure, e.g. by a university storytelling exchange on climate action).
Originality
The article provides an up-to-date overview of climate communication research, which is in itself original. This evidence base holds interesting learnings for institutions of higher education, and the link between climate communication and universities has so far not been explored comprehensively.
In einigen europäischen Nachbarländern herrschen weitaus schlechtere Voraussetzungen für die Binnen-schifffahrt als in Deutschland. Die wenigsten Länder verfügen über eine so effiziente Wasserstraße wie beispielsweise den Rhein. Dennoch forcieren nicht wenige die Verlagerung von Transporten von der Straße auf das Binnenschiff.