Over the past few years, we have supported numerous property developers, companies and municipalities in their transformation. In doing so, we have learnt to understand ambivalent requirements as potential for innovation and resilience. Based on this practice, we have developed four approaches with which we develop solutions for the diverse needs of our clients:
Resource-oriented building
Building as a resource. The demands on cities and landscapes, on our living and working spaces, are changing. The available resources are gaining more importance than ever – ecologically, economically and socially.This affects our economy, the diversity of our ecosystems and the built environment. In our daily work we focus on quality of life, resilience, biodiversity and resource management.
Dialogue processes
Change needs support. Planning and communication must be intertwined in transformation processes. Through dialogue processes, we are able to reconcile various stakeholders with today’s and tomorrow’s diverse requirements. We are curious and open to the different perspectives.
For us, contradictions are a potential for innovation.
Cross-scale planing
From big to small. And vice versa. Cross-scale conceptualisation is the tool we use to implement integrative planning and to overcome silo mentality. Depending on the task at hand, urban planners, architects, interior designers and communication experts work together, combining overarching strategic goals with the individual needs of occupants.This is how we design spaces that enrich our lives and are in harmony with our environment.
Knowledge-based design
Our work thrives on dialog. By this we do not just refer to the verbal exchange, but also the exchange on a methodological level. In our daily work, we combine traditional design skills with data-based digital tools such as BIM or life cycle analyses to make the impact on sustainability measurable right from the design stage.

