Call for Contributions Interdisciplinary Doctoral Colloquium | Gdańsk University of Technology

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Date added: 2026-05-25

Call for Contributions Interdisciplinary Doctoral Colloquium

umbau
RWTH Aachen University • 15–16 October 2026

Enhancing Umbau: Interdisciplinary Practices and Processes

Interdisciplinary Doctoral Colloquium • RWTH Aachen University • 15–16 October 2026

Doctoral researchers are invited to submit proposals for a one-day interdisciplinary colloquium on Umbau – the adaptation, transformation and continued use of existing buildings, neighbourhoods, and urban environments.

The colloquium gathers early-career researchers from many disciplines that engage with the built and lived environment, providing a platform to discuss the conditions, practices, and processes of Umbau from an interdisciplinary perspective.

While maintaining, renovating, remodelling and adaptively reusing existing buildings is as old as architecture itself, Umbau remains marginal in a planning and construction culture that still organises around new construction. In Germany, only around 8% of the building stock is expected to consist of new construction between 2022 and 2035; the remaining 92% will involve working with what is already there. Umbau is working with the existing, climate and use adaptation, demographic change, and shifting use requirements.

It also reshapes the conditions under which people inhabit and appropriate space – disrupting or reinforcing community ties, producing new contests over belonging and memory, and raising questions about who bears the burdens of transformation and who benefits from it. However, it also encounters persistent obstacles in the form of regulatory frameworks, liability regimes, economic logics, and comfort standards that all favour new construction.

Our aim is to position Umbau as a systematic driver of a resource‑efficient, climate‑neutral, healthy, just, and aesthetically rich built environment. Consequently, the colloquium will examine Umbau practices as systematised modes of action, knowledge production and lived experience that actors across disciplines employ when engaging with existing buildings and structures.

Professional, non‑professional, and institutionalised practices – ranging from spontaneous, evolving, experimental to deviant forms – will be considered.

This colloquium is based on the idea that the potential of Umbau is realised at the intersection of disciplines, where architectural design, building conservation, construction, building systems, design computation, urban planning, architectural history, artistic research, and social geography meet, overlap, and interact – bringing together material, spatial, social, cultural, and political perspectives on the built and lived environment.

Four Core Concepts

Temporality

From real-time design computation to centuries-long historical cycles, Umbau unfolds across intertwined timeframes. How are short-term interventions and long-term consequences negotiated? How do the differing temporal horizons of planners, designers, users, conservators and investors come into contact? What does it mean to plan for an open-ended process where waiting, uncertainty and incremental adaptation are structural features rather than failures? Contributions might address layering and palimpsest, life cycles, intergenerational responsibility, or the temporal mismatches between project time and lived everyday time.

Valuation

Assessment of the existing is foundational to any Umbau practice, yet rests on contested and shifting criteria. Economic, ecological, use, symbolic, historical, architectural, conceptual, and social values coexist and compete; their weighting changes over time and across scales. Whose valuations are heard, and whose are sidelined? How do we evaluate what is worth keeping when parameters remain partially unknown? Contributions might address criteria for working with historic layers, dynamic and iterative valuation in design, cross-scale assessment of building and neighbourhood qualities, or valuation as a political process.

Friction

Friction in Umbau is not a peripheral inconvenience but a structural driver. Unforeseen conditions, gaps between planned and actual states, collaborative practices that collide with industrial standards, top-down planning meeting bottom-up agency, market rationalities meeting lived attachments – frictions are productive as much as they are obstructive. Contributions might examine technical-regulatory tensions, conflicts between competing requirements, governance frictions, the uneven distribution of adaptation burdens, or the everyday frictions of inhabiting and negotiating spaces under transformation.

Convergence

If friction is the resistance, convergence is the binding force of Umbau. How do fragmented data, disciplinary expertise, stakeholder interests, and material potentials get re-assembled into coordinated outcomes? Convergence is critical: dynamic redevelopment models, planning vocabularies and design templates produce similarity across places that may erase local specificity and displace locally grounded practices and identities. Contributions might address handovers between survey and design, cross-scale coordination of planning instruments, new actor constellations and shared agency, or the simultaneous occurrence of convergence and divergence in lived outcomes.


Who should participate

Doctoral and early-career researchers at any stage, working in or across the following fields: architectural design, typology, architectural history, building conservation, building systems and construction, design computation, urban planning, artistic research, and human geography. Adjacent perspectives – e.g. building construction, material sciences, art history, building law, real-estate economics, sociology, environmental science – are explicitly welcome, provided they connect to the four core concepts.

We especially encourage proposals that speak across disciplinary boundaries: work that locates itself at an intersection, makes its disciplinary assumptions explicit, and offers something its neighbours can take up. Empirical, theoretical, design-based, and artistic-research contributions are equally welcome.

Format and Submission

Format 15-minute talk followed by discussion.
Working language English (discussion may be bilingual English/German).
Proposal Abstract of max. 400 words + short bio (max. 100 words). Indicate which of the four core concepts the contribution engages with and state your disciplinary background.
Submission One combined PDF sent by e-mail to umbau@arch.rwth-aachen.de
Deadline for proposal 10 July 2026
Notification of acceptance 31 July 2026
Conference proceedings Submission of an extended abstract for the conference proceedings (to be published in the RWTH Publication database) with 1.000-1.200 words, one illustration, up to 10 references.
Deadline 7 September 2026
Colloquium 15 October 2026 (evening) & 16 October 2026 (all day), Reiff Museum, RWTH Aachen University.
Publication Selected contributors will be invited to submit full papers for a peer-reviewed thematic collection on www.archimaera.de, which is due to be published in summer/autumn 2027.

The colloquium builds on ongoing work of an interdisciplinary research group within the Built and Lived Environment research area at RWTH Aachen University.

The call is hosted by

Jakob Beetz, Anne-Julchen Bernhardt, Agnes Förster, Susanne Hefti, Anke Naujokat, Christian Raabe, Daniele Santucci, and Sakura Yamamura.

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