Airports

Tempelhofer Feld, one of Europe’s largest urban open spaces, has long been a focal point of debate, particularly since its closure as an airport in 2008. Over the years, the site has sparked public protests, legal disputes, and heated discussions about its future. Now, after a highly anticipated international competition, the winning proposals have been […]

Parco della Pace is a transformation of a former airport into a vast ecological machine that operates simultaneously as water infrastructure, biodiversity habitat, and public space. Parco della Pace offers a complex interplay of geometries—traces of the former runway, the rigid grids of adjacent military grounds, and the superimposed logic of new water systems—generating a distinct spatial language that remains legible at multiple scales.

What distinguishes this project is its unapologetic embrace of scale, engineering, and earthworks, yet without sacrificing ecological subtlety. The site functions as a large-scale detention basin, integrating hydrological processes into a resilient landscape capable of absorbing and slowly releasing floodwaters. Water becomes both technical infrastructure and ecological mediator, generating new habitat edges and transitional ecotones that allow species to recolonize this former infrastructural void.

Beyond its technical accomplishments, Parco della Pace also offers a productive ambiguity between program and process. Today, it offers a base that is generous, extensive, and resolutely territorial in scale. In time, it will negotiate between the formal and the open-ended, between cultural programming and wilderness zones left to self-organisation. The project resists the impulse for total scripting, instead establishing a layered framework that will evolve across ecological time. In this sense, the park presents a form of engineered openness, where large-scale interventions initiate processes whose full resolution remains necessarily incomplete.

– from the LILA Jury statements

Surfacedesign: Auckland International Airport is strategically located on the eastern edge of an isthmus of the North Island of New Zealand, where the topography unfolds into the rugged coastline. Along this eastern coast, New Zealand welcomes the globe’s first light of day and watches as the seasons change in dramatic shifts. Although 70% of visitors […]

By joining forces with Arts of the Working Class (AWC), Architects4THF responds to the Ideenwettbewerb Tempelhofer Feld 2024-2025, by presenting a call for contributions to interrogate the ethical role of planners in shaping the future of cities, and to question their responsibilities within the building industry. The selected contributions will shape the flipside of AWC’s […]

Purpose of the Competition Following the closure of Tempelhof Airport, Berlin gained a key urban open space now enjoyed for recreation. Protected by the Tempelhofer Feld Law, this area faces new challenges, including housing needs. Berlin’s CDU and SPD coalition is considering thoughtful peripheral development, retaining most of the space for public use. This open […]

Northcrest Developments has launched a global design competition to transform a 2-km decommissioned runway at the former Downsview Airport in Toronto into a vibrant pedestrian corridor. The competition aims to make the runway a key feature of the future 370-acre community, connecting seven neighborhoods with public spaces, amenities, and recreational areas for 55,000 residents and […]

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