Housing is subject to constant change. To make housing socially, ecologically, and spatially equitable and sustainable, we must first understand how social change and the material aspects of architecture, neighborhoods, and settlements—including their infrastructures and open spaces—influence each other. We must also explore the opportunities, contradictions, and conflicts that arise from the tension between the spatial manifestation of housing and social transformation. Specifically, housing, which is largely organized according to market principles and characterized by social individualization, is currently undergoing profound change due to globalized, financialized, and flexibilized capitalism against the backdrop of multiple crises and social transformations. This conference aims to explore these developments and examine the interaction between structural, spatial, and social aspects.
Events
Annual conference 2026
Weiter Wohnen wie gewohnt? Gesellschaftliche Transformation und räumliche Materialisierung des Wohnens
Housing Lab
Whether it's rising rents and displacement, modernization and new construction projects, the business policies of public housing companies, or the simultaneous existence of vacant properties and homelessness: the housing issue is a hot topic in Frankfurt and one of the city's main areas of conflict. In various formats and on current occasions, the Wohnlabor works with tenants and those affected by the housing crisis, with scientists, experts, and activists from civil society, with exciting guests from outside the city, and with anyone interested in (Frankfurt) urban society.
Wohnen in Frankfurt – kritische Bestandsaufnahme und politische Perspektiven.
Zwischen Wohnungsnot und Klimakrise: Strategien einer Wärmewende für alle
Leerstand zu Wohnraum – aber wie? Erfahrungen, Handlungsspielräume und Herausforderungen
Perspektiven für den Umgang mit Boden
Lecture series (Winter Semester 2025/26)
Destruction – Shelter – Future. Living during and after war How does war affect housing, and what can we learn about war from the perspective of housing? In seven sessions, international researchers from the fields of urban planning, human geography, architecture, art history, law, and anthropology will examine the political, economic, structural, and social dimensions of housing provision in times of impending and ongoing war and subsequent post-war periods. The contributions look at developments in Bosnia, Germany, Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Ukraine and show how war destroys existing orders and structures, what innovations in state planning for housing provision have developed as a result, how people cope with the everyday challenges of housing, and how armed conflicts permanently shape social housing realities and identities. The lecture series takes place regularly during the semester on Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m., alternating between the research group's locations (Weimar and Frankfurt/Main). Digital participation is also possible.
Die Verrechtlichung des Wohnens – Anfänge und Kontinuitäten im und nach dem Krieg
Pia Lange
Taste of Cement – Everyday life between war destruction and reconstruction in Lebanon and Syria
Ansgar Frerich/FrankEckardt/Aref Swaidani
Housing refugees in camps? From shelters to dwellings
Ayham Dalal
Housing in Ukraine: War-induced Housing Crisis and Policy Response
Galyna Sukhomud
Homeland Revisited: From Homing to Homecide
Yael Allweil
Shifting values of housing in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Stef Jansen
Einrichten in der Apokalypse. Prepper-Wohnfantasien im Zeitschriftenformat
Mona Schieren