Tempelhofer Feld. Berlin
- Drawings: M-OST Malgorzata Zmyslowska
- Advicers: Joanna Erbel, Thomas Guethler
- Idea Competition: 2025
The planning vision for Tempelhofer Feld includes a „carpet of ideas” for the future – not based primarily on conventional planning methods, but rather on new, creative, and sustainable solutions for the needs of the urban community. These solutions can’t be fully captured by traditional spatial or temporal urban and landscape planning methods.
What’s needed is a shift in perspective – seeing nature as a new way of gardening (and planning), as Gilles Clément suggests in The Gardener’s Wisdom: „From now on, it is about engaging with the living. To look at it closely and get to know it. To connect with it in friendship.
In 1832, Caspar David Friedrich painted The Large Enclosure, a vast, seemingly natural yet human-shaped floodplain landscape. Such open vistas, often present in his works, are not just landscapes but “soulscapes,” pointing to a deeper longing – already threatened in the 19th century.
Tempelhofer Feld is such a place of longing, redefining the relationship between nature and the ever-present cityscape. Its sweeping, open views to the horizon offer visual escape from city chaos and let people experience the night sky with minimal light pollution – beneficial not only for the eyes, but for mental health, promoting peace, freedom, and connectedness with the world.