Category: Switzerland

  • «Bellinzona: a city with many projects»

    «Bellinzona: a city with many projects»

    Who is Mario Branda?
    In office since April 2012, Mario Branda (PS) is the first socialist mayor of a Ticino city. Being in this case the cantonal capital, the record doubles. An achievement that is certainly a source of pride for Mr Branda who does not like big fanfare. In 2011 he resigned from the office of public prosecutor to run for the Council of State but was not elected. He did not let himself down and in the following year he ran for the office of mayor in Bellinzona and collected an avalanche of votes. Born in 1960, a lawyer by profession, Mario Branda works at the law and notary firm MLaw in Bellinzona.

    You are the head of the city of Bellinzona which, in recent years with the aggregation, has undergone several changes. You recently developed the PAC, the Municipal Action Program. What is it about?
    To understand why the need to acquire the PAC has arisen, we must take into account two important aspects that have
    development of Bellinzona was born.

    With the 2017 aggregation, the new Bellinzona brought together 13 municipalities and grew from 18,000 to almost 45,000 inhabitants and an area that – with 164 km2 – is the largest in Switzerland for a municipality with an equivalent population.

    Managing the economic, cultural, eco-social development and guaranteeing maintenance and safety for such a large territory involves a considerable effort. With the aggregation, the administration of all the municipalities had to be standardized, a laborious operation because we have extensive agricultural and semi-agricultural areas – 1/3 of the Magadino Plan now belongs to the new jurisdiction – which have different needs and requirements compared to urban centers.

    The second important aspect is AlpTransit: the opening of the Gotthard and Monte Ceneri base tunnels constitutes a fundamental and strategic aspect that will benefit the whole Canton of Ticino and, above all, the city of Bellinzona will experience important changes to the urban fabric over time. . Transformations that can be evaluated in 10-15 years, even if already now we can observe movements that were not there until some time ago.

    The need has therefore arisen to create a document that would help the current Municipality and those who will continue to orientate itself and orient the development policy in this new reality. A competition was published in which various groups participated, with the aim of helping future choices in terms of planning and development of the city in the next 15-20 years and to be able to incorporate the current regulatory plans in a single document.

    What does the PAC contain?
    The PAC is a programming tool, consisting of a descriptive document and illustrative cards and plans. It contains some principles that are codified on which we will orient ourselves in the future and takes into account the following two important aspects:

    – Polycentric identity. The new Bellinzona has different realities and it is important to maintain the identities of the individual municipalities, their social life and their development. The former Municipalities have accepted the new status of the Bellinzona district as long as services, capillary connections and safety are guaranteed throughout the territory.

    -The Ticino river. From the landscape point of view, the river that crosses the territory from Moleno to Gudo characterizes the new territory and represents the backbone of the new Municipality.

    Once these two general principles have been established, development projects follow that are oriented towards a centripetal evolution of quality, focusing on the construction and development of economic activities in already densely populated centers to relieve the pressure of further exploitation of the territory.

    Two areas have been identified that are particularly suitable for construction activity and economic development: the sector of the former Ferriere Cattaneo and the space of the former workshops in Bellinzona, in the central area.

    Could you tell me something about the ambitious project of the Ex Officine space? It would be interesting to have some details on the timing as well.
    The project for the Ex Officine area actually includes various projects. The first big job will be to move everything located on the grounds of the SBB workshops and bring it to Castione. Here, an area of over 150,000 square meters has been identified which seems suitable for building the new SBB production site, in an easily accessible area for a total investment that should be around 400 million francs. Part of the costs will be covered by the canton (80 million francs) and the city of Bellinzona (20 million francs). The premises are good for thinking that the project can start once the administrative and recurring practices have been resolved.

    If this operation goes through, as can be hoped, the current area of the SBB workshops will be vacated, a space of approximately 120,000 square meters in the heart of the city. To understand what to do with it, a Masterplan with an international competition was launched. The data have already been published and foresee the construction of a new partly residential neighborhood, the current locomotive repair cathedral could be converted into a cultural and social center; finally, a part intended for training with a Swiss Innovation Park, a sub-site of the Swiss Innovation Parks.

    It will be a variant of the master plan that will also be based on the new Ma-sterplan to define the stages and processes of this new district. It is a project that has a vision and a horizon of 30-40 years, it will follow a defined path and it is hoped that it can be divided into lots and sectors, to be opened only when the previous one has already been completed and occupied. Part cen-
    trale of about 30,000 square meters is intended for public green, a real park where the various buildings will develop around.

    The land on which this new district will be built today is wholly owned by the SBB and the agreement signed in December 2017 established that half of it will be sold to the Canton of Ticino and the city of Bellinzona with the intention of carrying out a common project.

    What other construction sites do you have in progress or do you plan to activate in the near future?
    The new headquarters of the IRB will be inaugurated shortly in November. The current headquarters could be purchased by the city to include new biomedical research activities after some renovations. The idea is to consolidate the city of Bellinzona as a center for biomedical research.

    In 2030 work should begin on another important project: the construction of the new hospital, which will be built in the Saleggina area. The first step – the allocation of the credit of 16 million francs by the Commission for the management of the Grand Council, for the purchase of the land owned by Armasuisse – has been made.

    The other major project to be developed over the next four years will be to enhance the cultural offer of the city and the attractiveness of the three castles: essentially promoting the Bellinzona Fortress, a Unesco heritage site.

    Finally, I’m curious to know what the mayor Mario Branda’s dream is?
    In fact there are two: the consolidation of the IRB biomedical research poles and the one that will return to the building left empty by the IRB and, at the same time, take care of the project to enhance the Unesco heritage of the castles that could give a cultural and touristic turning point in Bellinzona.

    And a slogan: for a Bellinzona, a pole of research but with Art!

  • Blockchain applications for the real estate sector

    Blockchain applications for the real estate sector

    The term blockchain should be familiar by now. Most people associate it with cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and it is partly correct, although blockchain is the technology while Bitcoin is an application of it. The technology may seem complicated, the Swiss blockchain expert Michael Trübestein, but he is convinced that “blockchain technology is comparable to the debut of the Internet and it will not stop. For now it is only uncertain how it will develop ».

    First of all, you need to understand how it works: a blockchain is made up of individual blocks, on each of which sequences of data, such as transactions, are stored. A blockchain is a decentralized network. This means that anyone, anywhere in the world, can participate in a blockchain naturally with a computer. Each computer participating in a blockchain stores the same individual blocks in the exact sequence that forms the chain. Each block has its own "DNA". A new computer is only allowed when it has been checked and verified by everyone else. What has been programmed on a blockchain cannot be subsequently changed by a computer. To make a change, all the other computers on the network would have to be involved, and it is precisely for this reason that the blockchain is so secure. If a single computer tries to change the blockchain, the chain is immediately broken and the offender is kicked out.

    In Baar, «Hello World» is the first property in the world to be tokenized
    The possibilities that blockchain technology offers in the real estate sector are enormous, according to Michael Trübestein, professor of property management at the University of Lucerne who specializes in Real Estate Investment and Real Estate Asset Management. Numerous companies are currently researching possible application areas. “Currently, there are only isolated applications, such as in the land registry or in the investment / financing sector. A specific example is the world's first tokenization of a property, Baar's 'Hello World' property, ”says Trübestein. 20 percent (3 million Swiss francs) of the value of "Hello World" was tokenized by the Zug-based company "Blockimmo" and sold to four investors.

    Crowdlitoken also specializes in real estate: founded in 2018, the start-up sees itself as a digital real estate company. “Investors can acquire holdings in selected Swiss real estate for a minimum amount of 100 francs / euro. They are then allowed to build their real estate portfolio by allocating the purchased bonds (Crowdlitokens ‹CRTs›) individually to the various Crowdlitoken properties, ”explains Domenic Kurt, CEO of Crowdlitoken. By participating in the properties, investors can achieve annual returns of 7 percent and decide whether to have it deposited monthly into their bank account or digitally as a CRT token.

    Access to the financial market is liberalized
    No intermediary bank is needed for a digital bond and therefore it is more convenient for the investor. Crowdlitoken has over 630 investors with a volume of 18 million CRTs and its real estate portfolio is constantly growing. Among their prominent users are the Swiss professional footballer Diego Bena-
    son. Kurt defines the difference between Crowdlitoken and other companies based on blockchain technology thus: «there are no competitors who would accept such a low investment for a stake in different real estate properties. To manage investments, users can access the portal with their smartphone ».

    That blockchain has disruptive potential is clear to both Trübestein and Kurt. Crowdlitoken CEO adds: “Banks are becoming obsolete for investment products like ours. New distribution channels are emerging and access to the financial market is being liberalized ». On the one hand, the digitization of the capital market is completely disruptive as it leads to an opening of the financial market. "There are no barriers and the minimum amounts to access them have dropped." On the other hand, the digitization of titles is itself destabilizing: "it means that they are no longer transferred
    transferred values through third parties and – since they are based on blockchain technology – they can be sent without being duplicated first, ”explains Kurt.

    Trübestein adds: «Cryptocurrencies have already influenced the world and the way of thinking of the various operators on the market. Nobody knows how they will develop in the future, but the advantages are already clear now ». There are also prerequisites in Switzerland: “We have goal-oriented framework conditions and innovative companies,” says Trübestein. When implementing innovations it is important that companies work together. This is what happened, for example, with «Hello World»: the operation is the result of the collaboration between Block-immo, Elea Labs and Swiss Crypto Tokens.

    WHAT IS A TOKEN?
    Domenic Kurt, Crowdlitoken: is a digital asset (token) based on the blockchain. It is the digital representation of a title. It contains the ownership rights of the bond, as well as the right to returns and represents a redemption obligation.

    WHAT IS BLOCKCHAIN?
    Michael Trübestein, expert: a chain (= chain) of information (= block). They are time stamped and stored on different computers. This ensures a high degree of protection against forgery. Blockchain systems also differentiate between public networks and private networks. They can be used 24/7.

    WHAT CAN BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY DO BETTER THAN A BANK?
    Domenic Kurt, Crowdlitoken: With securities based on blockchain technology, it is possible to send value without duplicating it. It replaces the creditors' ledger and ensures that transactions take place in a more streamlined, convenient and efficient manner.

    Michael Trübestein

    Domenic Kurt
  • Real estate management goes digital

    Real estate management goes digital

    Digitization is transforming more and more sectors, just think of the banking sector which has long since introduced the concept of E-banking and the ability to manage payments independently directly from your PC or Smartphone. When it comes to digital transformation, real estate is reticent in the implementation of new technologies. Yet if you look at the Swiss PropTech scenario, you will find more than 100 innovative companies and start-ups in the field of Property Management, Construction and Smart Building. This is proof that real estate innovations are not lacking. What seems to be lacking, on the other hand, is the predisposition of entrepreneurs to welcome them, too often short-sighted and tied to routine processes. These mechanisms will therefore have to adapt in the next few years to respond more and more to the needs of a digital market. Tomorrow's tenants are today's teenagers, "born with smartphones in hand", and they are unlikely to have the same way of communicating as current tenants. For this reason, it is important to have a proactive approach to new technologies right from the start and implement them gradually, enabling, on the one hand, current tenants and collaborators to adapt and, on the other, to be ready in time for the needs of tomorrow's tenants.

    We at FlatMan accompany companies in this digital transformation process, allowing them to face change gradually. In a first phase we propose to install our digital notice boards at the entrance of the buildings, through which it is possible to publish any type of notice to tenants directly from your office. This allows you to save paper and travel times, as well as generate additional financial income through optional advertisements. In a second phase, the platform developed by FlatMan allows you to manage communications between tenants, real estate agencies and craftsmen via App (www.flatman.ch). This allows to optimize most of the processes related to real estate administration, increasing their efficiency and traceability.

    Roberto Fantoni, Cofounder FlatMan Sagl.
    Rocco Vicenzi, Cofounder FlatMan Sagl.

  • Flaneur D’Or 2020

    Flaneur D’Or 2020

    Riqualifica Comparto S. Simone a Vacallo
    Valutazione della giuria: Il nuovo spazio pubblico si fonda su un progetto solido, che comprende interfacce per i pedoni nelle vicinanze della chiesa. Il piazzale antistante l’edificio può avere nuove destinazioni d’utilizzo dato che i parcheggi sono stati sostituiti da un piccolo parco. La superficie della chiesa è pianeggiante e accessibile anche alle persone disabili. Gli arredi fissi disposti all’ombra degli alberi invitano a sedersi e a fare due chiacchiere, mentre un bar all’aperto offre la possibilità di ristorarsi. La presenza appena accennata di queste «piccole oasi» è comunque visibile dall’altro lato della strada. Sul marciapiede basso si può camminare in sicurezza grazie a colonnine che, se da un lato impediscono agli automobilisti di parcheggiare sul marciapiede, d’altro lato non sono ottimali per le persone ipovedenti e neanche dal punto di vista estetico.

    Davanti alla fermata riqualificata ci si può sedere sul muretto. Le strisce pedonali, dotate di isola centrale, forniscono una protezione sufficiente per attraversare la strada.

    L’intervento pragmatico e localmente molto efficace denota qualità di accesso e di sosta. Dimostra come, con un dispendio proporzionato di mezzi e con pochi ma raffinati provvedimenti, sia possibile conferire al paese un «decisivo valore aggiunto».

    Committente:
    Comune di Vacallo

    Progettazione:
    Inches Geleta Architetti Sagl;
    Studio Ing. Fabio Bianchi

    Tappe:
    2012: La Parrocchia incarica l’arch. Inches di uno studio preliminare per la riqualifica della piazza
    2013: Il Comune decide di appoggiare il progetto ma coordinandolo con la riqualifica del sedime stradale adiacente
    2016: Il progetto viene presentato alla popolazione
    2017 – 2019: Inizio e fine cantiere

    Costo complessivo: CHF 716’200

  • Colombaro square in Canobbio

    Colombaro square in Canobbio

    Evaluation of the jury: With the current intervention, the third stage of a wider requalification of the Municipality, the public space of the historic center has been revived, inverting the hierarchy between the car and the pedestrian. The cars were not completely eliminated from the still driveway nucleus, however the pedestrian was given priority. With the new flooring it becomes clear that all the space between the buildings is public. In the granite flooring, squares of different materials have been inserted that look like colored carpets and highlight the centrality and usability of some places, giving the whole a more domestic character.

    The project was appreciated because – thanks to these interventions – the quality of life in the nucleus, its habitability and its social and aggregative value have been improved. Pedestrians have returned to inhabit the streets and squares and children play on colored carpets, adults converse, passers-by stop.

    Client:
    Municipality of Canobbio

    Design:
    Architecture studio Workshop
    of Construction Sagl
    Lucchini-Mariotta engineering firm
    and Associates SA

    Stages:
    2014: Concept
    2016: Preliminary project
    2018: Final project
    2018-19: Execution

    Total cost: CHF 1.8 million

  • Redevelopment of the center of Balerna

    Redevelopment of the center of Balerna

    Evaluation of the jury: This project was particularly appreciated for its ability to transform what, over time, had become a road artery for the circulation and parking of vehicles into a vital space for pedestrians. By eliminating the side car parks and moving the bus stops from the carriageway, the sidewalks were considerably widened and the space they had lost was restored to pedestrians. The choice of flat borders reinforces the crossing character of the public space, which the iron poles, placed to prevent the parking of vehicles, only slightly scratch.

    Client:
    Municipality of Balerna

    Design:
    Cattaneo Birindelli architecture firm,
    Engineering firm ing. Fabio Bianchi

    Stages:
    2013: Final project
    2016: Start of the works
    2017: Public inauguration

    Total cost: CHF 2.1 million

  • Ground floor surfaces (re) used to best effect

    Ground floor surfaces (re) used to best effect

    Spaces located on the ground floor in Swiss cities, in medium-sized centers or in smaller municipalities, unfortunately have a marked destiny – with the exception of those with coveted privileged locations. According to experts, there has been a clear change in the destination of this type of space, and not just after the recent pandemic. Where once there was a restaurant, cafe or hairdresser, butcher or owner-run fashion shop, today there is often a huge void.

    What the research says
    Nicole Hartmann, research assistant at the Institute of Interior Architecture (IIA) of the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts (HSLU), is studying how to make the most of this particular space. With the «PARTERRE» project he examines – together with his colleagues Markus Gmünder, Christoph Hanisch and Katharina Kleczka – «how to best convert the spaces on the ground floor, but from the inside». According to Hartmann "the ground floors are important not only for the building but also for the urban space". However, due to the reorganization of retail businesses and the constant increase in the sale of products online, there have been major changes in the use of these ground floor spaces. According to Hartmann, however, changes in social and cultural values as well as changes in legal framework conditions also played a role. The project team highlighted some concrete examples, for example in the Portuguese city of Porto, where SMEs and start-ups have revitalized the downtown neighborhoods with original ideas and innovative solutions. Or in the city of Lucerne, where due to the absence of international tourists there has been a considerable increase in empty shops and vacant commercial spaces.

    One solution: pop-up shops
    The Pop-up-Shops company of founder and CEO Chalid A. El Ashker is interested in these vacant spaces. With its «Online Market», it offers space for rent in Baden, Brugg or Dietikon. The internet platform of the start-up, based in Zollikon, connects owners of commercial spaces or showrooms with interested parties who want to rent a space for a fixed term. The contracts and rent payments of these pop-up shops are also handled online. The interest groups are on the one hand the owners of spaces and on the other hand the new brands, companies, designers or artists who need a space to exhibit their products. “No matter what kind of space, we optimize the leasing process,” says El Ashker, whose business idea doesn't stop at the Swiss borders. There are also international commercial spaces, such as in Germany, the United Kingdom or the United States, many of which are located on the ground floor.
    no land of a building. According to El Ashker, the platform offers several advantages in one: it increases the availability of space for shops and promotes the local economy by supporting both new and emerging businesses without forgetting those already established. In Switzerland, Pop-up Shops counts SBB, Swiss Post, Migros, SPG Intercity and Wincasa among its customers.

    Flexible office spaces close to your home
    Empty commercial spaces on the ground floor, in Swiss municipalities and cities, can be converted into offices as well as retail stores, depending on the administration and planning regulations. One of the recent "Coworking Spaces" was opened by Village Office, a company that wants to create several hundred coworking spaces throughout Switzerland. There are currently more than 80, located in Aarau, Bottighofen, Frauenfeld, Lucerne, Laax, Nyon and Davos, to name a few.

    Conceived and founded as cooperatives, they aim to promote new forms of work and to build an entire network of "Coworking Spaces". “At the same time we are also creating links between communities, companies, property owners and coworkers,” says Jenny Schäpper-Uster, who in 2015 and 2016 co-founded the new type of company Coworking Switzerland and Village Offices. “Our vision is that every person in Switzerland by 2030 will be able to reach the nearest 'Coworking Space' in 15 minutes. In this way, we reduce the impact on transport, increase the creation of local value and contribute to improving the quality of life of people thanks to shorter work paths ».

    "Revitalizing city centers"
    Nicole Hartmann, HSLU interior architect, proposes another solution to reconvert ground floor spaces into urban areas: create housing. “Depending on the existing floor plans, the heights of the rooms, the facades, the fixtures and the types of space, the goal should be to revitalize urban centers,” he explains. It would also mean making cities attractive and liveable again for new residents. In Switzerland there has been a displacement of people in the more modern and modern suburbs. "We could begin to think about a redefinition of public areas and launch a new trend, revitalizing many city centers". Hartmann is convinced of this.

    This is one of the themes studied in the "PARTERRE" project, as well as the
    the finding that a change in the destination of a space can affect the quality of life of the local inhabitants, and how public and private spaces could be designed and shared. “The project considers the interaction of various stakeholders and develops a sustainable conversion strategy for the vacant ground floors,” says Hartmann. We can look forward to the results of the project right now.

    Baden – a model city
    With over 19,000 inhabitants, Baden is the third largest municipality in the canton of Aargau and is one of the top 5 Swiss economic regions among the 110 existing ones. It is home to around 2,500 companies, many of them international. Thanks to its connections with local and long-distance transport networks
    room and the remoteness of only about 20 kilometers from Zurich, the capital of the Canton of Aargau and the city of Waldshut-Tiengen in Germany, is a regional business center and also a popular place to live.

    It is no wonder that developer Thomas Lütolf talks about a very low vacancy rate among the shops in the city center: "only three of the 220 spaces are currently empty". This means that the vacancy of the ground floors in the city has recorded the lowest rate in the last six years – and this despite the pandemic from Covid-19. There is also a growing trend in the occupation of spaces vacated by the retail trade by restaurants and gastronomy. Among the retail stores, even some with new concepts and others already tested. One example is Ohne.ch at Stadtturmstrasse 15, which offers fair and sustainable food without packaging. Or the chain of prestigious and very famous Sprüngli patisseries, which has opened a store in the train station of Baden.

    And when it comes to pop-up shops, Lütolf sees more opportunities than risks: "Pop-up shops are not unknown in Baden". According to him, this trend will continue in the long term and, thanks to the city's active art and cultural scene, he will be able to quickly and easily occupy free spaces. Only in terms of rent levels does it see a slight downward trend. "But this in turn makes it attractive to other supplier groups in this segment," says Lütolf.

  • The 4 leading sectors in Ticino

    The 4 leading sectors in Ticino

    Science of life
    The life sciences sector in Ticino is a very important reality and is made up of innovative companies, strongly export-oriented, and internationally recognized research institutes. It includes the pharmaceutical industry, the biomedicine and medical technology sectors. The Research Institute in Biomedicine (IRB), the Cardiocentro Ticino or the Oncological Institute of Italian Switzerland are just some of the prestigious institutes that contribute to shaping an environment particularly favorable to research and development. Among the projects under development, we find the competence center dedicated to life sciences within the Switzerland Innovation Park (SIP), an important project to which Ticino joined last spring, which aims to encourage interactions between companies and research institutes.

    Mechanical and electronic
    In Ticino we find numerous excellences in the field of EDM. This technology was born and developed thanks to an industrial fabric in the highly technological and innovative field of micromechanics and electronics. This allows Ticino to cultivate and strengthen valuable skills, especially useful for dealing with transformation processes, not only in the industrial and corporate sector, but also in applied research. The institutes of the Department of Innovative Technologies (DTI) of the Professional University School of Italian Switzerland (SUPSI) are important players in this context. Ticino offers a favorable environment for the development of other emerging sectors and applications, such as that of drones. This sector has developed considerably with the creation of the Drone Competence Center at Lodrino Airport (the Swiss Drone Base Camp), integrated into the Switzerland Innovation Park (SIP).

    Information and telecommunication technologies
    The information technology and telecommunication (ICT) sector is central to the digitalization process underway and affects all economic sectors across the board. Ticino boasts skills and business realities of the highest level. The Dalle Molle Institute for Artificial Intelligence Studies (IDSIA) is ranked among the best ten research institutes in the world in its branch, while the most powerful super-computer in Europe at the Swiss Center for Scientific Computing (CSCS) in Lugano and third in the world, it is capable of processing 20 million billion operations per second.

    Lifestyle Tech
    In recent years, the Lifestyle Tech sector, which has developed in a very important way in Ticino, focuses on innovative technologies (e-commerce, blockchain, 3D development, artificial intelligence, big data) related to design, health, travel, fashion, food, media and more. Thanks to the creation of a competence center dedicated to the Lifestyle industries, it is possible to enhance the skills present in Ticino in universities and companies, encourage research and development activities and, consequently, attract significant investments.

  • Historical manor with a modern frame

    Historical manor with a modern frame

    Like a park, the spacious grounds of the Glockgut stretches through rural Herblingen. The former farming village is only a few kilometers away from the center of Schaffhausen. In the middle of the green surroundings and at the same time close to urban culture, it has a high recreational and leisure value. A total area of 24,223 m² offered the experienced Steiner AG project developers space right in the middle for the vision of creating a varied living environment for young and old – with a children's playground, flower meadows and open green areas full of tall trees and ornamental shrubs. At the end of March 2018, the project of the working group Theo Hotz Partner AG and Bergamini Partner Architects received the building permit. The main building of the former manor, which is worth protecting, formed the starting point for the development plan. After the Steiner Investment Foundation got involved in the project as an investor, construction began on the family-friendly and near-natural apartments in autumn 2018.

    Open terrain

    The old manor building is now gracefully framed by five modern apartment buildings. It was a particular challenge to design the different buildings and such a large area as uniformly as possible and to realize them from a single source. A special feature of the plot in the north-western area, which initially presented itself as a problem, helped here: a steep slope. The solution was to leave it undeveloped. The actually built-up part today covers an area of 10,330 m 2 , while the preserved green space proves to be an enrichment for the quarter.

    The first construction measure was the conversion of the two-storey manor into a daycare center – in close cooperation with the preservation of monuments. The adjoining shed, in turn, was torn down and replaced by a new multi-purpose building with the same location and similar cubature. On the ground floor, this new building houses a common room that is used by the after-school care center during the day and is available to the residents of the complex in the evenings and on weekends. "The space is intended to give the building an identity as a new center," explains Peter Herzog, team leader for real estate development at Steiner. The ensemble of the two buildings was therefore left free and fits harmoniously into the backdrop of the open slope behind. Arranged in a U-shape around the building, the new housing estate grew step by step.

    The new residential buildings fit in with the simple manor with a straight-line architecture and corresponding colors and, with their loggias, balconies and terraces, bring the interiors together light and airy with the outside area. From the inside, they allow a generous view of the green area and sometimes into the distance. The buildings in the area are loosely distributed and connected by a network of paths. Kindergarten, primary school and various shops can be reached in a few minutes on foot from the quarter. In this way, the entire development is both naturally permeable and urban dense at the same time.

    Sustainable investment

    The five new multi-family houses comprise a total of 27 rental and 71 condominiums. These are 2.5 to 5.5 room apartments with an area of 65 m 2 to 130 m 2 . All apartments have a high standard and are tailored for families as well as for couples or individuals. With the prices and different apartment sizes, the aim is to achieve a mix of one-person and family households. "In terms of price, we are in the middle segment," confirms Peter Herzog. An underground car park with 136 parking spaces also provides space below the site. It is directly accessible for all new buildings.

    The buildings are implemented in accordance with the Minergie standard and are heated with climate-friendly geothermal heat pumps. When possible, sustainable types of concrete with cement from mixed demolition were used for the construction. Recycled aggregates were mixed in here.

    Planning tailored to your needs

    The entire development is based on a design plan that was presented to both the responsible authorities and the local residents during the process. That contributed to the trust in this large project, explains Herzog and adds: "With the Glogguet development we have shown how we can build compacted and how the quality of the place remains." Despite the pandemic, the construction work could be carried out on schedule in compliance with the applicable protective regulations, so that the apartments were ready for occupancy in spring 2021.

    www.steiner.ch
    www.gloggeguet.ch
    info@steiner.ch

  • Demand for larger apartments is driving the construction industry

    Demand for larger apartments is driving the construction industry

    The construction industry has proven to be crisis-resistant during the corona pandemic. According to a press release, the economic research and consulting institute BAK Economics expects building construction to grow by 0.4 percent this year. An increase of 0.6 percent is expected for 2022.

    The prospects for construction activity vary between residential construction, commercial construction and infrastructure construction. While residential construction is increasing, commercial and public construction projects are recording slight losses. The demand for larger apartments is growing due to increased home work. In addition, the energetic renovations and the expected turnaround in interest rates are driving growth.

    In contrast, the pandemic-induced decline in the number of public-sector construction projects is having an impact on infrastructure construction. The number of commercial construction projects is also falling, as many companies postpone or stop planned construction projects. Thanks to the current economic upturn, according to BAK Economics, an upturn in both areas can be expected in 2022.

    Positive results in building construction are expected for the years 2023 to 2027. In commercial and infrastructure construction, the medium-term order situation should remain constant.

    There are regional differences in overall construction activity: According to BAK Economics, the regions of Zurich / Aargau, the Lake Geneva region and central Switzerland have the best forecasts. The institute expects the Basel region to stagnate in the medium term.

  • Baulink realizes the Marriot Hotel in Basel

    Baulink realizes the Marriot Hotel in Basel

    Munich Hotel Partners GmbH ( MHP ) has commissioned Baulink with the realization of a Marriot hotel in Basel, informs Baulink AG in a message . Specifically, the Invita division, which specializes in hotel interiors, is to renovate the former Swissôtel Basel. The hotel, which has been closed since November 2020, was bought by MHP and the American HIG Capital .

    Invita will act as the general contractor for the design of the hotel’s 125 rooms and public areas, the communication further explains. “With our experience from the first conversion phase, we offer the best prerequisites for successfully and efficiently carrying out the project for MHP,” Robert Diepenbrock is quoted there. The head of the Invita department at Baulink is convinced that “he can bring specialist knowledge of hospitality to a team of first-class partners”.

    For the execution of the project, Invita will work together with the architects Oana Rosen from Frankfurt. The notification does not provide any information about the financial scope of the contract.

  • Jaisli-Xamax equips Bern special education school

    Jaisli-Xamax equips Bern special education school

    The Dietiker electrical company Jaisli-Xamax is responsible for the electrical installations for the new building for the special education school in Bern ( HPS). Work began in March and, according to a message on Facebook, should go until January 2023⁠. Jaisli-Xamax therefore provides the following services: high and low voltage installations, building automation and the delivery of switchgear.

    The special education school is a special school for the city and region of Bern. The building of HPS correspond according to the communication of Jaisli-Xamax not today's operational requirements are age-related need of renovation and can werden.⁠ spatially and structurally developed Therefore, arises new school with a gymnasium on a vacant lot on the grounds of elementary schools Bümpliz and Lieutenants.

  • Building program has a record year

    Building program has a record year

    2020 was a record year for the federal and cantonal building program. A total of CHF 299 million has been paid out for renovation and new construction projects, more than in any previous year, according to a federal media release.

    Of this, 119 million francs went to thermal insulation projects. At 72 million francs, system renovations make up the second largest share. This involves extensive renovation of the building envelope, which can be combined, for example, with renovation of the heating systems. Around 62 million francs in funding have been awarded for projects relating to heating changes, solar and ventilation systems. In these projects, known as building services, an increase of 65 percent was achieved compared to the previous year.

    The building program also has successes in terms of climate protection and employment. The measures funded in 2020 will save 5.7 million kilowatt hours of electricity and 1.4 million tons of CO2 over the entire service life. However, since the subsidy rates were increased compared to 2019, the proportion of francs paid out per ton of CO2 saved rose from 205 francs to 207 francs. The employment effect is 2,100 full-time equivalents, the additional domestic added value is 88 million francs.

  • Schaffhausen extends contract with Generis AG

    Schaffhausen extends contract with Generis AG

    Generis AG will continue to run the economic development agency for the canton of Schaffhausen until 2024. The same applies to the office for the promotion of regional and location development. The government council decided this at its meeting on Tuesday.

    The service contract currently runs until the end of 2022. After that, it can be extended for a further two years for the last time. At the beginning of 2015, Generis AG was awarded the contract to manage both facilities.

    As stated in a communication from the government council, Generis AG has “so far fulfilled its mandate very well. The results achieved to date in the field of business development represent a real success story. ”That is why the service contract is now being extended.

  • Smaller rental apartments save resources

    Smaller rental apartments save resources

    According to a press release , three scientists from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne ( EPFL ) have tried to find out what is behind the ever increasing space requirements of tenants. The background to this is that residential construction is not only the second largest source of energy consumption and CO2 emissions in Switzerland, right after traffic.

    The researchers at the Laboratory on Human-Environment Relations in Urban Systems ( HERUS ) at EPFL have therefore launched a survey among tenants. In Switzerland they make up 60 percent of the apartment occupancy. The responses from 968 tenants showed, among other things, that 40 percent of them moved into a larger apartment, although their household size had decreased. Only 25 percent would be willing to downsize under the same circumstances.

    The researchers summarized the following main obstacles to downsizing: the large living space serves as a status symbol, the bond with the current apartment and the neighborhood as well as the fear of loss of privacy.

    They propose several solutions: financial incentives to move and a sufficient supply of small apartments in city centers. In addition, there should be apartments of different sizes in the same building so that tenants can move without losing contact with friends and neighbors.

    They also recommend giving tenants who want to downsize, priority over other potential tenants. In addition, the current approach to privacy in the entire building should be reconsidered, says Anna Pagani from HERUS, for example "by providing workshops and music rooms that can be used by tenants".

  • Fewer apartments are empty

    Fewer apartments are empty

    As of June 1, 2021, Switzerland had a total of 71,365 vacant apartments, including single-family houses, according to the Federal Statistical Office ( FSO ) in a message . Compared to the previous year, this corresponds to a decrease of 9.5 percent. The corresponding vacancy rate fell in the same period by 0.18 percentage points to 1.54 percent. It fell for the first time in twelve years, according to the announcement.

    The FSO analysts observed a decline in vacant apartments in six of the seven major regions. Only in the greater Ticino area did the vacancy rate rise by 0.12 percentage points to 2.83 percent. Within the cantons, the analysts found the lowest vacancy rates in Zug (0.34 percent), Geneva (0.51 percent) and Zurich (0.72 percent). The highest vacancy rates were observed in the cantons of Solothurn (3.15 percent), Ticino (2.83 percent) and Appenzell Innerrhoden (2.59 percent).

    The analysts have noted a particularly high decline in vacancies for new apartments and single-family homes. As of the reporting date, 7,066 vacant properties were offered for long-term rent or for sale across Switzerland, 24.2 percent fewer than in the previous year. The number of vacant single-family houses offered for long-term rent or purchase decreased by 18.8 percent to 5940 properties in the same period.

  • Regional 2025 celebrates halftime

    Regional 2025 celebrates halftime

    The Regionale 2025 celebrated its fifth anniversary with a celebration on the banks of the Limmat in Neuenhof AG. According to the announcement, the Regionale 2025 association was founded in 2015 and is supported by 16 Limmattal municipalities and cities as well as the cantons of Aargau and Zurich. It is intended to strengthen the identity of the Limmat Valley. To this end, 29 different projects are to be implemented by 2025.

    More than 100 invited guests took part in the celebration with an aperitif and a musical performance from the water. The focus of the celebration on September 9, the fifth anniversary of the association's start-up, was the exchange of all those involved across borders. For the previous president Brigitta Johner it was a farewell. She resigns from office after six years. "For a livable and lovable Limmat valley" was the motto of the FDP politician, it says in the message. The former canton councilor was bid farewell with speeches of thanks by Roland Kuster, Wettinger mayor and former vice-president of the Regionale 2025, the managing director Peter Wolf, the mayor of the host community, Martin Uebelhart, as well as two digital greetings from the two cantons. They came from government councilors Markus Dieth (Aargau) and Martin Neukom (Zurich).

    Halfway through, the next five years were also looked at. First there will be an interim show from May to October 2022. The projects nominated for the final project show will be presented there. Further projects will then be completed by 2025. The conclusion of the work of the Regionale 2025 culminates in a large project show at which all projects and processes in the region are presented to the public.

  • Building the future of energy

    Building the future of energy

    The property right at the entrance to the municipality is less than 10 kilometers away from the city of Winterthur and is still an idyllic piece of land, with a direct connection to the banks of the Töss and with a view of meadows and forest. The goals of the Energy Strategy 2050 are being built here. The Verde Blu development has been inhabited since autumn 2019. So far, so normal. It is noteworthy, however, that this development covers a large proportion of its energy requirements itself and that exclusively from renewable sources. “The specifications of the Energy Strategy 2050 are an opportunity for the real estate industry,” explains Dieter Stutz from Atlantis AG, which is active in the areas of environmental consulting, settlement planning and architecture and who developed the project. The heat supply via groundwater was the best and most convincing solution for the area. Atlantis planned and implemented this complex construction project together with EKZ.

    Sustainable living as a need
    The new construction project Verde Blu with nine residential and commercial buildings comprises 108 condominiums as well as various commercial areas that are used by a Migros branch, a community and a physiotherapy practice, among other things. An old, listed barn serves as a common room and provides rustic charm on the site. In contrast to this is the state-of-the-art technology that supplies the system with energy: groundwater is used as a heat source for the heating and hot water, which supplies the houses with decentralized heat pumps via a so-called anergiering. An anergiering is a cold local heating system that, in contrast to conventional local heating systems, works with transfer temperatures below 30 degrees Celsius. Anergy networks therefore have no heat losses in the lines, but even generate additional energy gains from the ambient heat. In summer, the buildings can be passively cooled with the groundwater via the anergy ring.

    A photovoltaic system, which is optimally designed to meet the needs of the building, provides the electrical energy for the building. The complex was only built after the apartments had already been occupied. Because they wanted to leave the decision for or against solar power to the owners. The fact that the system with a peak output of 100 kilowatts was approved by an overwhelming majority at the first owners’ meeting in winter 2019 speaks for itself. Martin Nicklas, who is responsible for modern energy solutions at EKZ, is not surprised: “In the real estate sector, we have long known the need to make a contribution to sustainability in the living area too.” A charging infrastructure for the 209 parking spaces was installed in the lower-level garage. Thanks to load curve management, it is possible to charge the cars in stages if a whole fleet of electric vehicles should one day populate the garage.

    Well-coordinated system
    In Kollbrunn, power generation as well as heating and cooling generation and electromobility are combined in an integrated energy system. The centerpiece is an intelligent control system that maximizes the self-consumption rate and takes over load management. In this way, what is actually the most important goal can be achieved: that the electricity produced by the PV system is also consumed as much as possible on site. The control uses weather forecasts from an external weather portal for this purpose. An algorithm in the control system evaluates this data and decides on the previous evening whether enough solar power will be produced the next day to charge the boiler and storage tank of the heating system. If the solar production is too low, the boilers are charged during the night at the low tariff, otherwise there is a wait until there is enough solar power available the next day to start the heat pump.

    On-site energy production
    The “Grand Chemin” development was built in Epalinges in western Switzerland, with some of the electricity required being produced on site by a photovoltaic system (PV). A new multi-family house is being built in Emmen (LU), which will be characterized by a heat pump with groundwater and a PV with ZEV. Two examples out of many that show that the future of energy has long since begun.

    Comprehensive energy systems for your property

  • 89. immoTable Ticino

    89. immoTable Ticino

    Finally, the well-known immoTable continues., On September 30, 2021, the 89th immoTable Ticino will take place in the Villa Negroni. Speakers will be Stefano Rizzi, Alberto Donada, Stefano Tibiletti, Mario Branda, Giovanna Bevilacqua, Luca Gazzaniga and Roberto Fantoni. You can find more information on our website.

  • Real estate platform immo-invest.ch now online in four languages

    Real estate platform immo-invest.ch now online in four languages

    The Swiss platform for locations and real estate www.immo-invest.ch has been online since April 2020. Since this Monday you can also read all Immo-News and Immo-Projects in English, French and Italian. The digitization of the established real estate magazine “immo! Nvest” is now entering the next phase. Click your way through.

  • The «complete success» continues

    The «complete success» continues

    According to co-organizer Marco Camenzind, the first SVIT Digital Day was a “complete success”. In addition to the SVIT Digital Compass, on which software manufacturers can present their latest tools live, the practice-oriented specialist presentations in particular met with great interest: “There was consistently positive feedback from the exhibitors. But the visits by the speakers were also very good, ”Camenzind sums up. This is reason enough for the organizers to make the second SVIT Digital Day on September 17th more attractive with hand-picked specialist speakers. There would be Mario Facchinetti, who with the Global Real Estate Run on October 29th at 12 o’clock wants to make people inside and outside the real estate industry aware of the importance of the industry for achieving the climate goals: “With the event we awaken a sense of community in us and provide a bit of variety in everyday Corona everyday life, which has become monotonous. “

    Real estate success factors
    At 1 p.m. Boris Grell will speak about electronic signatures in real estate practice. The independent lawyer specializes in construction and real estate law, company and commercial law as well as contract law. He is also a specialist lawyer for SAV construction and real estate law. At 2:15 pm, Casavi CEO Peter Schindlmeier will take over to talk about success factors for digital property management: “The interest in solutions for ‘digital management’ has increased significantly in recent months. But how do you go from traditional management to networked property management? ” And at 3:15 p.m. Rolf Truninger, Managing Director QualiCasa AG, will talk about the web-based app Visits, which is taking digitization in the real estate market a big step forward. Everything can be experienced live on Friday, September 17, 2021 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Zurich Kulturhaus Kosmos. More information: https://svit-digital.ch/digital-day/

  • 7. Real Estate Summit at Samsung Hall

    7. Real Estate Summit at Samsung Hall

    At the beginning, FRZ President André Ingold gave an overview of the organization. The network continues to grow: 730 members are now part of the FRZ Zurich Airport Region – Business Network & Location Development.

    Ingold also gave an overview of the largest development projects. It is forecast that the airport region will grow by 20 percent in terms of both population and jobs by 2030. He specifically mentions the Dübendorf Innovation Park, which is intended to increase the attractiveness of the location considerably. The same applies to the Digital Health Center Bülach.

    There were numerous opportunities for small talk and informal discussions in the spacious rooms. The 320 targeted “meet & match” discussions with Internet support were actively used.

    Claudio Saputelli , UBS Switzerland AG, said he did not see a turnaround in the real estate market. In the lecture entitled: “Home office as a game changer in the real estate market?” The upward trend in prices on the housing market continues and the office market remains under pressure. Incidentally, working from home had already been identified as a megatrend 50 years ago, at that time under the term “teleworking”.

    Patrick Eberhard , Eberhard Enterprises, pleaded for sustainability in the lecture “Off to the circular age”. An important element of this is recycling with the help of robots.

    Marloes Fischer , Madaster Services AG, CEO Madaster Switzerland – “Madaster – giving materials an identity” sees considerable savings potential if the materials used in construction are inventoried.

    Marc Walder , CEO Ringier AG & Founder digitalswitzerland, spoke about digitization as an opportunity for business and society. The media company, founded in 1833, decided in 2007 to transform itself into a digital company. In the meantime, Ringier has invested over two billion francs in the digital transformation and increased the digital operating profit from 0 to 65 percent. His maxims include: Constantly improving, thinking long-term and with a clear focus.

    “Creativity is the new currency – Startup and Corporate / SME Collaboration”. That was the title of Eva Wimmers , CEO ISS Facility Services Germany. She pointed out the different perspectives of startups and established companies. The environment brought her to the denominator VUCA: Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity. Anders Indset, economic philosopher, spoke about «The infected thinking – why we have to free ourselves from our old self-evident things». He amazed the guests with remarkable thoughts: Err dich happily. We need chaos and order. The art of being wrong. We should tell new stories. Anyone who is interested becomes interesting.

  • The renovation of the Baden district building is about to be completed

    The renovation of the Baden district building is about to be completed

    The district building in Baden has been refurbished since March with ongoing operations. According to the media release, all natural stone and artificial stone components are being restored and the facade base plaster partially replaced. The construction work will be completed in October 2021. Under the project management of the real estate department of the city of Baden as the client, the work is strictly based on the historical model. The construction project is being accompanied by Heiko Dobler, building consultant for the cantonal monument preservation department.

    The model for the renovation of the former schoolhouse, which was built in 1856/57, is the facade of the renovated Ochsen branch in the spa district. In the course of the renovation work, the existing plastic-contaminated plaster was completely milled off and a new lime plaster was applied based on the historical model. The facade was then given a new coat of paint and all 108 wooden windows were replaced. Both the planned construction time and the budget can presumably be adhered to, according to the statement from the city of Baden.

    During the renovation work, two special factors had to be taken into account. On the one hand, there are nesting sites for the protected swifts and alpine swifts. The upper part of the scaffolding was designed accordingly by mid-April. "This meant that suitable nesting sites were available to the birds returning from the south in good time," the city councilor in charge Philippe Ramseier is quoted as saying.

    Furthermore, special security requirements of the canton police and the district prison as tenants of the district building had to be met. For example, a three-meter-high board wall and a barbed wire at the end were installed.

  • Verena Rohrer will head Aargau Services

    Verena Rohrer will head Aargau Services

    The Aargau government council has appointed Verena Rohrer as the new head of the cantonal location promotion agency Aargau Services . She is the successor to Annelise Alig Anderhalden, who accepted a new challenge in the spring. Rohrer will take up her new position on January 1, 2022.

    According to a statement from the government council, Rohrer is very well anchored in the canton of Aargau. From 2011 to 2017 she was in charge of the regional Brugg Regio location promotion. In addition, the 40-year-old also has several years of experience in the private sector. For example, she is a member of the executive board of the wholesaler Bio Partner Switzerland based in Seon AG. Rohrer has been Head of Central Services at Caritas Aargau since 2019.

    “Due to her knowledge of location promotion, her networking in the canton and her professional experience, Verena Rohrer has the best prerequisites to decisively further develop the location promotion of the canton of Aargau together with the experienced employees of Aargau Services,” said government councilor Dieter Egli (SP), head of the department Economics and Home Affairs, quoted in the communication.

    The Aargau Services location promotion contributes to the continuous improvement of the business environment in Aargau. It also supports foreign companies wishing to settle in the canton. As part of the implementation of the new cantonal development model, Aargau Services will, according to its own information, also take on important tasks. The development model envisages further strengthening the business location and linking living and working in the canton more closely.

  • Zurich is Switzerland's first green city

    Zurich is Switzerland's first green city

    The city of Zurich accepted the Green City Switzerland award in gold on Thursday evening. As city councilor Richard Wolff said on this occasion, according to a press release , this seal is “both recognition and incentive. We are on the right track and know where we need to improve further ”.

    In 2019, the city council commissioned the Green City Zurich service department of the civil engineering and waste disposal department to have the city of Zurich certified with the Green City Switzerland label. It is awarded by the Association of Swiss Urban Gardeners and Horticultural Offices according to uniform criteria. Not only core processes such as planning and construction, care and maintenance, but also management and support processes are assessed. Zurich received 451 out of a possible 500 points.

    “This is an excellent result and a role model,” says Markus Weibel from the Label Commission. It shows that it “sets high standards and is made for both urban communities and the largest city in Switzerland”.

    The team of experts particularly praised the “very good, long-term planning basis”, in which sustainable topics and biodiversity are given high priority. The binding basis for the near-natural maintenance and management of urban green and open spaces was also praised. In addition, the green spaces would be integrated to reduce heat.

  • ImmoScout24 reports record price for condominiums

    ImmoScout24 reports record price for condominiums

    The prices for condominiums in Switzerland rose by 1.8 percent in August compared to the previous month. The prices for single-family houses have risen by only 0.1 percent. This is shown by the current Swiss Real Estate Offer Index , which is collected by ImmoScout24 in cooperation with the real estate consultancy IAZI AG.

    The market for condominiums is becoming more and more expensive , according to the press release. At the end of August, 7916 francs were charged per square meter, 1.8 percent more than a month earlier. A typical apartment with 100 square meters is advertised for an average of around 790,000 francs in Switzerland. That is a new record.

    The prices for single-family houses rose by only 0.1 percent in August, but according to ImmoScout24 they are “at a dizzying height”. The square meter price is 7048 francs. For a typical Swiss single-family home with around 160 square meters of living space, the average asking price is over 1.1 million francs. The prices can be significantly higher in better locations.

    The supply is scarce, the market has dried up. Martin Waeber, COO of Scout24 is quoted as saying that sellers were waiting in view of the rising prices. “Only a strong increase in construction activity or a decline in demand, for example due to rising mortgage interest rates, could reduce the price pressure on the residential property market,” Waeber continued. However, neither is currently foreseeable.

    According to the index, asking prices for rental apartments fell by an average of 0.5 percent in August, with significant regional differences.

  • NEST office unit demonstrates potential for circulation

    NEST office unit demonstrates potential for circulation

    A new unit went into operation on Tuesday in the NEST research and innovation building of the Federal Materials Testing and Research Institute ( Empa ) and the ETH Domain's water research institute ( Eawag). As Empa in a message emphasized the office module called is Sprint was completed in just ten months. This demonstrates that building with reused materials and components is “a viable alternative to building with new material”. It “meets the market requirements for flexible and fast building”.

    The entire unit follows the so-called design for disassembly approach. If necessary, the flexible partitions could be dismantled. This enables flexible use of space and the recycling of built-in materials.

    The still existing skepticism of the construction industry about the reuse of materials is unjustified. Contrary to initial concerns about the tight schedule, "we were even able to find the re-use materials faster than new material," is quoted from Kerstin Müller, architect and business service member at the Basel construction office in situ , which planned the sprint unit.

    In addition, reuse is not yet cheaper given the current market situation. However, that will change as soon as a competitive market has developed, believes component hunter Oliver Seidel from in situ. In addition, there is a need for CO2 taxation, "which relieves the cost of new materials and used materials in order to be able to quantify the ecological added value."

  • The Dübendorf Innovation Park should focus on mobility

    The Dübendorf Innovation Park should focus on mobility

    A project group set up by the government council of the canton of Zurich has been creating an overview of the Dübendorf airfield area since September 2020. The state chancellery of the Canton of Zurich informs in a statement that the members of the delegation of authorities have now signed the synthesis report. The airfield area is to be used as an innovation park, airfield and for military purposes.

    “For reasons of economy and sustainability” and “with consideration for the population”, “only what is needed will be built in stages,” explains the State Chancellery. According to her, the project should become “a beacon for innovative urban development, especially in the areas of environmental compatibility, sustainability and careful use of resources”.

    Specifically, the overall view provides for the area to be subdivided into four sub-areas. The innovation park with a focus on mobility, robotics, aviation, space travel as well as modern production technology and materials research is to be built in sub-area A. In sub-area B, the innovation park and a research and works airfield will combine to form an aviation cluster. Area C is reserved for uses with high security requirements. The aviation infrastructures are located in sub-area D, in which nature conservation will play a central role. A circular airfield path is intended to make the area usable for recreation and leisure for the population.

    In the next step, planning rights are to be created for all sub-areas, according to the communication. Specifically, a cantonal and a regional structure plan as well as the communal structure and land use planning are named there. The cantonal structure plan will be made public from September 6th to November 5th.

    The Zurich Chamber of Commerce ( ZHK ) welcomes the commitment to triple use as an innovation park, civil and military airfield. The vision of an internationally leading location for research and development on mobility solutions is worth supporting, she writes in a press release . However, she regrets the renunciation of business aviation. This is important for the attractiveness of the economic area. Therefore, the doors should not be permanently closed for them.

  • Mountain cantons insist on imputed rental value

    Mountain cantons insist on imputed rental value

    The intergovernmental conference of the mountain cantons of Uri, Obwalden, Nidwalden, Glarus, Appenzell Innerrhoden, Graubünden, Ticino and Valais (RKGK) is against the Federal Council’s plan to abolish imputed rental value for second homes as well. It would result in a loss of income of around CHF 200 million a year, explains the RKGK in a press release. On the other hand, the RKGK has no objections to the planned abolition of the imputed rental value for main apartments.

    The mountain cantons have already been hit by the Second Home Act of decisive economic effects, writes the RKGK. In contrast to the Federal Council, the mountain cantons see further need for action here. Specifically, provisions are to be changed, “the application of which leads to objectively negative results or leaves insufficient scope for innovative solutions”.

    The RKGK is also calling for improvements to the message passed by the Federal Council on electricity supply with renewable energies. Among other things, the mountain cantons want to have extended the current maximum water rate. With electricity prices rising as a result of climate policy, the electricity companies are still “in a position to pay today’s water rates without any problems,” argues the RKGK.

    Furthermore, the RKGK criticizes the approach to the Postal Organization Act: Here the Federal Council has pushed ahead with a message without waiting for the results of an expert commission it has set up itself. However, the responsible commission in the Council of States has postponed its deliberations until the results have been presented. “Against this background, it cannot be tolerated in any way if Swiss Post continues to dismantle its services in the run-up to the political discussion,” says the RKGK.

  • Schilliger Holz AG plans a new plant in Perlen

    Schilliger Holz AG plans a new plant in Perlen

    Schilliger Holz AG from Küssnacht is planning to build a new production plant for wood fiber insulation panels in Perlen. According to a media release, this is to be built on the Perlen Papier AG factory site. The CPH Group , to which Perlen Papier AG belongs, will hand over a land area of 20,000 square meters to the wood processing company with building rights.

    Schilliger Holz AG is one of the main suppliers of wood chips to Perlen Papier AG. One of their sawmills is already located right next to the paper mill in Perlen. Thanks to the new plant, the two companies will work even more closely together: Perlen Papier AG will supply the new plant with electricity, process steam, fresh water and fully demineralized water. In addition, it will treat the waste water produced in the company’s own sewage treatment plant.

    “We are pleased to be able to realize synergies in industrial wood processing together with Schilliger Holz AG at the Perlen location. In this way, Perlen will become the center for sustainable recycling of the important resource wood in Switzerland ”, Peter Schildknecht, CEO of the CPH Group, is quoted in a press release from his company.

    According to Schilliger Holz AG, there has been “no more insulation board production in Switzerland for a long time”. With the implementation of the new plant, the company therefore wants to close a “large gap in the Swiss wood processing chain”. Wood fiber insulation boards are used, for example, for the thermal insulation of the outer shell surfaces of buildings.

    The project is currently in the planning phase. Commissioning is scheduled for 2023.