Tag: Alterszentrum

  • Construction site for retirement home in Schlieren to be set up in March

    Construction site for retirement home in Schlieren to be set up in March

    From the beginning of March 2026, the construction site for the new Schlieren retirement home “Wohnen am Stadtpark”will be visible to the public. Preparatory work will then begin there. Two appeals had led to a one-year delay, but these were withdrawn in December 2025. The legal proceedings have now been concluded. According to a statement from the city of Schlieren, the construction site can now be set up and the initial construction and preparatory work can begin. The official ground-breaking ceremony is scheduled for April 2026. Construction work is expected to be completed by the end of 2028.

    As construction begins, the playground on the western edge of the city park will also be dismantled starting in early March. According to the city, a new municipal playground is already being built at Stürmeierhuus. It is scheduled to be completed in April.

    In the referendum on 12 March 2023, a loan of CHF 44.32 million for the construction of the new retirement home was clearly approved with 76.6 per cent voting in favour. As the city emphasises, it makes “an important contribution to ensuring modern, needs-based care and nursing for the elderly close to their homes”.

  • New ground-breaking ceremony in Bergdietikon

    New ground-breaking ceremony in Bergdietikon

    The ground-breaking ceremony for the Hintermatt retirement and care centre, the Oase, took place on 5 November, as reported by the municipality of Bergdietikon in a press release. On completion in summer 2028, the retirement centre in Bergdietikon will be able to provide 66 flats for senior citizens and 44 care places.

    The project was approved by the municipal assembly back in 2012 and the sale of the land was also authorised. However, this was followed by 13 years of planning and legal disputes. The ground-breaking ceremony is a “decisive moment” in the realisation of the project, which is now “finally being implemented after a long phase of objections and legal disputes”, according to the municipality of Bergdietikon.

    The project is particularly important for the municipality in that it not only meets the needs of the elderly population. The local infrastructure is also to be enriched by publicly accessible facilities.

  • Bergdietikon grants building permit for retirement and care centre

    Bergdietikon grants building permit for retirement and care centre

    The Bergdietikon municipal council has given the green light for the construction of a retirement and care centre in the Hintermatt area, according to a statement from the Oase Group. Retirement flats and care places are to be built there. The building permit is expected to come into legal force at the end of May, according to the municipality’s press release.

    Planning for the Hintermatt retirement and care centre in the Kindhausen district of Bergdietik has been ongoing for around twelve years, according to the press release. It began with a municipal assembly and the sale of the land in Hintermatt to Oase Holding AG in Baar ZG. Oase submitted the planning application in November 2023.

    The Oase Group, based in Dübendorf ZH, currently operates a wide range of residential concepts in the areas of retirement living, assisted living, care for people in need of care and long-term and palliative care at eight locations throughout Switzerland, according to the company. A further seven projects, including Bergdietikon, are in the planning stage.

    According to the guideline project on which the design plan is based, Oase will build a centre with around 64 retirement flats and 45 care places. Seven parties objected to the planning application. After the public consultation was completed in summer 2024, several objection negotiations took place between the developer and the objectors. The negotiations were concluded before Easter and the municipal council issued the building permit at its meeting on 22 April, according to a statement from the municipality.

    According to the plans of the municipality and the Oase Group, the new retirement and care home is set to open in the fourth quarter of 2027.

  • Schlieren concludes planning contract for new retirement centre

    Schlieren concludes planning contract for new retirement centre

    In March, Schlierem’s voters approved a loan of 44,317,000 Swiss francs for the construction of the retirement centre Wohnen am Stadtpark. The new building in the middle of the city is to replace the Sandbühl retirement centre. Now the city council has awarded Liechti Graf Zumsteg Architekten from Brugg AG the contract for the corresponding architectural work, the Schlieremer city administration informs in its current city council news. The volume of the planning contract is 3.7 million Swiss francs.

    Wohnen am Stadtpark is designed as a building complex with contemporary and affordable flats for older people. The concept by Liechti Graf Zumsteg Architekten envisages a two-storey base with concrete elements housing the restaurant and nursing rooms. Four upper floors for the flats for the elderly will be built in timber. According to the city administration’s information on the project, the new building will “meet the requirements of a healthy and ecological construction method according to Minergie-P ECO and be certified accordingly”. The completion of the new retirement centre is planned for 2026.

  • Schlieren votes for construction of retirement centre

    Schlieren votes for construction of retirement centre

    After the vote on Sunday, 12 March, the retirement centre Wohnen am Stadtpark can be built in Schlieren. The new building in the middle of the city will replace the Sandbühl Centre for the Elderly. According to a media release, Schlieren’s voters approved the loan of CHF 44,317,000 for the project with a vote of 76.59 per cent.

    “The electorate already clearly approved the sale of the Sandbühl retirement centre in 2019,” Manuela Stiefel, head of the finance and real estate department, was quoted as saying. “With this second yes, we can now tackle the implementation-“

    The new building is described in the city’s statement as “an attractive facility in the centre of Schlieren”. It is to offer contemporary and affordable flats for older people. Occupation of the new premises is planned for 2027.

    Residents at the Zentrum Wohnen am Stadtpark will be able to live in their own flats in a mobile and self-determined manner and, depending on their needs, take advantage of services such as nursing and care, meals, cleaning or laundry services, according to the statement. They also do not have to move to another care facility if more intensive care is needed. An important goal of the city of Schlieren’s age strategy has thus been achieved.

    The turnout in the referendum on 12 March was only 22.12 per cent, according to the minutes of the electoral office. Of 9033 voters, 1998 cast a vote. Of the 1991 valid votes, 1525 were in favour and 466 against.

  • Schlieren votes for construction of retirement centre

    Schlieren votes for construction of retirement centre

    After the vote on Sunday, 12 March, the retirement centre Wohnen am Stadtpark can be built in Schlieren. The new building in the middle of the city will replace the Sandbühl Centre for the Elderly. According to a media release, Schlieren’s voters approved the loan of CHF 44,317,000 for the project with a vote of 76.59 per cent.

    “The electorate already clearly approved the sale of the Sandbühl retirement centre in 2019,” Manuela Stiefel, head of the finance and real estate department, was quoted as saying. “With this second yes, we can now tackle the implementation-“

    The new building is described in the city’s statement as “an attractive facility in the centre of Schlieren”. It is to offer contemporary and affordable flats for older people. Occupation of the new premises is planned for 2027.

    Residents at the Zentrum Wohnen am Stadtpark will be able to live in their own flats in a mobile and self-determined manner and, depending on their needs, take advantage of services such as nursing and care, meals, cleaning or laundry services, according to the statement. They also do not have to move to another care facility if more intensive care is needed. An important goal of the city of Schlieren’s age strategy has thus been achieved.

    The turnout in the referendum on 12 March was only 22.12 per cent, according to the minutes of the electoral office. Of 9033 voters, 1998 cast a vote. Of the 1991 valid votes, 1525 were in favour and 466 against.

  • Timber Corporation is the guardian of our forest

    Timber Corporation is the guardian of our forest

    The Schlieren wood corporation and the forest ranger Limmattal Süd have their diverse tasks under control despite the many challenges. They are pleased that this year, with the new cloakroom in the Zelgli, a building will be built by the city of Schlieren with local wood and that other buildings (after-school care center, new retirement center) will be tendered or planned in wood. This role model function of the city of Schlieren was also carried over to private real estate investors. The “Kesslerplath” project of the Migros Pension Fund is also to be realized in wood.

    Around 100 cubic meters of spruce wood from the Schlierem Forest will be used for the new cloakroom building at the Rohr sports field. Financially this is not a big deal for the Schlieren wood corporation, but President Fredy Füllemann is very pleased that the city of Schlieren not only sets an example for building with local wood with this decision, but also appreciates the work of the wood corporation.

    The Schlieren wood corporation was founded as a private corporation in 1851 and manages a total of around 180 hectares of forest. A milestone in the history of the Schlieren wood corporation was the great amalgamation of forests in 1984. This resulted in large and much easier-to-manage parcels. The city of Schlieren also contributed its forest and has since then been a member with partial rights, like all other private forest owners. Almost without exception, these are long-established Schlierem families.

    The prices for domestic wood are poor. These prices have been falling for a long time and the storm Lothar in 1999 intensified this trend. So there is hardly any more money to be made with the forest and the timber corporations are happy when they can cover the costs of care and maintenance with the proceeds. A further complicating factor is that significantly cheaper wood is delivered to Switzerland from abroad.

    The forest belongs to private individuals, but can be used by the public. Very few people know that the forest owners are responsible for a great deal of work in the forest, including the maintenance of the forest paths, which are highly valued by the population, and that they also have to bear the costs.

    In some Swiss cantons, wood corporations are supported in this area, but unfortunately this has hardly been the case in Zurich so far. "As the price of wood continues to fall, it is becoming more and more difficult for forest owners to cope with the financial burdens," emphasizes Roland Helfenberger and Fredy Füllemann adds: "We will probably have to make ourselves heard more in the canton in the future."

    In our time, the forest has to struggle with various influences. In particular, global warming is causing him a lot of trouble, some tree species will probably disappear in our forests in the long term. While spruce, fir and beech trees suffer from the higher temperatures, oaks, Douglas firs and nut trees have significantly fewer problems.

    It is typical of forest management that everything has to be considered over long periods of time, or – as Revierforster Helfenberger aptly puts it: "We benefit from the work of our ancestors and work for future generations." As the district forester Limmattal Süd, Helfenberger from Aesch has also been responsible for the care and management of the Schlierem forest since 2013. He and his team are faced with great challenges in a variety of ways. The heavy snowfalls in the past few months have caused a lot of extra work and the clean-up work is far from over.

    Ecologically and economically
    This is not the first time that the city is building Schlieren with wood. The multi-part factory building in the city on Bernstrasse was made of wood and even made it into the 20 best best practice examples in Switzerland. The double after-school care center at Schulstrasse 12 was also made entirely of wood in 2007. More wooden structures are to follow. The Migros Pension Fund MPK is currently examining the procurement of wood for the new Kesslerplatz building from the Schlieremer Wald, or from the Limmattal-Süd forest district. Spruce and fir trees are available for the harvest season. At best, the MPK plans to source the wood for the ceilings and facades from the region. The latest study by Wüest Partner AG shows that wooden buildings are not only ecologically convincing, but also keep up economically.