Tag: Chur

  • Customised processes support bridge renovation in Chur

    Customised processes support bridge renovation in Chur

    The AS Chur Süd consortium, consisting of METTLER PRADER AG and Cellere Bau AG, has commissioned STRABAG to replace the bridge edge beams as part of the renovation of the Sommerau subway in Chur. The timber construction department of the Schlieren-based construction company was tasked with developing a customised method for the formwork, explained STRABAG in a press release. “With our experience, we found the right solution,” Dominic Graf, timber construction foreman at STRABAG AG, is quoted as saying.

    Specifically, the work was made more difficult by the limited space available, which, among other things, did not allow for a conventional substructure for the formwork. The STRABAG timber construction team solved this problem by reinforcing the formwork panels with flat steel. Fire hoses were inserted into the gaps. The hoses, filled with compressed air, hold the panels in a stable position during concreting.

    According to the press release, the first bridge edges have now been completed to the complete satisfaction of the master builders on site. According to STRABAG, the other construction phases are currently being realised according to plan with the help of this technically demanding but ideally suited solution.

  • Canton can build Graubünden University of Applied Sciences Centre

    Canton can build Graubünden University of Applied Sciences Centre

    Construction of the new Chur University of Applied Sciences Centre can begin in spring 2025. According to a recent press release, the cantonal building construction office received the building permit from the city of Chur at the beginning of June.

    The fact that the city was able to give the green light just three months after submitting the planning application was due to its quality, according to the responsible city councillor Sandra Maissen: “The canton’s largest construction project was well and comprehensively prepared. Thanks to the excellent cooperation between the canton and the city of Chur, the planning application was processed very quickly.”

    According to cantonal master builder Andreas Kohne, the realisation can now be tackled according to schedule. This schedule envisages the ground-breaking ceremony and thus the official start of construction in late autumn 2024. The actual start of construction should then be in spring. If everything goes according to plan, the new Graubünden University of Applied Sciences Centre should open in 2028. Initial demolition work on the Pulvermühle site in Chur and the rerouting of the Mühlbach stream began a few weeks ago.

  • Opening of the liug.innovation centre in Chur

    Opening of the liug.innovation centre in Chur

    The liug.innovation centre in Chur has been handed over for use. The centre is planned, owned and operated by Liechtenstein-based ITW Ingenieurunternehmung AG. According to the company, Mayor Urs Marti and Victor Zindel, Head of Regional Management/Economy Contact Centre of the City of Chur, took part in the opening ceremony.

    ITW describes the semi-circular building with integrated piazza by Chur architects Bearth & Deplazes as Chur’s new landmark. It is modelled on a Roman amphitheatre. Its Rhaeto-Romanic name Liug means place or square: “A place for innovation, a place for encounters,” said liug project manager and member of the management team, Oliver Bossi, in a press release.

    According to its own advertising, the liug.innovation centre offers 11,200 square metres of space for work, research, workshops, education, congresses, laboratory activities, fitness, events, catering and services. Equipment and layouts can be changed and utilised on a modular basis. A total of up to 300 workstations could be created there.

    In a video, Bossi explains that the difference between the liug.innovation centre and conventional buildings is “certainly the mix of renowned and young companies that will have space here”. In addition, the liug.innovation centre will be partially open to the public. According to him, the project represents another milestone for ITW in the canton of Graubünden.

  • Projekt Interim is looking for interim users in Chur

    Projekt Interim is looking for interim users in Chur

    The business model of Projekt Interim is the rental of temporarily vacant rooms at favorable conditions to artists and young companies. A new property is available in Chur, Projekt Interim informed in a statement. Specifically, interim users are being sought for offices, studios, storage rooms and a communal kitchen at Loëstrasse 37. Chur train station is a five-minute walk from the property. The premises can be used until July 15, 2023.

    “We at Projekt Interim are happy that with this beautiful project in Chur we can now provide the most affordable spaces for innovative people with big ideas throughout Switzerland,” Corinne Walker is quoted as saying in the statement. “The project on Loëstrasse with the beautiful and large rooms with parquet is my favorite from now on,” says the project manager. Interested parties can contact Walker by email .

    On July 7, Projekt Interim also invites you to a public tour of the building at Loëstrasse 37. It takes place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Projekt Interim provides further information and photos on the internet .

  • Energy efficiency makes buildings more economical

    Energy efficiency makes buildings more economical

    Nowhere else is so much energy consumed as in the building sector. In Europe, around 40 percent of final energy consumption and 36 percent of greenhouse gas emissions are attributable to this sector. With its Smart Buildings technologies, Talkpool AG is helping to make buildings more energy-efficient. For example, via intelligent sensors that can be used to automatically control and optimize the indoor air and climate. “Our technology not only helps to significantly reduce the energy requirements of buildings, but also saves the corresponding costs,” says Aurelius Wosylus, Group Chief Commercial Officer at Talkpool AG. He refers to the rapidly increasing energy prices and advises building operators to tackle the problem now.

    In Germany alone there are 21 million buildings, of which around 19 million are residential buildings and around 2 million non-residential buildings. Together they consumed around 865 terawatt hours (TWh) of energy in 2019. At 76 percent, by far the largest part is accounted for by space heating (658 TWh). Even back in 2019, i.e. before the energy price shock, the costs for space heating, hot water and lighting in buildings in Germany amounted to an estimated 73 billion euros. Although the final energy consumption in the building sector has fallen slightly in recent years, it is not to the extent that would be necessary to achieve the climate targets. This is also due to the fact that around a third of the buildings in Germany and Europe are more than 50 years old. Older buildings in particular often only have inadequate HVAC systems. HVAC stands for heating, ventilation and air conditioning and refers to the various systems in a building responsible for heat regulation, indoor comfort and air quality.

    Convincing solutions for saving energy in buildings

    The international company, headquartered in Chur, Switzerland, has developed solutions with which energy and cost savings of 10 to 25 percent can be achieved in existing HVAC systems. Aurelius Wosylus explains the technology behind it: “Our wireless room climate sensors form the basis. After they have been installed in the building, these monitor the various parameters such as room heat and air quality in real time.” This input goes to a self-learning control algorithm via an Internet gateway. According to Wosylus, the AI also accesses external data, such as the weather situation or the development of energy tariffs. “In this way, the AI controls the HVAC system in a constant improvement process to maximize indoor climate quality and optimize energy consumption.”

    The system is already installed in buildings with a total area of more than one million square meters. With consistently good results. As an example, Wosylus cites a hotel and office project in Sweden with an area of around 25,000 square meters. “Our analysis shows that not only has the air quality and thus the feel-good factor improved significantly, but also the energy consumption for the heating and cooling systems has been reduced by between 20 and 25 percent.” It didn’t even take a year, he says Wosylus until the project has recouped its costs for the building operator.

  • Avobis confirms Ralf Capeder as Managing Director of Verit Immobilien

    Avobis confirms Ralf Capeder as Managing Director of Verit Immobilien

    The Avobis Group AG has officially confirmed Ralf Capeder in his function as Managing Director of Verit Immobilien AG , the real estate company, which has belonged to Avobis since spring 2021, informed in a press release. Capender had managed Verit Immobilien ad interim since the beginning of November last year. The qualified lawyer and real estate economist joined Verit six years ago. In the past few years, Capender has successfully managed the Chur site, according to the statement.

    “We are very pleased about the appointment of Ralf Capeder,” Sandro Sulcis is quoted as saying in the statement. The Co-CEO of Avobis is convinced that Capeder “with his extensive experience and broad network will further strengthen Verit Immobilien as a reliable partner in the real estate market and position the company as a powerful pillar within the Avobis Group”.

    At the beginning of March, Verit Immobilien also strengthened its management team with Manuela Gläser-Glänzel, as further explained in the press release. The expert for real estate management will be responsible for the operational skills of Verit Immobilien as Head of Management. Before joining Verit Immobilien, Gläser-Glänzel worked for Intercity Bewirtschaftung AG, Livit, Suva and Wincasa, among others.

  • IKEA expands in Chur and Valais

    IKEA expands in Chur and Valais

    IKEA is opening new locations in Switzerland after ten years. There will be a planning studio for customers in Chur and a furniture store of the usual size in Riddes. According to the press release , the 565 square meter planning studio with various model rooms is to open in autumn in the Steinbock shopping center in Chur. It should become a kind of mini-IKEA, it is said. The focus is on the consulting and planning service for visitors and business customers.

    At the same time, Spreitbach-based IKEA Schweiz AG will soon be submitting the building permit for its tenth store in the Valais municipality of Riddes. After the announcement of a so-called plan and order point in Bern, the expansion of the two locations is the next step in IKEA Switzerland’s expansion strategy. The most modern and greenest IKEA furniture store in Switzerland is to be built in Riddes. The opening is planned for autumn 2023. The shop will offer a wide range of sustainable products and services on around 23,000 square meters with lots of green space.

    “It’s now ten years since we opened the last IKEA store in Switzerland in Rothenburg and thus opened up Central Switzerland. With the planning studio in Chur and the store in Riddes, we are opening up two new markets in Switzerland outside of the cities,” Jessica Anderen, CEO and strategy manager at IKEA Switzerland, is quoted as saying. Today, IKEA has nine furniture stores in all parts of the country and a distribution center in Itingen BL, which handles most of the online sales.

    According to the press release, the IKEA planning studio is the first format of its kind in Switzerland. Comparable service points are only available in London, Berlin and Oslo. “We are both pleased and proud that IKEA is now offering its new service format based on selected world cities here in Chur of all places,” Frederick Widl, Head of Real Estate at AXA , is quoted as saying as the landlord.

  • Construction of the InnoQube Swiss has started

    Construction of the InnoQube Swiss has started

    The latest innovation center in the Alpine region is currently being built in Graubünden. The groundbreaking ceremony for the InnoQube Swiss was celebrated on Friday in the Rossboden area of Chur. According to a notification , the project will be fully financed by the Liechtenstein- based ITW group of companies . It specifies the total investment at around CHF 25 million.

    The CEO of the investor and project developer, Dr. Martin Meyer, is convinced that this will create “a place of innovation, inspiration and progress that will become known far beyond the Swiss borders”. The Chairman of the Board of Directors of the operating company InnoQube Swiss AG, Franco Quinter, emphasizes that the InnoQube Swiss is viewed as a temporary or permanent “base camp for innovations”. The offer is aimed “specifically at start-ups, spin-offs and companies from research, development and digitization”. “The key issues of health and performance would play a decisive role”.

    Completion is planned for the end of 2023. From 2024 research and work will be carried out in the four-story InnoQube on a total area of 11,200 square meters. It offers flexible office space for around 300 workplaces, various co-working and meeting rooms, an event arena, a restaurant and a daycare center.

  • Inventx can expand its headquarters in Chur

    Inventx can expand its headquarters in Chur

    Inventx has received the green light to expand its headquarters in Chur, according to a press release . The IT service provider wants to build a new building on the area of the old forestry workshop in the city center. This should offer space for more than 200 employees. In addition, there will be space in the new building for apartments, restaurants, a daycare center and the Chur city archive.

    Inventx has been planning to expand its headquarters for four years. However, the project was delayed due to “objections from the neighborhood”. Ultimately, the complaints landed before the federal court. But she rejected this.

    “We are pleased that the project can now finally be realized and that the fallow area in the city center is revitalized,” says Mayor Urs Marti (FDP) in the press release. “In addition, the project strengthens Chur as a business location in the long term and thus also strengthens the city’s position as an attractive ICT location,” he adds.

  • New use for a former prison

    New use for a former prison

    An open district of Chur is being realized on the Sennhof site. With the new Sennhof, the city is getting an extension of the old town with a broad mix of uses, writes the building construction department of the canton of Graubünden in a message. In other words: after two hundred years, the Sennhof prison will once again be freely accessible to everyone. The conversion includes residential, commercial, gastro and a hostel.

    New life in old walls
    Those responsible for the project emphasize that in future people will work and live around the newly accessible inner courtyard. In the planned new building on the Sennhof site, 29 modern old town apartments will be realized. The heart of the complex remains the actual Sennhof, which, with the tower from the 13th century, is a distinctive identification feature. In addition to the tower, the arched wing and the buildings along Sennhofstrasse will be retained. The proposed project blends the existing building structure harmoniously into the old town, according to the building construction department. The angled part of the new building means that the inner courtyard is redrawn, opens up towards the vineyard and looks more spacious overall, according to the team of architects. The overall idea is supported by the diverse and well-structured mix of uses with a restaurant, commercial, residential, cultural and student space. Except for deliveries, the area should be car-free and only open to non-motorized traffic.

    Construction is expected to start in autumn 2020. The project development company Sennhof submitted the building application for the project in mid-February 2020. The company consists of Brandis Investment AG and Miro Immo AG. The Chur office Ritter Schumacher is responsible for the architecture. The project developers provide an insight into the planned project as part of the temporary use until October 2020 on the Sennhof site in Chur. If everything goes according to plan, construction work should start in the autumn of this year. ■