Tag: Gemeindeentwicklung

  • Regensberg fights for survival

    Regensberg fights for survival

    Regensberg has exactly 477 inhabitants at the end of 2024. Despite two tax increases in recent years, there is not enough revenue to finance the municipality’s tasks. The structural deficit threatens the independence of the medieval country town on the rocky spur above Dielsdorf. A merger with a neighboring municipality is on the cards, a scenario that many Regensberg residents want to avoid.

    A meadow as a turning point
    The impetus came in April 2024 at a Future Day, where the population openly discussed the fate of their municipality for the first time. On the agenda was the Pünt meadow, the last major building site in the village. This discussion gave rise to the idea of a cooperative. In July 2025, the Pünt Regensberg building cooperative was officially entered in the commercial register.

    40 apartments, 80 new people
    The project, a four-storey building with 41 apartments, is to be built on the Pünt, around three quarters of which will be large family apartments with 4.5 to 5.5 rooms, the rest smaller units with 2.5 to 3.5 rooms. The cooperative anticipates 60 to 80 new residents. For a community the size of Regensberg, this corresponds to a population increase of around 15 percent. A competition to find the project team was held back in 2025.

    More than taxes
    The goal is not just fiscal. Regensberg has the fourth-highest average age of all Zurich municipalities. Younger families should come and thus also secure the elementary school, because without a school there are no families and without families there is no village life. The flexible usage concept also allows older people to move from their single-family home to a suitable smaller apartment without having to leave the village.

    non-profit instead of speculative
    If the project had ended up in private hands, the apartments in the attractive location would have primarily been investment properties. In contrast, the cooperative lets on a cost-rent basis, i.e. without the intention of making a profit. The project is being financed via share certificates, member loans, state subsidies and bank mortgages, with a target equity ratio of 35 to 40 percent.

    the cranes will rise in 2028
    Because Regensberg is listed in the federal inventory of sites worthy of protection, particularly strict conditions apply to construction. The building permit is due to be issued in 2027, with construction scheduled to start in 2028. The first apartments could be occupied one or two years later. Whether the cooperative can solve the structural deficit on its own remains to be seen. But it proves that sometimes a village saves itself.

  • New residential neighbourhood brings dynamism to Spreitenbach

    New residential neighbourhood brings dynamism to Spreitenbach

    The Tivoli Garten neighbourhood is revitalising the municipality of Spreitenbach, according to a press release. People have been able to move in there since mid-July and by mid-September more than 500 residents had already taken advantage of this, according to the municipality, citing figures from the residents’ services.

    The largest group are the 226 people (45 per cent) who have moved to Tivoli Garten from the canton of Zurich. This is followed by 121 people (24 per cent) from the canton of Aargau, 89 people (18 per cent) who have moved within Spreitenbach, 49 people (10 per cent) from other cantons and 22 people (4 per cent) who have moved to Tivoli Garten from abroad.

    Tivoli Garten offers a total of 445 rental flats (1.5 to 5.5 rooms) and small commercial spaces on an area of 15,000 square metres. A communal garden with a playground serves as a meeting place for the residents.

  • Development plans are being revised and expanded in Hünenberg

    Development plans are being revised and expanded in Hünenberg

    OSRI AG from Lucerne is supporting the Zug municipality of Hünenberg in the implementation of two development plans. According to a press release, the urban planning and spatial development company is to assist the municipality with the transfer of existing development plans, to finalise the planning basis and to coordinate with cantonal authorities. The aim is to create a consistent, legally compliant basis.

    Parallel to this work, OSRI is to draw up a development plan for the Langrüti conservation area. This will integrate the building structure, the open space planning and the urban planning connection.

    With this joint project, Hünenberg aims to drive forward sustainable community development in which the existing buildings are harmonised with future developments.

  • 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.