Tag: Limmatstadt

  • Location promotion Limmatstadt has three new members

    Location promotion Limmatstadt has three new members

    Standortförderung Limmatstadt AG welcomes three new members. According to a press release, SEQUOIA Legal & Advisory GmbH, based in Birmensdorf ZH, is a new member. Sequoia offers companies an external legal department at a fixed monthly price. Clients receive ongoing legal support, which frees up managers to concentrate on their core business. “As a long-established Weininger and member of the Limmatstadt, it is important to me to support SMEs in the Limmat Valley in all situations in a pragmatic and solution-oriented manner in the area of commercial law and litigation,” says David W. Frei, Managing Partner at SEQUOIA.

    The hotel harrys home Zürich-Limmattal in Spreitenbach AG is only a few meters away from the shopping center Shoppi Tivoli. From the hotel, the airport and the city of Zurich can be reached in less than 20 minutes on the Limmattalbahn. “As part of the Limmatstadt community, our aim is to offer travelers and locals a modern and comfortable retreat. At harry’s home Zürich-Limmattal, we combine authentic, family hospitality with tailor-made accommodation experiences and a feel-good atmosphere,” says Operations Manager Florian Schrempel.

    Acasa Immobilien GmbH in Neuenhof AG is a real estate company with around 700 properties in the greater Aargau and Zurich area, which specializes in the brokerage, sale and management of properties. “Acasa Immobilien GmbH is a young start-up that has set itself the task of bringing a breath of fresh air to the real estate industry. Being part of the Limmatstadt community opens up new channels for exciting collaborations,” says Managing Director Shpejtim Fazlija.

  • Location promotion with new management

    Location promotion with new management

    The handover in the management of Limmatstadt AG has been completed. Stephanie Kiener has taken over from long-time Managing Director Jasmina Ritz, the location promotion agency announced in a press release. Following her withdrawal from the operational business, Ritz will continue to be involved in Limmatstadt AG as Vice President of the Board of Directors.

    One of Kiener’s new tasks is to lead the process with which the location promotion agency intends to define its future direction. To this end, joint seminars with representatives from the Board of Directors and the Executive Board as well as the member municipalities and the Economic Advisory Board are planned from November. They will be supported by external consultants. “I am pleased to inform you about the results and the strategy for the coming years once the process has been completed,” Kiener is quoted as saying in the press release.

    In recent months, the location promotion team has created promising conditions for the future, according to Limmatstadt AG. The member municipalities want to make a greater financial commitment in future. The member municipalities of the Zurich Limmat Valley Planning Group are planning to increase their contributions as of 2025, while the four member municipalities in Aargau want to follow suit in 2026 and have approved a project contribution for the coming year.

    In addition, the number of members with annual contributions has been increased. This serves the objective of securing funding in the medium term in equal parts from the private and public sectors. The acquisition of new members will continue.

  • Stephanie Kiener succeeds Jasmina Ritz at Limmatstadt AG

    Stephanie Kiener succeeds Jasmina Ritz at Limmatstadt AG

    The Limmatstadt AG location promotion organisation is getting a new managing director in Stephanie Kiener. According to a press release, Kiener will take over the operational management of the Limmatstadt regional location promotion office based at the JED in Schlieren ZH in August. The successor to Jasmina Ritz at Limmatstadt AG has thus been decided. Ritz will oversee the transition process until the end of the year and will then retire from operational activities. She will continue to fulfil her role as Vice President of the Board of Directors.

    Stephanie Kiener joined Limmatstadt AG in November 2023. She had previously worked for the city of Baden for eight years, where she held various positions in location marketing, including Head of Tourism. She actively supported the separation of the city’s tourism division into the new public-private partnership TourismusRegion Baden AG, of which she was most recently Deputy Managing Director. Kiener knows the Limmat Valley inside out. She was born in Schlieren.

    “The opportunity to work together with stakeholders from the entire region and the Board of Directors to shape regional location promotion in a future-oriented way is a great motivation for me,” Kiener is quoted as saying. She is counting on “taking this path together and further strengthening the Aargau and Zurich Limmat Valley region with innovative approaches, fresh ideas and combined forces”.

    “Stephanie Kiener is our preferred candidate. We are now ideally positioned for the transformation process that has already begun,” said Lara Albanesi, President of the Board of Directors.

    A public dialogue event will take place on Tuesday, 4 June, from 7.30 to 9 a.m. at the LAB coworking office in Spreitenbach.

  • Limmatstadt AG prepares for the next stage

    Limmatstadt AG prepares for the next stage

    As announced, Balz Halter has resigned as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Limmatstadt AG. Erika Fries, Peter Rauch and Franziska Schopp also stepped down at the Annual General Meeting on 12 March at JED Schlieren. “We want to make room for new forces,” says Halter. The shareholders of the regional location promoter unanimously elected Lara Albanesi (Administrative Director of the Kurtheater Baden), the Mayor of Weiningen and Weytec co-owner Mario Okle and Jasmina Ritz to the Board of Directors. They will join Josef Bütler and Jörg Krummenacher, who are currently on the Board. Jasmina Ritz announced her resignation as Managing Director of Limmatstadt at the end of 2024.

    The new Board of Directors will primarily have to deal with financing. According to Balz Halter, expenditure amounts to around CHF 600,000, a third of which is for staff. The municipalities and the two cantons pay 200,000 francs, the economy 150,000 francs. Halter AG will pay the remainder, most recently CHF 250,000. His company will do this one last time in 2024, said the initiator of Limmatstadt AG.

    Both politicians and the business community are called upon to provide future funding. “We need regional location promotion,” said Urdorf mayor Sandra Rottensteiner. “We need to divide the funding so that we can maintain the structures of Limmatstadt AG.” Urdorf is prepared to double its contribution.

    The Limmat Valley SME and Trade Association, the Spreitenbach Industry, Services and Trade Association(IDH), the Schlieren Chamber of Commerce and the Dietikon Industry and Trade Association support the further development of the regional location promoter. A joint vision, a performance mandate and a financial commitment from the new organisation are needed, they write in a parallel statement. The organisation should operate economic and location promotion, network the region internally and represent it externally.

    Patrick Stäuble, IDH President and Managing Director of Shoppi Tivoli, emphasised the importance of a cross-cantonal offering. “We need an institution that looks beyond borders. Then the economy will be prepared to give money,” he said on the podium.

    The members of the Board of Directors are confident. “I don’t have a recipe yet, but I have confidence that things will continue,” said the newly elected Mario Okle. Josef Bütler, one of the two incumbents and former mayor of Spreitenbach: “I am convinced that we will still be around in 2025.”

  • Limmatstadt und FRZ feiern dritte Gubriströhre

    Limmatstadt und FRZ feiern dritte Gubriströhre

    Die Standortförderung Limmatstadt und die FRZ Flughafenregion Zürich haben am Freitag, 14. April, zusammen mit dem Bundesamt für Strassen (ASTRA) einen Lunch im neuen Tunnel am Gubrist organisiert. Laut einer Medienmitteilung wurde der exklusive Tunnel-Lunch auf der Nord-Seite in Regensdorf abgehalten. Mehr als 300 Gäste nahmen daran teil.

    Der Anlass bot den Gästen der FRZ Flughafenregion Zürich und der Limmatstadt die Möglichkeit, den neuen Tunnel vor der offiziellen Inbetriebnahme zu besichtigen. Zu Beginn sprachen Jasmina Ritz von der Standortförderung Limmatstadt und Christoph Lang von der FRZ Flughafenregion Zürich. Eine Grussansprache hielten auch Ernst Stocker, Regierungspräsident des Kantons Zürich, und Jürg Röthlisberger, der Direktor des Bundesamts für Strassen. Nach den Grussbotschaften und Informationen hatten die Gäste Gelegenheiten zur Besichtigung der neuen Tunnelröhre und danach zum Gespräch beim Steh-Lunch an der Regensdorfer Seite des Tunnels.

    Sponsoren des Anlasses waren das Bauunternehmen Basler & Hofmann, die auf Elektroinstallation und Gebäudetechnik spezialisierte Firma ETAVIS  und die Gottlieber Spezialitäten AG. An der Veranstaltung wurde das alkoholfreie Bier von Chopfab Boxer angeboten. Das Kreativkonzept und die Durchführung lagen in den Händen von Aroma. Am Samstag, 15. April, folgte das Tunnelfest für die Bevölkerung auf beiden Portalseiten in Regensdorf und Weiningen.

    Die Bauarbeiten an der dritten Röhre des Gubristtunnels dauerten von November 2017 bis April 2023. Zum Projekt heisst auf der ASTRA-Internetseite, die Nordumfahrung Zürich gehöre zu den am stärksten befahrenen Strassenabschnitten der Schweiz. Mehr als 120‘000 Fahrzeuge rollen täglich zwischen dem Limmattalerkreuz und der Verzweigung Zürich Nord.

    Zur Bildergalerie.

  • Limmattal communities are committed to "room for more"

    Limmattal communities are committed to "room for more"

    The new motto “Space leads more” of the Limmatstadt AG location promotion will be adopted by several municipalities in the Limmattal and, according to the media release, will be used as a logo in the communication. Limmatstadt AG operates location promotion in the Limmattal across cantons.

    For example, since Thursday the Schlieren website has read: “Schlieren. part of the Limmat city. Room for more.” According to the statement, the large brackets around the statement symbolize the sense of unity in the region and the understanding that the Limmat Valley towns and communities have more power with a common self-image. In this way, the municipalities, together with the Zurich Planning Group Limmattal ( ZPL ), show their commitment to the region. According to the announcement, the appearance was created as a joint effort in workshops with the municipalities and the Baden agency Kommpakt .

    According to the press release, the Limmatstadt municipalities of Bergdietikon, Dietikon, Geroldswil, Schlieren, Turgi, Uitikon, Unterengstringen, Urdorf and Weiningen as well as the ZPL maintain service agreements with the Limmatstadt location promotion. Since it was founded in 2014, Limmatstadt AG has been committed to regional awareness, a common living and economic area, increased networking, sustainable development and joint positioning. At the General Assembly in August 2021 in the JED in Schlieren, the new motto “Room for more.” was approved.

  • "Where there are rails, there is a city"

    "Where there are rails, there is a city"

    The November issue of the “ Baden aktuell ” magazine makes the city on the Limmat the topic of the month. In an interview, the managing director of the Limmatstadt AG location promotion company, Jasmina Ritz, explains the vision of the Limmatstadt. This is more than just a synonym for Baden and Zurich, she is quoted as saying.

    According to Ritz, the term Limmatstadt stands for the entire region along the Limmat. Seen in this way, the Limmat Valley is not located on the edge of two cities, but in their center and forms a whole. Ritz: “This change of perspective is central. The Limmatstadt with its around 20 cities and municipalities has what many other regions do not have: space for more. "

    The fact that the Limmat Valley is now becoming the Limmat City is a logical consequence of developments over the past 20 years. One associates the idea of a classic agglomeration with the Limmattal. So industrial location, specialist stores, traffic axis. Jasmina Ritz believes that the reality is different today. With its contrasts and diversity, the region forms a spatial unit, embedded in the Limmatraum and the hills. With the Limmattalbahn, the region is also receiving an urban mode of transport. Ritz: "The Limmattalbahn turns the agglo into an attractive urban region."

    The merging of the region is also interesting for Baden. The managing director of location promotion refers to the practice: “The communities in the region are all in the same boat, so it is worth joining forces. It has little weight when the city of Baden knocks in Bern. But if an entire region presents, the pressure increases, ”she is quoted as saying.

    Regarding the canton border between Zurich and Aargau, which runs in the middle of the city on the Limmat, she says: "Political borders no longer correspond to the realities of life." The fragmentation of the region prevents greater thinking and action. However, an overall view of the competition between the regions is necessary. This becomes clear in challenges such as traffic solutions. The Limmattalbahn will open in 2022. It creates connections between places, people and workplaces beyond the canton's borders. This train is much more than a means of transport. Ritz: "Where there are rails, there is a city."

  • The borders disappear in the Limmatstadt

    The borders disappear in the Limmatstadt

    The customer magazine " blue " of the electricity works of the canton of Zurich ( EKZ ) dedicates its cover story to the development of the Limmatstadt. In conversation in Schlieren and at urban development centers along the Limmattalbahn, the managing director of the Limmatstadt AG location promotion company, Jasmina Ritz, explains the idea behind the project. “A city is emerging” is the title of the latest edition of “blue” with a photo of Jasmina Ritz on the roof of the Bio-Technopark in Schlieren. "Here we are in the epicenter of the urban development of the Limmatstadt," Ritz is quoted as saying. And: "From up here you can no longer see any boundaries."

    With this sentence and in the long conversation with the author Luc Descombes, the person responsible at Limmatstadt AG makes it clear that the advantages and strengths of the individual communities should be brought together in the common vision of the Limmatstadt. "That is why a common self-image is so central," Ritz is quoted as saying. According to the text of “blue”, at least 200,000 people live in the catchment area of the so-called Limmatstadt, depending on the perspective. In the opinion of Jasmina Ritz, this deserves “a strong joint appearance and powerful location marketing”.

    In the main story published under the second title "Vision Limmatstadt", the examples of the communities of Schlieren and Dietikon show the emergence of a "liveable city" across the canton border into Aargauische Spreitenbach. The importance of the Limmattalbahn, which is currently under construction, for regional merging is emphasized. Jasmina Ritz says: “Wherever a tram goes, urban space is created. The Limmattalbahn is crucial for the positive development of the region. "

    The EKZ's commitment in this area is made clear in "blue" with the company projects. The Dietikon EKZ hydropower station supplies 4,500 households, the Oberengstringen substation has been providing an additional 80 megawatts since 2020 and the EKZ has been laying dozens of kilometers of new lines and conduits for the Limmat Valley Railway since 2020 to strengthen the future power grid in the Limmat city. "Blue" appears twice a year with a circulation of 300,000 copies throughout the canton. The magazine goes to every household.

  • Schlieren drives the upgrading of Kesslerplatz

    Schlieren drives the upgrading of Kesslerplatz

    The Migros Pension Fund's investment foundation has presented a design plan for Kesslerplatz. After the transfer of the private design plan from the local council to the local parliament, "the city of Schlieren will soon come a big step closer to its goal," as a media release said.

    As part of the planned upgrading of the square, the high-rise is to be preserved. The design plan also provides for four new structures. One of them is intended for commercial use, the other three are intended to provide living space. A total of 103 new apartments, a double kindergarten and a multi-purpose room are to be created as a result. For the realization of the kindergarten, the city of Schlieren has agreed with the investment foundation of the Migros pension fund both an exchange of land and compensation of CHF 2.11 million.

    Work is scheduled to begin in spring or summer 2022, and move-in is to take place from spring / summer 2024. Since the double kindergarten will not be available until a year later, “the Migros Pension Fund's investment foundation will cover 50 percent of the rental costs for a temporary arrangement, the remaining rental costs are also included in the compensation”, according to the city of Schlieren.

    With the upgrading of Kesslerplatz, a “high-quality and attractive entrance gate” to Schlieren should be created, which will also be optimally connected to the Limmattalbahn.

  • Dietikon relies on location advertising with comedian duo Lapsus

    Dietikon relies on location advertising with comedian duo Lapsus

    The city of Dietikon relies on humor in its location advertising. According to a media release, the well-known Dietiker comedian duo Lapsus has therefore received the order to subject their residential area to a critical examination and to record their impressions. It is said that funny, self-deprecating video productions were created.

    The videos can now be viewed on YouTube, Facebook and Instagram. The first is entitled “Dietikon from its most beautiful side”. Dietikon is presented as a noisy and urban city with idyllic green areas as the train passes by. The second video introduces the open-air gallery “DietikON – experience light art”, which will run until the end of February, with humorous puns. Further topics are planned.

    The core of the campaign, which will last in May, is self-irony, according to the media release. The plan is to publish six to seven videos, which will make the qualities and location advantages of the city visible and promote the city's positioning as a center for business, culture, education, local recreation, sport and leisure.

    It is emphasized that the topics have been discussed with the city. The comedians are free to implement it.

  • Jasmina Ritz promotes the idea of the Limmatstadt

    Jasmina Ritz promotes the idea of the Limmatstadt

    According to Jasmina Ritz, the Limmat Valley and the idea of the Limmat City is more than just the route between Baden and Zurich. The managing director of Limmatstadt AG , now based in Schlieren, pointed out in an interview in the customer magazine "blue" of the electricity works of the canton of Zurich ( EKZ ) that the change from an agglomeration area to a coherent urban area has long been taking place there. "We accompany this change, bundle resources, combine the advantages and strengths of the individual communities into a common Limmat city", Ritz is quoted as saying. It names four important cornerstones for the realization of the idea of transforming the many municipalities – which are not to be merged – into a city on the Limmat: Networking of municipalities and politicians, the economy and the population. As a second point, Ritz mentions the positioning of the region with a common face, the development of the region as well as image promotion and the creation of a supra-regional awareness.

    From Jasmina Ritz's point of view, the Limmattalbahn is very important for the desired cohesion. The managing director is quoted as saying that it is not just a huge commitment to the federal and cantonal region. The railway networks the communities and is the backbone of urban development, "Without the tram, the Limmat Valley would have been just an agglomeration", Ritz is quoted as saying in "blue".

    This growing together and a shared cross-border vision was made possible by the development in the Limmat Valley. In the past, this was only perceived as an industrial location and a traffic axis. But a common city on the Limmat with its numerous municipalities would have much more economic and political weight. Limmatstadt AG is setting a cultural and economic agenda for the entire region. The regional magazine "36 km" – named after the length of the Limmat between Zurich and Baden – draws attention to regional products or recommends the best hiking trails, bike routes and the like. The daily newsletter “punkt4 Limmatstadt”, in which the activities of the companies are exclusively present, contributes to the “branding strategy”, ie the anchoring of the name Limmatstadt in the consciousness. Ritz: "There is no other region."

  • "The Limmattal is more than an alternative to Zurich"

    "The Limmattal is more than an alternative to Zurich"

    Limmatstadt AG was launched 6 years ago. Where do you see your core tasks as managing director?
    I see myself as a service provider and ambassador for the entire region from Baden to Zurich, within the Limmat Valley and beyond. In my job I am always on the move and bring people and ideas together across the cantons. Network is the be-all and end-all. I supply those interested in the location with information, open doors, join committees or drive projects forward.

    What milestones have you reached today?
    Limmatstadt AG has established itself as a relevant partner and regional player. In the past few years it has been possible to win important supporters for the idea of the Limmatstadt as a networked and strong living and economic area: first companies as shareholders, numerous municipalities as clients, then the planning association and various network partners came along. The public can also participate via public shares. We reach the region with the establishment and operation of various communication channels – from the print magazine “36 km” to the digital 3D Limmat city model to the daily “punkt4” business newsletter.

    What are the next goals?
    It is of central importance to continue to bundle forces and use resources sensibly. In other words: to enter into cooperations where it makes sense and to make the value of our platforms and networks even clearer in order to win further communities and partners. Anyone who wants to settle in the city on the Limmat or is pursuing a project idea must know that we have come to the right place. Image is also important in the competition for locations. The aim here is to showcase the advantages of the entire region.

    At the beginning of 2019, Limmatstadt AG took over the function of Limmattal Location Promotion, the former association of the Zurich Limmattal municipalities. How important was this step?
    This step was central. The location promotion of the association stopped at the canton border. Our sphere of activity is the entire region. The complex challenges do not stop at canton borders. The dissolution was preceded by a broad-based strategy process. The realization: The privately owned Limmatstadt AG is an organization with a track record, the establishment of which has been privately financed and ensures a seamless succession. The municipalities have new performance agreements with us, so they are our customers, and the bottom line is that they benefit from significantly more performance for the same money.

    "If you want to settle in the city on the Limmat, you've come to the right place."


    How popular is the Limmattal when it comes to company settlements?
    There are over 80,000 jobs in the region, which are expected to increase by around 30 percent by 2040. Due to the lively construction activity, we can offer ideally located areas, especially for retail and services. The preferred location, the proximity to leading educational and research institutions and the good development make the location extremely attractive. With the Limmattalbahn we get an urban mode of transport and even better connections. This will also attract companies that have not previously had the Limmat Valley on their radar.

    How realistic do you think a merger of the communities Schlieren, Urdorf and Dietikon will be in the next 15 years?
    It is undisputed that the municipalities will have to intensify their cooperation in the future, because problems of regional scope can hardly be dealt with at the municipal level alone. But I don't think that mergers are always profitable. If we look at the small parts in our region, a merger, especially smaller communities, could certainly help to gain more strength. But I don't think a major merger is realistic. There are, however, municipalities in the Aargau Limmat Valley that are willing to merge: The municipality of Turgi is aiming for a merger with the city of Baden.

    Many residents fear for their identity in a merger.
    This argument is always at hand. Just because you come together to form a political unit, you don't have to lose your local anchoring. A new affiliation can also arise. Every change harbors loss and gain. The question is what outweighs. With an early, open dialogue, politics can succeed in picking up the population, feeling where the shoe pinches and identifying opportunities. It also takes courage from a local council to touch this hot topic. As the example from Turgi shows, this can be very promising.

    What do you think of the objection that a Limmat city lacks history and the past and that the Limmat valley could therefore never become a single city?
    Every story has a beginning. Why can't the change from an agglomeration to an urban area start in the 21st century and create identity for future generations? I find it rather absurd that we are still guided today by political borders that are more than 200 years old. The Limmat Valley is already a spatial unit – connected by the Limmat and embedded in hills with forests and vineyards. Soon the tram will connect the region and the people even more. The best prerequisites so that a new togetherness can arise.

    The Limmattalbahn is under construction. The project was particularly controversial among residents of the Limmat Valley. Did you expect this reaction?
    A local concern always makes the emotions go high. I was surprised by the violence. This, too, is an example of how important it is to maintain a close dialogue with the local population on regionally important projects. That went wrong in the first campaign. But in the second vote, the Limmat Valley voted in favor of the construction by a large majority. The Limmattaler have understood that half a Limmattalbahn makes no sense.

    "It is a good sign that the federal government and the cantons believe in our region and are investing millions."

    Why does the Limmattal need the Limmattalbahn?
    The railway means a long-term upgrade for the entire region. It's a generation project. One argument was always: Repentance does it too. But a bus is not a commitment to a region. The Limmattalbahn are rails that will be laid in the ground for the next few decades. Every stop is a nucleus where something new can arise. A city emerges where a tram passes. It is a good sign that the federal government and the cantons believe in our region and are investing millions.

    Isn't there a risk that the area will be paved too much with apartments, workplaces and streets?
    On the contrary: the railway helps to channel growth and to protect certain places. That is why the Limmattalbahn does not run along the village-like right side of the Limmat. That would develop
    trigger flare-ups that you don't want there. The train travels where there is already the greatest potential today, where most people live, where traffic flows and where unused properties such as the Dietiker Niderfeld are located.

    A lot is being built in the Limmat Valley. Schlieren, for example, has already changed a lot. Completely new quarters have also emerged in Dietikon. Will the building potential soon be exhausted?
    The large Limmattal industrial wastelands are now being converted into city quarters. In the future it will be more about internal development. We have to be careful with the limited ground. Ultimately, this is extremely ecological. A pulsating and attractive city needs a certain density of people, offers and uses. Transport is also part of it, both private and public. A clever network of cycle routes in the flat valley floor can relieve congested roads. This potential is far from being exhausted.

    Can the Limmattal compete with the Glatttal?
    No question about it, we are the two most attractive boom regions. I envy the airport region and its managing director Christoph Lang for some companies that we would also like to have as taxpayers. At the same time, I am glad that we are not so intensely concerned with the airport issue. As location organizations, however, we are set up differently. The airport region is a very successful business network with countless events throughout the year. Our focus, however, is also on society and urban development.

    How deeply is the idea of a “Limmat City” anchored in the minds of the Limmattal population?
    If you were to do a street poll now, the result would likely be sobering. Some would say this is Zurich, others Baden. And that's exactly what we're building on: we're reinterpreting the term Limmatstadt and charging it positively. It serves perfectly as a bracket for the region between two strong poles. We do not place the Limmat Valley on the edges of two canton areas, but in their center.

    What measures should this perception be further supported?
    By consistently working to make the region and all its advantages even better known to the resident population as well as to companies and those interested in settling in. For this we need all the communities behind us and a steadily growing sponsorship. We feel that our idea is becoming more and more anchored. In Spreitenbach, for example, the largest coworking space in Switzerland recently opened under the name “Office LAB Limmatstadt”. The term Limmatstadt is intended to convey precisely this future-oriented new self-image to the outside world.

    How should the Limmat Valley be perceived by the population in five years?
    As a place where you want to go, a destination. The Limmat Valley is more than an alternative to Zurich. It should be perceived as a self-confident region that has managed to shed its dreary aggloimage and transform itself into an attractive urban space that surprises again and again with its contrasts and peculiarities. The development of the last decade is enviable – including the renewal. It could also be different: standstill or emigration – those would be problems. We can count ourselves incredibly lucky with the dynamism and definitely look positively into the future. ■

  • From the Limmat Valley to the Limmat City: The enviable development of a region

    From the Limmat Valley to the Limmat City: The enviable development of a region

    The Limmat Valley has changed like hardly any other region in Switzerland over the past few decades. Since the 1960s, the predominantly rural villages have been transformed into what is now a coherent urban landscape, embedded in a spacious landscape of forests, hills and recreational areas along the 36-kilometer-long Limmat.

    From the Limmat Valley to the pulsating urban landscape
    The transformation started with the economic boom of the post-war years. In Zurich's Limmat Valley, the population doubled between 1950 and 1960. The enormous boom was also reflected in large infrastructure buildings: the A1 motorway including the “Fressbalken” – the world's largest motorway bridge restaurant at the time – and the first shopping temple in Switzerland, the Shoppi Tivoli in Spreitenbach.

    The intensification of de-industrialization from the 1980s onwards led to major upheavals in the Limmat Valley: On the one hand, jobs were created in the service sector, especially in the cities, which further fueled population growth. At the same time, the region suffered from this transformation. Traditional industrial companies had to restructure or even give up. The resulting industrial wastelands were initially unpleasant contaminated sites. It was not until the 1990s that their potential as mixed urban areas was recognized. In another wave of urbanization, they were developed into new city quarters. Examples of this are the conversion of the Wagi or Färbi area in Schlieren or the Limmatfeld in Dietikon: where the Rapid company used to produce agricultural machinery, a new district has been created on an area of 89,000 m2.

    An important piece of Switzerland
    Today the region has well over 200,000 inhabitants and 80,000 jobs, and the trend is rapidly increasing – also thanks to the preferred location at the gates of Zurich and the proximity to leading educational and research institutions. The present and future are shaped by the pioneering spirit of the industrial culture past, which is reviving in many traditional companies and in the enormously developing start-up scene. In addition, the emerging urban landscape and the rich industrial heritage leave a lot of space for design and development. At the same time, idyllic local recreation areas can be found in the immediate vicinity of pulsating urban spaces in the Limmat Valley. These include the Limmat or the green valley flanks, which can be reached within a very short time from anywhere in the Limmat Valley. All of this contributes significantly to the unique character and attractiveness of the region.

    The future prospects are also extremely promising. On the one hand, the growth forecasts are intact. On the other hand, the region is once again experiencing a major upgrade thanks to the Limmattalbahn. The tram will connect Zurich, Schlieren, Urdorf, Dietikon, Spreitenbach and Killwangen with each other from December 2022. A continuation to Baden is being planned. The light rail network networks the region closely beyond the canton's borders and is the driving force behind numerous urban development projects.

    Far-sighted development as a necessity
    With this in mind, foresight is now more important than ever. Only with a regional understanding and coordinated planning does growth lead to a better quality of life. How can that be achieved? The growth should concentrate on the new urban focal points in the valley floor, where urban life should pulsate with high density and intensity in attractive public urban spaces. As a result, local recreation areas along the Limmat and especially on the valley flanks on the right bank of the Limmat can be protected. Instead of a random collection of settlements and communities, the Limmatstadt is to develop into an attractive urban area with supra-regional charisma embedded in the local recreation area.

    Limmatstadt AG: A powerful location promotion for a strong region
    Limmatstadt AG is consistently committed to networking the entire region and creating regional awareness. In particular, it wants to make their advantages and potentials better known both internally and beyond the region.

    It is of central importance to join forces and strengthen the interaction between politics, business and society. This is the only way to ensure sustainable development and positioning. Until recently, there was no perspective on the region as a whole: Promotion of business locations ceased in the middle of the Limmat Valley, on the canton border. Only the creation of Limmatstadt AG in 2014 closed this gap.

    The location promotion organization was created on a private initiative and is organized as a stock corporation. It is broadly anchored in the entire region with 160 corporate and public shareholders and is supported by 13 commissioned municipalities and the planning association of the Zurich planning group Limmattal. The network is growing and having an impact: It bundles strengths, promotes diversity, increases competitiveness and releases potential.

    Limmatstadt AG is much more than a business network. It also provides a wide range of options for culture and society, always with the aim of creating awareness for the region. In addition, it addresses the urban development of the region and campaigns for sustainable development. ■

  • Strabag relies on 3D models in the Fahrweid

    Strabag relies on 3D models in the Fahrweid

    Geroldswil , Weiningen and Limeco are part of the owner of the joint project drainage Fahrweid. As part of the project, a new sewer system is being implemented. For the central shaft structure, the construction company Strabag relies on Building Information Modeling (BIM), as stated in a message . A software is used for the planning, through which, among other things, 3D models of the buildings to be realized are created.

    "We are carrying out the central manhole structure together with the planners from ILF Switzerland using OpenBIM2Field as a pilot project," is how Stijepan Ljubicic, BIM manager at Strabag, is quoted in the message. The 3D models in particular have proven to be helpful. “The visual representation is a big advantage. Plans in 3D are easier to understand than complicated paper plans, especially for people in the team who speak other languages – they understand the 3D model better and faster, ”says foreman Adrian Wildhaber. But changes are also easier to implement than with plans on paper, says site manager Sven Landis, "in the model they are easily generated at the push of a button".