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The Life After. To the History of Re-Use in Architecture in the 20th century

Project Description

The history of architecture is a history of completed buildings and ended narratives. In a circular construction economy, however, the end of a building is also the beginning of a new story. Due to analysis of exemplary demolitions, this research examines the life after of prominent structures, the history of their dissolution, final storage and concepts for the re-use and further use of construction waste, building materials and components. The focus of the work is not quantitative studies of material flows, but the social, cultural, and affirmative architectural handling of the remains of the architecture in the 20th century.

Project Participants

Employee
Dipl. Ing. Arch. (TU) Gabriela Dimitrova MAS gta ETH
- PhD-Student
PhD-Student
Employee
Prof. Dr. Daniel Stockhammer
- Supervisor
Professor - Built Heritage and Upcycling
Supervisor
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Prof. Dr. Silke Langenberg
- Co-Supervisor
Co-Supervisor

The Life After. To the History of Re-Use in Architecture in the 20th century

Project Description

The history of architecture is a history of completed buildings and ended narratives. In a circular construction economy, however, the end of a building is also the beginning of a new story. Due to analysis of exemplary demolitions, this research examines the life after of prominent structures, the history of their dissolution, final storage and concepts for the re-use and further use of construction waste, building materials and components. The focus of the work is not quantitative studies of material flows, but the social, cultural, and affirmative architectural handling of the remains of the architecture in the 20th century.

Project Participants

Employee
Dipl. Ing. Arch. (TU) Gabriela Dimitrova MAS gta ETH
- PhD-Student
PhD-Student
Employee
Prof. Dr. Daniel Stockhammer
- Supervisor
Professor - Built Heritage and Upcycling
Supervisor
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Sustainable Urban Development and Community Values in Post-conflict Regeneration

Project Description

This study seeks to relate two current study foci to one another, in order to arrive at new conclusions useful to both. For one, it is an inquiry into the values and principles used in pursuing environmentally sustainable modes of urban development, including the means of establishing the essential institutions and infrastructures of urban development. The dissertation will examine the relevance of popular religious values - in particular that of Islam. Indeed, the link between faith values and sustainable development is a rising and global topic of inquiry. In order to arrive at a dialectically informative contrast, this dissertation will also look systematically at aspects of another increasingly well-researched topic: the processes and institutional agents delivering urban development via international aid, as well as influential mainstream development organizations on the ground. The latter will then be looked at methodically vis-à-vis the cultural framework of local traditional and religious beliefs. The research seeks to establish a correlational matrix of values which will be tested using a series of surveys and workshops on the ground. The setting for this research is the city of Sirte, destroyed during the 2011 Libyan civil war, where urban regeneration projects are to be carried out.

Keywords

Sustainable Urban Development Islamic values, sustainability and urban development Institutional values in sustainable urban development Post-conflict urban regeneration strategies Lybia

Project Participants

Employee
Prof. em. DI MAAS Peter Droege
- Supervisor
Supervisor
Employee
Ing. arch. Wasel Elgayar
- PhD-Student
PhD-Student

Sustainable regulations and their influence on the financial markets

Project Description

This research project examines the impact of regulatory measures to promote sustainability in the context of financial markets. In particular, it focuses on the newly enacted EU taxonomy. The thesis consists of three papers that converge into a cumulative dissertation. In the first paper, a bibliometric analysis will be performed in order to identify upcoming priorities and challenges. In the following two articles, the financial impact of regulatory measures on companies will be investigated using quantitative methods.

Project Participants

Employee
Ramon Hörler MSc
- PhD-Student
Research Assistant / PhD Student - Sustainable Finance and Investments
PhD-Student
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Employee
Prof. em. Dr. Marco J. Menichetti
- Supervisor
Professor Emeritus - Liechtenstein Business School
Supervisor

Sustainable planning and value creation in the Lake Constance-Alpine Rhine Valley region - preparation of an international building exhibition (IBA-BA) and major research endeavours

Project Description

The main purpose of the project is to support organisational innovations for the implementation of regional sustainability targets on the basis of ecological footprint characteristics and an associated understanding of the capabilities of regional value creation. To achieve this, the project pursues the following three objectives in the areas of quantitative documents and mapping, planning variables and cost-effectiveness:

1. Exploration and representation of ecological footprint characteristics in the region. By incorporating aspects of ecological footprint into our GIS-based STEM model, developed in the BAER project, we achieve an understanding of environmental consumption patterns, both for a large area, and, in relevant sub-territories, for individual communities. This is of fundamental relevance as a basis for additional work and decisions.

2. An understanding of the possibilities of architectural and urban forms, to achieve a reduction of the ecological footprint through improvements in the choice of lifestyles. Different forms of settlement and structures determine usage behaviour as well as the energy used. After identifying these, a regional planning competition serves to evaluate their social acceptance.

3. Regional value creation on the basis of a reduced ecological footprint. A central issue in regional sustainability strategies is the cost-effectiveness of the measures and, particularly, the value creation that can be achieved through sustainability measures. Existing regional and community-specific value creation analyses and methods of investments in renewable energies in Germany are taken as a basis. Economic and social benefits and, in particular, important ecological advantages that can be internalized economically are also considered for the purpose of regional value creation.

Relevance to Liechtenstein

Hauptzweck des Projektes ist die Unterstützung organisatorischer Innovationen zur Umsetzung regionaler Nachhaltigkeitsziele auf Basis ökologischer Fussabdruckcharakteristika und eines hiermit verbundenen Verständnisses regionaler Wertschaffungskapazitäten. Als Basis wird ein STEM Modell ein grossräumliches, teilweise für Liechtensteiner Gemeinden scharfes Verständnis der ökologischen Verbrauchsmuster erreicht. Planungswettbewerbe bezüglich verschiedener architektonischer und urbaner Formen werden auf deren Akzeptanz in Liechtenstein geprüft. Zuletzt wird im Sinne der Wertschöpfung für das Fürstentum und der Region wirtschaftliche und gesellschaftliche Gewinne und insbesondere wichtige ökologische Vorteile, die wirtschaftlich zu internalisieren sind betrachtet.

Keywords

ecological footprint regenerative region value capture and creation international building exposition life style aware spatial design

Project Participants

Employee
Prof. em. DI MAAS Peter Droege
- Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator
Employee
Dr. sc. Ariane Ruff
- Project Collaborator
Project Collaborator
Employee
Prof. em. Dr. Marco J. Menichetti
- Project Collaborator
Professor Emeritus - Liechtenstein Business School
Project Collaborator
Employee
Prof. Dr. Carsten-Henning Schlag
- Project Collaborator
Project Collaborator
Employee
Dipl.-Ing. Simon C. Winker MRICS
- Project Collaborator
Project Collaborator
Employee
Dr.-Ing. Anis Radzi BArch MUrbDes
- Project Collaborator
Project Collaborator
Employee
Dr. Clarissa Rhomberg
- Project Collaborator
Project Collaborator

Sustainable transport in the Alpine Rhine Valley

Project Description

In der Untersuchung wird der Frage nachgegangen, wie die Mobilität in sub- bzw. periurbanen Siedlungsräumen nachhaltig gestaltet werden kann. Als Untersuchungsgebiet dient dabei das Alpenrheintal, die Ergebnisse sollen jedoch auch auf ähnlich strukturierte Räume übertragbar sein. Sub- und periurbane Räume wie das Alpenrheintal sind in starkem Masse autoorientiert. Die Mobilität ist daher in hohem Masse von der Verfügbarkeit billiger fossiler Treibstoffe abhängig. Um die Nachhaltigkeit der Mobilität im Alpenrheintal und anderen sub- bzw. periurbanen Siedlungsräumen zu steigern, müssen daher Strategien entwickelt werden, um die Abhängigkeit der Transportsysteme von fossilen Treibstoffen zu reduzieren.
Es sollen Szenarien und Handlungsempfehlungen für eine nachhaltige, postfossile Entwicklung der Mobilität im Alpenrheintal entwickelt werden. Die Arbeit erfolgt in mehreren Phasen. In der ersten Phase geht es um eine chronologische Beschreibung der Siedlungsentwicklung im Alpenrheintal. In der zweiten Phase werden Daten aus den Pendlerstatistiken ausgewertet, um eine Abgrenzung von Teilräumen vornehmen zu können. Anschließend soll ein Mobilitäts-und Verkehrsenergiebedarfsprofil dieser Teilräume erstellt werden. In einer dritten Phase soll in Szenarien für verschiedene Teilräume abgeschätzt werden, in welchem Umfang fossile Brennstoffe durch Verkehrsverlagerung, Verkehrsvermeidung und Umstellung der Fahrzeugantriebe eingespart bzw. ersetzt werden können. Hieraus sollen anschließend Handlungsempfehlungen für die regionalen Akteure in den Bereichen Raumentwicklung und Mobilität abgeleitet werden.

Relevance to Liechtenstein

In der Untersuchung wird der Frage nachgegangen, wie die Mobilität in sub- bzw. periurbanen Siedlungsräumen nachhaltig gestaltet werden kann. Als Untersuchungsgebiet dienen dabei das Fürstentum Liechtenstein und das Alpenrheintal. Es sollen Szenarien und Handlungsempfehlungen für eine nachhaltige, postfossile Entwicklung der Mobilität im Alpenrheintal entwickelt werden. Hieraus sollen anschliessend Handlungsempfehlungen für die regionalen Akteure in den Bereichen Raumentwicklung und Mobilität abgeleitet werden.

Keywords

Traffic planning, -security Renewable energy Mobility Sustainability

Project Participants

Employee
Dipl. Ing. Hans-Martin Neumann
- Project Collaborator
Project Collaborator
Employee
Prof. Dr. Ing. Hans-Henning von Winning
- Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Publications

Sustainable investment revisited: Enhancement and Integration

Project Description

The dissertation consists of three papers, which focus on quantitative methods to utilize sustainability in financial management. Although, sustainability is not in scope of the first paper, we adopt parts of the methodology and data retrieval process for the second and third paper.

The first paper examines the connection between uncertainty and momentum to eradicate the time varying risk momentum crashes. Thus, we propose a new momentum strategy, which remains unaffected by financial turbulences. Moreover, classical asset pricing models struggle to explain the generated returns of the strategy in several international markets and regions.

The second paper contributes to the ongoing discussion about ESG momentum. We shed light on the long-term sustainable development of portfolios and underlying constituents utilized by the strategy. Thus, the paper overs valuable insights for professionals about the sustainable consequences of this strategy.

In the third paper, we propose another approach to integrate ESG and thus sustainability in the portfolio formation process. In detail, we propose the parametric portfolio approach with ESG as input parameter. Thus, we offer practitioners a potential alternative to the conventional methods.

Project Participants

Employee
Dominik Kaiser MSc
- PhD-Student
PhD-Student
Employee
Prof. em. Dr. Marco J. Menichetti
- Supervisor
Professor Emeritus - Liechtenstein Business School
Supervisor
Prof. Dr. Olaf Weber
- Co-Supervisor
Co-Supervisor

Sustainable investment revisited: Enhancement and Integration

Project Description

The dissertation consists of three papers, which focus on quantitative methods to utilize sustainability in financial management. Although, sustainability is not in scope of the first paper, we adopt parts of the methodology and data retrieval process for the second and third paper.

The first paper examines the connection between uncertainty and momentum to eradicate the time varying risk momentum crashes. Thus, we propose a new momentum strategy, which remains unaffected by financial turbulences. Moreover, classical asset pricing models struggle to explain the generated returns of the strategy in several international markets and regions.

The second paper contributes to the ongoing discussion about ESG momentum. We shed light on the long-term sustainable development of portfolios and underlying constituents utilized by the strategy. Thus, the paper overs valuable insights for professionals about the sustainable consequences of this strategy.

In the third paper, we propose another approach to integrate ESG and thus sustainability in the portfolio formation process. In detail, we propose the parametric portfolio approach with ESG as input parameter. Thus, we offer practitioners a potential alternative to the conventional methods.

Project Participants

Employee
Dominik Kaiser MSc
- PhD-Student
PhD-Student
Employee
Prof. em. Dr. Marco J. Menichetti
- Supervisor
Professor Emeritus - Liechtenstein Business School
Supervisor

Mystery Shopping in Private Banking (Luxembourg)

Project Description

The aim of this project is to determine the quality of customer service and to identify the areas that require improvement. To be more specific, we assess the administrative functions and interpersonal skills of bank employees. We evaluate sales effectiveness of platform and relationship managers by analyzing whether the bank staff is listening to its customers, how friendly they are, the time to spend in order to receive a solution as well as the quality of the solution. Using different mystery shopping techniques such as face-to-face, telephone, postal, internet and video assessments, we get a comprehensive picture of the quality of the banks' customer service. After evaluating the customer service and performance of bank employees, a report is submitted and presented to the client.

Project Participants

Employee
Lic. oec. HSG Oliver C. Oehri
- Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator
Employee
MMag. Dr. Wilfried Amann
- Project Collaborator
Project Collaborator
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