CET and can be attended via Zoom at the following link https://htw-berlin.zoom-x.de/j/63784020464?pwd=dWtrOXJnNC9RTElKKzc1Ti9semhvdz09 Meeting-ID: 637 8402 0464 Kenncode: 180355 Questions can be submitted
activities guarantee fun and action for every taste and age. Special highlights this year include giant 3D mappings, a skywalk tour, a light show featuring works by world-famous artists such as Gustav Klimt
Students from other disciplines are also welcome. Eligible are all bachelor, master or doctoral/PhD students who have completed at least their 2nd semester and who are enrolled at a university. The S
Professionals (YP) network, established two years ago, comes in. Jule Lux (6th from left, squatting), PhD student at the University of Marburg and one of the new YP spokespersons, represented the network at
It focuses on close interactions between the two neighbouring regions. This becomes evident in the St. Anthony ironworks in Oberhausen, built in 1758, which is considered the cradle of the coal and st
How do you steal a mountain? You knock it off. That’s the answer you’d get from a Welshman. The Welsh speak from experience. In North Wales they knocked off mountains en masse – in the form of hundreds
g and print technology since 2001. The collection dates back to the largest European type foundry, D. Stempel AG (1895-1985) in Frankfurt am Main. The museum demonstrates developments in the printing industry
So it's not only history the exhibition explores but also a living monument. Interactive displays, 3D visualisation, videos and a large number of exhibits illustrate past and present of the industrial plant
of Jewish industrialists during the Third Reich. The factory was established in 1913 by Hugo Juhl (d 1939) and his wife Clara (b 1887) for the manufacture of table linen, bed linen, women’s underclothes
archive and the oldest history workshop in Hamburg. It is housed in the listed buildings of the former J.D. Feldtmann wire pin factory, founded in 1874. The factory was a supplier to the many industrial companies
time and its work is carried on by the Fiskars Corporation. From 1822 it was managed by Johan Julin (d 1853) who developed the whole area encouraging initiatives in agriculture and forestry, as well as bringing
wetlands of international importance. The principal historical interpretation is provided in the Valli d’Argenta Museum in a marsh house at Campotto, where there are displays relating to ecology and archaeology
Santorini is an island in the Cyclades in the Southern Aegean Sea. The island produces crops of large cucumbers, Spanish vetchling, capers and aubergines. Cherry tomatoes cultivated there from the lat
but is conserved, and interpreted with displays about its history and a working model. The Crystal d’Arques glassworks and the preserved railway, the Chemin de Fer Touristique de la Vallée de l’Aa are
early pioneers. It starts with a big screen showing original footage of historical Zeppelin flights. A 3D documentary provides an almost physical impression of the airships' tremendous size. Visitors who board
closed by the founder’s grandsons in 1886. The buildings that remain include Mill ‘C’ of 1815-16, Mill ‘D’ of 1826 and Mill ‘E’ of 1830, all iron-framed structures on the same basic principles that were pioneered
history of trams in the region but also a display of buses and a collection of scale models. Pavilion D exhibits luxury cars such as Rolls-Royce and Cadillac.