NSL – Netzwerk Stadt und Landschaft ETH Zürich
  • Projects
      • Projects of the Chairs
        • Prof. Dr. Bryan T. Adey | Infrastructure Management
        • Prof. Dr. Tom Avermaete | History and Theory of Urban Design
        • Prof. Dr. Kay W. Axhausen | Traffic and Transport Planning
        • Prof. Dr. Francesco Corman | Transport Systems
        • Prof. Teresa Galí-Izard | Chair of Being Alive
        • Prof. Dr. Adrienne Grêt-Regamey | Planning of Landscape and Urban Systems (PLUS)
        • Prof. Dr. Eva Heinen | Transportation and Mobility Planning
        • Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann | Spatial Development and Urban Policy
        • Prof. Hubert Klumpner | Architecture and Urban Design
        • Dr. Anastasios Kouvelas | Traffic Engineering and Control
        • Prof. Dr. Christian Schmid | Sociology
        • Prof. Milica Topalovic | Architecture and Territorial Planning
        • Dr. Jennifer Duyne Barenstein | ETH Wohnforum – ETH CASE
        • NSL-Archiv
      • Former Chairs
      • NSL Colloquia – The NSL Colloquia are a bi-annual presentation of exceptional work under a rotating theme determined by the inviting professor.
      • NSL Projects
          • E-Bike City
          • Future Cities Lab Global
          • Urban Potential and Strategies in Metropolitan Territories
 – The Zurich Metropolitan Region as an Example (NFP65)
          • Large-scale Virtualization and Modeling Lab (LVML)
      • NSL Forum
        • NSL Forum & Cycling Research Board
        • NSL Forum: Pandemie? Mitten im Klimawandel. Was bedeutet das für die räumliche Entwicklung der Schweiz? Ein Dialog.
    Close
  • Teaching
    • Teaching
      • Bachelor and Master Degree Programmes, Department ARCH
      • Bachelor and Master Degree Programmes, Department BAUG
      • MSc in Spatial Development and Infrastructure Systems
      • MAS/CAS in Regenerative Materials
      • CAS in Regenerative Systems: Sustainability to Regeneration
      • MAS/CAS Spatial Development
      • MAS Urban and Territorial Design
      • MAS in Housing
      • Doctoral Programme in Landscape and Urban Studies
      • The teaching component of the NSL seeks to impart the knowledge and skills needed to develop the standard strengths of spatial planning and their interaction as well as the ability to develop strategies for the solution of spatial problems. These are central prerequisites for a responsible and successful exercise of planning functions in the service of the public commonwealth and of private companies. Especially important in fufilling these prerequisites is the quality of university-level education: graduate and post-graduate work as well as professional development in spatial, urban and landscape planning. The ETH Zurich has offered programmes such as continuing education courses and post-graduate programmes (NDS, now MAS) since 1965. The NSL (Network City and Landscape) is responsible for these courses and programmes.
    Close
  • Publications
    • Cover NL 65NSL Newsletter – The NSL brings the experts at ETH Zurich together and also maintains a dialogue with other groups that deal with or are interested in issues relating to cities and landscapes.
    • A map describing the different phases of India’s neoliberal highway programme. Source: The author.Publications of NSL Chairs – A complete list of publications can be reached via the following link, which also includes advanced search capabilities:
      • ETH Zürich Research Collection
    • disP – The Planning Review – The interdisciplinary scientific journal covers the topics of spatial development, urban planning, landscape and environmental planning, landscape architecture, traffic planning, and regional and environmental economics, as well as special issues on specific themes.
      • Instructions for Authors
      • Types of Articles
      • Publisher
      • Book Review Guidelines
      • Editorial Staff
      • Latest Issue
      • facebook
    • DELUS Cover Issue 1DELUS – Journal for Landscape and Urban Studies – DELUS is an annual publication by the Institute of Landscape and Urban Studies at ETH Zürich.
    Close
  • News
  • Contact
      • en
        • de
        • fr
        • it
      • Search

    • Close
      • en
        • de
        • fr
        • it

CAS in Regenerative Systems: Sustainability to Regeneration

Crises hold chances. We are finding ourselves in times of deep, nested, and accelerating ecological, social, cultural, political, economic, and personal crises. This dynamic situation is highly complex and uncertain, unpredictable, and even chaotic. Yet within chaos is creativity, and creativity leads to chances for renewal.

This first CAS ETH in Regenerative Systems as part of the Designing Resilient Regenerative Systems (DRRS) programme is about creating positive impact in complex systems as part of learning communities.
Exciting live illustrations take participants to partnering real-world labs and bio-regional learning centres, i.e. Ostana Italy, Hemsedal Norway, Annecy France, Mallorca Spain, and Venice Italy – embodying complex systems from governance scales of material supply chains to products, buildings, communities and their services, to landscapes, bio-regions, and transnational cooperation. This offers a relational understanding of communities and regions undergoing sustainability transitions across different contexts, cultures, climates, and geographies.

Some of the prominent methods participants will learn are systemic design and systems-oriented design, social network analysis, resilience assessment, life cycle and footprint analysis, circularity mapping, visual dialogue, cross-scale design, «View from Above» perspectives, design as nature, transdisciplinary research, real-world elaboration, personal inner development, and more. A main innovation is that such diverse methods, practices, tools, cultures, are taught and learnt in synergies, in relation, challenge based, to form new cultures of “dancing with systems”, of dealing with complexity, science-based and designerly with direct practical impact.

This CAS is the first out of a planned series of three CAS, leading to the planned MAS Master of Advanced Studies ETH in Regenerative Systems.

A Hybrid Course Setup

This CAS with its introducing MOOC is a hybrid programme that can be studied virtually from wherever one lives, in a pace that one can combine with professional and private life. The distinctive physical, in-person component adds the real-world facets with all their unmatched qualities to the flexible virtual part and makes it hybrid. The course modules and themes are as follows:

  • Introduction to the programme, the learning cohort, your QUEST, the field design trip
  • Module 1: Global crises to local interventions
    Navigating nested crises; societal and individual root causes; solutions or interventions; transformation and transition
  • Module 2: Sustainability to Regeneration
    Sustainability origins and mental models; sustainability science; regeneration across contexts and scales; from cells to ecosystems to societal to personal regeneration; regenerative AI
  • Module 3: Worldviews
    Different ways of knowing and reasoning; science; warm data; design; free topic.
  • Module 4: Reframing complexity
    Complexity, simplicity, reframing; weaving
  • Module 5: Design as nature
    Ecosystems functions; deep ecology; we are nature; biomimicry; bio-infused communication; nature finance
  • Module 6: Mind and movement
    Flow experiences; self-compassion; meditative nature practice; self-agency; mountaineering metaphors; regenerative leadership; organic emergence; systemic cycles

Duration and Graduation

The course starts on 4 September 2023 and extends over three months. DRRS MOOC#1 needs to be taken prior to CAS#1 start. After an initial introduction week there will be a block field design trip where the entire group meets physically in a partnering real-world lab and engages physically, intensively for 10 days. For the successful completion of each CAS, 12 ECTS credits are awarded. The course language is English.

The application window is now open until 31 May 2023.

For whom is this course?

The CAS addresses thought leaders and decision makers from a variety of fields who want to embrace uncertainty and co-design across governance scales, cultures and thought schools for a better, more resilient, and regenerative future. The inclusiveness of this unique programme allows participants to expand on their fields by learning and co-creating with synergistic stimulation and exchange.

Admission

Admission to the CAS programme is open to students who hold a master’s degree acknowledged by ETH or equivalent educational qualifications. In addition, applicants must have successfully completed MOOC#1 Sustainability to Regeneration and submit a motivation letter.

For more information about the course setup and the application process please refer to the programme website which also entails a downloadable educational programme magazine.

 

Share this...
  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp
  • Email
This article has been published in the following newsletter edition:

58 | Juni 2023: Wissensproduktion / Knowledge Production

  • Design Studios as «Communities of Tacit Knowledge»
  • Design Research Studios – A Research-based Design Process for Interdisciplinary Dialogue and Collaborative Thinking
  • TimeUse+ – How do the Swiss Spend Their Time and Money? A Longitudinal Smartphone Diary Study with GPS
  • Tentacular Writing – A Peer-to-peer Writing Retreat
Publikationen
  • Stadtwerdung im Zeitraffer
  • disP 58/4, December 2022
  • Science-design Loop for the Design of Resilient Urban Landscapes
  • Inhabiting the Extensions
Weiterbildung | Further Education
  • CAS ETH Regenerative Materials
  • MAS ETH in Housing
  • MAS ETH in Raumentwicklung
  • CAS ETH in Raumentwicklung und Planungspraxis
  • CAS ETH Raumentwicklung und Prozessdesign
Aktuell
  • Tacit Knowledge in Architecture
  • La Norme d’Agadir – Un Urbanisme sur Mesure (Exhibition) & Agadir – Building the Modern Afropolis (Book Launch)
  • Öffentliche Schlusspräsentation MAS in Raumplanung 2021/23
  • Anthologie Landschaft – Lucius Burckhardt
  • Bright environments: Daylight in Sustainable Building Design
  • Landschaftstadt Zürich. Überlappen Verbinden Öffnen – eine Bildersuche
  • MATSim User Meeting 2023
  • hEART 2023 – 11th Symposium of the European Association for Research in Transportation
  • Reflective Practitioners
  • Öffentliche Erörterung Master Thesis MAS in Raumplanung 2021/23
  • Planetary Urbanisation: Agendas for Research and Action
  • SPUR Research Colloquium
  • Schatzkammer Wald: Lebensraum, Inspirationsquelle, Ressource
  • NSL Colloquium: Transport Planning – Where do we go now?
  • E-Bike – Chancen und Risiken des Verkehrsmittels der Zukunft

Chairs

Prof. Dr. Bryan T. Adey
Prof. Dr. Kay W. Axhausen
Prof. Dr. Tom Avermaete
Prof. Maria Conen
Prof. Dr. Francesco Corman
Dr. Jennifer Duyne Barenstein
Prof. Teresa Galí-Izard
Prof. Dr. Adrienne Grêt-Regamey
Prof. Dr. Guillaume Habert
Prof. Dr. Eva Heinen
Prof. Damian Jerjen
Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann
Prof. Hubert Klumpner
Dr. Anastasios Kouvelas
Prof. Freek Persyn
Prof. Dr. Christian Schmid
Prof. Milica Topalovic
Prof. Martina Voser

Contact

Address
ETH Zürich
NSL – Netzwerk Stadt und Landschaft
Stefano-Franscini-Platz 5
HIL H 44.2
8093 Zürich

NSL Director
Director: Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann
Deputy Director: Prof. Milica Topalovic

NSL Coordination
Claudia Gebert
Telephone: +41 (0)44 633 36 33

 

Register for the NSL Newsletter

disP Publication Office

Editor-in-Chief
Dr. sc. techn. Martina Koll-Schretzenmayr, Spatial planner ETH/NDS,
Telephone +41 (0)44 633 29 47

Mailing address
ETH Zürich
Redaktion disP
NSL – Netzwerk Stadt und Landschaft
Stefano-Franscini-Platz 5
HIL H 33.3
8093 Zürich
Fax +41 (0)44 633 12 15
E-Mail

 

NSL Archive (gta)

Research and Bequest Archive for
Swiss Landscape Architecture and Spatial Planning

Consultation Requests

Mailing address
ETH Zürich
NSL Archive (gta)
Stefano-Franscini-Platz 5
HIL C 65.2
CH-8093 Zurich

 

 
Privacy Policy