DOI https://doi.org/10.36487/ACG_repo/2515_0.02
Cite As:
Feucht, K 2025, 'Perception as a key for post-industrial design', in S Knutsson, AB Fourie & M Tibbett (eds),
Mine Closure 2025: Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Mine Closure, Australian Centre for Geomechanics, Perth,
https://doi.org/10.36487/ACG_repo/2515_0.02
Abstract:
The development of the hidden potentials of post-mining landscapes and industrial legacies requires a focus on perception. The question is, “How do we perceive the potentials of what is left by industry, and how can we design an emptied space as a former mine for an as-yet-empty future?”. For this purpose, the method of the Perception Workshop® provides an innovative instrument for the discovery of the value and for the development of adequate and sustainable concepts of (re)design and (re)utilisation of post-industrial sites. The experience in the post-mining region of Lusatia in Germany, in the iron ore mine in Austria, and in the urban context of Berlin teaches that perceptiveness plays a crucial role in such complex situations and can also be helpful as a seismograph for our current and future culture of industry. This is how industrial culture takes on a meaning, as industrial ethics that adds a human, ecological, and global perspective to present economy.
Keywords: post-mining landscapes, industrial heritage, perception, potential, design, reutilisation
References:
Hoppe, J 2020, Metropole Berlin: Die Wiederentdeckung der Industriekultur (Metropolis Berlin: The Rediscovery of Industrial Culture), BeBra Verlag, Berlin.
Kercuku, A 2023, Shrinking Cities in Reunified East Germany, Routledge, Abingdon, pp. 111–139.
Montalta, J 2005, Alles Verloren – Alles Gewonnen? (Everything Lost – Everything Gained?), International Building Exhibition, Großräschen, viewed 30 April 2025,
Whitbread-Abrutat, P 2024, 102 Things to do with a Hole in the Ground, Eden Project, Cornwall.