Ambiguous Liminalities – Emotional Attachments and Socially Contested Potentials of Vacant Spaces in a Structural Change Region

Structural Change & Participation

What happens to buildings that are no longer in use—yet have not disappeared? 

Bild oben: AI Image Lost Place

Within the framework of my JTC project and doctoral research, I investigate the significance of vacant buildings and sites in the Central German Mining District (Mitteldeutsches Revier). The focus is on places that are often considered “abandoned” yet exist in complex transitional states between former use and potential future repurposing. Particularly in structural change regions such as southern Saxony-Anhalt, which have already been shaped by earlier transformations and disruptions, vacancy manifests in diverse forms: ruins reduced to their foundations along rural paths, (formerly) imposing industrial complexes in small towns, partially empty residential blocks in once-vibrant housing estates, or seemingly untouched buildings lying dormant like in a “Sleeping Beauty” state in city centers.

Starting from the premise that vacant spaces are more than mere problem sites, general open spaces, or development reserves of a capitalist city, the project asks how emotional attachments, ascribed meanings, and informal practices of appropriation unfold around these places. A wide range of actors is considered, including nearby residents, former users such as industrial workers, urban explorers, artists from graffiti or photography scenes, socio-cultural initiatives, and precarious users. Despite the diversity of access, expectations, and uses, many of these actors engage with vacant spaces beyond formal planning processes – often “under the radar” – and inscribe them with new, sometimes contradictory meanings in the “in-between.”

A central concern of the project is to examine these perspectives relationally and to make visible the ambivalences between promising potentials and social exclusions. Vacant spaces appear simultaneously as sites of memory, informal spaces, arenas for expression, and projection surfaces for alternative urban imaginaries, but also as conflict-laden locations where power relations, property structures, and social inequalities are enacted. Rather than treating vacancy as a neutral space of possibility, the project analyzes it as a social liminal space in which transformation is experienced sensually, affectively, and socially selectively.

The research aims to elucidate how these practices contribute to a more inclusive and socially sensitive understanding of urban and regional development in the context of structural change. In doing so, the project seeks to critically interrogate dominant narratives of structural transformation and to reconceptualize vacancy as an ambivalent, contested, and socially highly relevant space.

Team

Cheyenne Wolf

Research assistant/ PhD candidate
Read more
Portrait Cheyenne Wolf, Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin, Team A1