This is how Erlangen makes it to second place

gain

Not only the skyline is convincing: Erlangen has a low unemployment rate, high growth rates and around a third of all employees are academics.

(Photo: Prisma Picture Agency)

gain One white block next to the other. In between a green stripe. That’s the future. The Siemens Campus, a completely new part of the city, is being built half an hour’s walk from downtown Erlangen.

Module 1 is already in use and consists of eleven square buildings, eight of which are for offices and three for cars. The multi-storey car parks are the present, but still: young plants on the facades pave the way towards climate neutrality. Because that’s where you want to go at Siemens. And the new Siemens campus in Erlangen should be a pioneer for this future.

“Erlangen and Siemens are yin and yang,” says Michael Sigmund. At Siemens, he heads the regional department for the Nuremberg-Erlangen metropolitan region. He confidently states what everyone knows: it would be a “trade tax challenge” for Erlangen if Siemens were to disappear into thin air.

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