Competence Center Cultural Landscape (CULT)

science.practice.discourse.

Today's modern age is causing great changes in cultural landscapes. The use of landscapes through intensification of land use (agriculture, forestry, settlements, energy generation etc.) leads to ever more profound changes in these high-quality cultural landscapes. Characteristics such as historical elements and diversity, which determine value are irretrievably lost.

The Competence Centre Cultural Landscape works on these current social challenges of sustainable development of the cultural landscape in a cooperative network. To this end, we organise specialist events and further training and thus promote the development of professional standards.

Upcoming Events

Here you can find the current events of the CULT:

4 September 2025: 7th Road and Landscape Conference ‘Water as a key factor for a more sustainable development of transport infrastructure’

The seventh ‘Road and Landscape’ conference will take place at Hochschule Geisenheim University on 4 September 2025. Under the title ‘Water as a key factor for a more sustainable development of transport infrastructure’, the event is dedicated to current challenges in dealing with water in road construction. In view of climate change and its effects on the water balance, water is increasingly becoming a strategic element in the focus of planning and construction. Experts from administration, science and practice will discuss technical solutions, nature conservation aspects and new forms of cooperation in presentations and examples. The conference is aimed at experts from road construction, water management, landscape conservation and related fields. It starts at 10:00 a.m., participation costs 50 euros and is possible with prior registration until 27 August. The venue is lecture theatre 50 on the campus of Hochschule Geisenheim University.
Register online by 27 August 2025 at: veranstaltungen.hs-geisenheim.de/event/7-sl2025

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Images

Contact

If you have any questions or if you would like to cooperate please write an email at kult(at)hs-gm.de

Cult

Events

Future Perspectives for Viticulture in the Rheingau: Opportunities in a Time of Crisis

In a shared lecture, Professors Manfred Stoll, Ilona Leyer, and Eckhard Jedicke emphasized how the current transformation of viticulture brings opportunities with it. Photo: Hochschule Geisenheim/Nelly Sämann

In spite of the current crisis in viticulture, there are still opportunities waiting to be leveraged. Highlighting such opportunities was the primary goal of a recent professional conference held on December 4, 2025, at Hochschule Geisenheim University.

 

'What does structural transformation in viticulture mean for the cultural landscape of the Rheingau?' was the conference's guiding question for tackling the region's current economic, climatic, and ecological challenges, which ultimately sparked detailed discussions covering a range of perspectives. Among other activities, participants developed concepts for the use of abandoned vineyard sites and contributed ideas for actively shaping the transformation of the Rheingau's landscape.

The conference was organized by Hochschule Geisenheim University's knowledge transfer project GeisTreich and Cultural Landscape Competence Center, in cooperation with the civic foundation Unser Land!. As the second event in this new series focusing on the future of the region's cultural landscape, it attracted over 90 participants, including experts from viticulture, local government, public administration, nature conservation, and academia. Together, they worked on developing forward-looking concepts for the Rheingau.

The conference program was moderated by Dr. Verena Rossow from the Institute for Social-Ecological Research, a project partner in GeisTreich. Professor Klaus Werk, chair of the civic foundation, and Professor Hans Reiner Schultz, president of Hochschule Geisenheim University, set the stage for the conference’s key themes. In a joint presentation, Professors Manfred Stoll, Ilona Leyer, and Eckhard Jedicke emphasized that the current transformation of viticulture also creates new opportunities. Land that is no longer used for winegrowing offers a chance to develop the landscape as a space for production, recreation, and living, and to better address the challenges of the climate crisis. The animated video ‘Landscape Is Changeable’ (available on YouTube) illustrates this vision: a vineyard landscape evolving from a monotonous setting into a diverse and attractive space that fulfills multiple functions beyond grape production.

Opportunities for the Landscape, Opportunities for the Economy

The conference's speakers presented findings from a survey of regional stakeholders showing that a multifunctional and diverse viticultural landscape aligns well with the needs and perspectives of winegrowers, municipalities, public authorities, and nature conservation organizations. 

Dominik Russler, Managing Director of the Rheingau Winegrowers’ Association, highlighted the untapped potential of the Rheingau for wine tourism, which he sees as an important component in addressing the current sales crisis. Known for its attractive mix of forests, vineyards, and the river Rhine Rhine, the Rheingau is likely to experience change in the near future; Russler expects the actively cultivated vineyard area to shrink by 10 to 20 percent in the coming years. Using some of this land for alternative crops and woody plants would be a gain for the cultural landscape. ‘The visions we are discussing here today are pure economic development,’ emphasized Patrick Kunkel, mayor of Eltville.

In the afternoon, participants worked at four parallel topic tables to develop visions for alternative uses of abandoned vineyard sites and larger interconnected areas, while also discussing funding-related and legal implications, as well as societal expectations. The proposals will be fed into existing networks in the Rheingau, with the aim of turning some of these ideas into reality.

At the conclusion of the conference, participants stressed how essential cooperation among all stakeholders is to developing solutions for the Rheingau that benefit viticulture, the regional economy, and society as a whole. A digital poll on the focus of the next conference showed strong interest in continuing and further deepening this topic.

Further information on the regional survey (in German) and the animated film is available at geistreich.hs-geisenheim.de

Categories: MyHGU-App, Mein-Netzwerk, Kompetenzzentrum Kulturlandschaft, Wissenstransfer, Landschaftsplanung und Naturschutz, Angewandte Ökologie, Allgemeiner und ökologischer Weinbau

Images

Four parallel focus groups developed visions for alternate uses of abandoned vineyard sites. Photo: Hochschule Geisenheim/Martin Bahmann
The animated video 'Landscape Is Changeable' demonstrates how variety can be successfully integrated into vineyards. Photo: Hochschule Geisenheim/Winfried Schönbach