The appeal of hidden places on the Hönggerberg campus
The winners of the photo competition for ETH members "Favourite places on the H?nggerberg campus" have been selected: Nicolas Ochsner won with a photo of the archive room of the Institute for the History and Theory of Architecture (gta).
 
			
                    				   
		    The organisers were looking for images of what ETH members considered were their favourite places on the H?nggerberg campus. Sixty-seven photographs were submitted and assessed by a jury from the Real Estate Management, Services and Corporate Communications departments.
The photos were judged on how well they depicted the unique atmosphere and particular aspects of the H?nggerberg campus, as well as on their technical quality.
The winning photograph by Nicolas Ochsner is of a room on the H?nggerberg campus: he imbued the Heinz Isler archive room of the Institute for the History and Theory of Architecture (gta) – which he shares with his Civilian Service colleague Nils Franzini – with an atmospheric treatment. The photo shows ETH members appropriating a room on the campus and filling it with life. "I wanted to show that even little-known and hidden rooms on campus have their appeal," says Nils Ochsner, who is delighted with his photo prize.
 
			
                    				   
		    Second place went to Philip Verwegen, a physics Master's student who works in the HPF building. His photo depicts the relationship between work space and outdoor space:
mature trees such as the large oak on Wolfgang-Pauli-Strasse provide amenity value as well as a sense of identity.
Taken from the laboratory, the photograph also shows how green roofs and gardens constitute additional landscaping on the campus. "I wanted my picture to make the campus appetising," declares Verwege.
 
			
                    				   
		    The third-placed photo by Kim Gloor and Riccardo Montecchi, a doctoral student at the Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences (D-CHAB), had a different approach:
their submission focuses less on a specific location than on a particular campus atmosphere and a motif that represents the "ETH spirit" exuded by the H?nggerberg.
Gloor and Montecchi were surprised to have been singled out for a prize, as their photo was actually a spontaneous snapshot.
The remaining images depict characteristic activities or interior scenes on the H?nggerberg: the bouldering facility as a typical use of sports and outdoor space; the after-work ambience on the central piazza in the middle of the campus; the interplay of landscape architecture and staircase geometry around the 1960's Steiner buildings; 3D-printed cone figures in an inner courtyard of the Fünffinger Dock – as an example of how ETH members appropriate campus spaces and make them their own.
The prizes consisted of three restaurant vouchers worth 100, 50 and 20 francs for the Fusion coffee cafeteria and Coop to go shop. The vouchers were presented to the winners at the H?nggerberg campus on Tuesday morning.
Other photos from the competition
 Fifth place: "The perfect lunch break: bouldering, sun and relaxation at the boulder blocks." (Photo: and text: Thomas Drobnik, doctoral student / D-BAUG)
                    
                
                        Fifth place: "The perfect lunch break: bouldering, sun and relaxation at the boulder blocks." (Photo: and text: Thomas Drobnik, doctoral student / D-BAUG) Sixth place: "On the H?nggerberg campus, the journey is the reward. Footpath between HPP and HPZ, October 2018." (Photo and text: Céline Spillmann, Master's student / D-MATH)
                    
                
                        Sixth place: "On the H?nggerberg campus, the journey is the reward. Footpath between HPP and HPZ, October 2018." (Photo and text: Céline Spillmann, Master's student / D-MATH) Seventh place: "Inspiration, research and leisure conspire on the H?nggerberg to turn my daily journey to work into a mini adventure." (Photo and text: Paulina Pacak, doctoral student / D-HEST)
                    
                
                        Seventh place: "Inspiration, research and leisure conspire on the H?nggerberg to turn my daily journey to work into a mini adventure." (Photo and text: Paulina Pacak, doctoral student / D-HEST) Eighth place: "In front of the alumni lounge, a very relaxing yet also very busy corner of the campus." (Photo and text: Hantao Zhao, doctoral student / D-GESS)
                    
                
                        Eighth place: "In front of the alumni lounge, a very relaxing yet also very busy corner of the campus." (Photo and text: Hantao Zhao, doctoral student / D-GESS) Ninth place: "Sunset's fiery kiss: I'm fascinated by the way the HCI's glass walls on campus reflect the setting sun." (Photo and text: Deepak Kumar Ravi, doctoral student / D-HEST)
                    
                
                        Ninth place: "Sunset's fiery kiss: I'm fascinated by the way the HCI's glass walls on campus reflect the setting sun." (Photo and text: Deepak Kumar Ravi, doctoral student / D-HEST) Thirteenth place: "Autumnal sunset at H?nggerberg: welcome to the campus." Einstein Bridge, ETH Zurich, H?nggerberg? (Photo and text: Michael Lyrenmann / D-ARCH, NCCR Digital Fabrication)
                    
                
                        Thirteenth place: "Autumnal sunset at H?nggerberg: welcome to the campus." Einstein Bridge, ETH Zurich, H?nggerberg? (Photo and text: Michael Lyrenmann / D-ARCH, NCCR Digital Fabrication) 
                    
                For formal reasons, the original photos submitted were partly cut to size in the photo gallery.
 
