All posts by OBUKev

Berlin and Water II

Topics of the day

  • Water and Urban Development
  • Guided tour

Free afternoon

After starting like the day before 😉 we did a short evaluation about the workshop: Our task was to reflect in small groups of 4 people, each, how we felt, what we liked or disliked and what we’d suggest to change or add in order to make it better and than wrote it onto a flip-chart to make it visible for everybody.
If it was (mainly) the opinion of one person, it was simply written down, if several others agreed, it was additionally marked through encircling or underlining…
Altogether it took not longer than about 10 or 15 Minutes – or at least it didn’t “feel” longer. So it was a really nice method to do an evaluation including common exchange and reflection, making sure that everybody was heard and seen – not like the typical exhausting reflection rounds where you’re thoughts are going somewhere else after the 15th person is talking and repeating all the stuff which was already said or – if it’s not a round – just a few rather loud/space taking people talk. So for sure this is my favorite reflection method for larger groups from now on! 🙂

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After this we grabbed our stuff and walked to the “Weißensee” where the story of the leisure park Weißensee was told and filigreed with pictures, showing what happened in that place about 100 years ago.
[A nice way to get into the imagination how it might have been or felt like, regarding the meaning or importance of the lake in that times, abstracting form the own actual perspective.]
We continued to …, visited the “rotes Rathaus”, passed through the “Nicoleiviertel” and took a lot of pictures in front of the river “Spree”. Everywhere seemed to be hidden stories and connections…
More stages were a bridge, a very important former trade route, and a ship look.

I like this way of experiencing stories and connections, where I can connect unmediated impressions with additionally told information and through this make up my own “movie” in my had, which stays there for longer. The only pity was, that the group streaked so long, that not everybody could experience this, and that the cool whether made us freeze after a while. But it seems to be a good method especially for children and youth, effording them to create an own personal access to a certain topic.

Then we visited the “Brewery KĂśnigsstadt” in Senefelder Straße. It was interesting to find the answer of the question, why breweries where located on a hill and how they found their place there. Nowadays there are small handcraft-workshops and alternative cultural projects located which are auto-organized through a collective (e.G.) and which fought successful against the gentrificaton of their site.

At the Wasserturm & WindmĂźhlenberg a few streets away more stories were told about the old times and the developments and changes until today. The Water-Tower at Water-Tower-Place in Prenzlauer Berg was the First Pumping-Station in Berlin established to promote a public water-grid in the town. In order to get a constant water-pressure in the town-pipes the tower and the water-storage was needed. Today it’s a park and in the old flats of the waterworks-workers their are normal people living. The water-storage is sometimes used as a cultural place. Old pictures showed that there were windmills located on the hill when they established the water-tower. The water-tower has as well a dark historical side, when it was used a as concentration camp during the German fascism.

Water is Water is Water?

Topics of the day

  • Blue, Grey and Green Water
  • Water Footprint
  • Virtual Water
  • Sustainable Cooking

Summary by the participants

The yesterday’s rally stories

After another fresh breakfast we gathered together to hear about each team’s experience during the yesterday’s rally.

What were their experiences?

One mighty team had to go to a former harbor and a canal and had to find out what were they used for, and what was their importance in the industry development of Berlin. They asked passerby’s with no success but in the end they found an old man which seemed informed. They found out a piece of history of Berlin, of the canals and the industry of the city. It seemed that they were lucky and they stumbled upon a university professor.

Another team had to investigate a former industrial site on the bank of the river. It held now only one glass factory conserved as a monument, and the rest of the area was transformed in a residential area.

The third team had to investigate the banks of the Spree in the area where the Berlin wall was, and how that space was used then and how it’s used now. One philosophical conclusion was that water can bring people together but it can also separate them.

One team had to go and find the area where the beginning the city of Berlin is. They also had to gather clues about water usage in that area. They also visited a museum where models of the river bed were displayed with fish dying from rubbish that got washed into the water. We concluded this is a good approach to teach them about the garbage that gets underwater: we can’t see it but it’s there and it poisons the aquatic fauna.

The others teams got to investigate the Radial System 5 and the Museum of Technology… but enough it’s enough, as more things happened during this day.

The feedback referring to the field work educational method.

We all felt that the field work experience was valuable, the key ingredient being the fact that we got to spend time outside and experience Berlin for ourselves.

The positive aspects we found were, as follows:

– the fact that we worked in small groups of 4, which gave us the chance to get to know each other better

– most of us not knowing the language was a barrier we used in fruitful ways, thus exploring other ways to express ourselves, other than verbal.

– “we did not feel like tourists” was what Ana (from Portugal) expressed, and she was right. We really felt like we had a specific mission to accomplish.

– the information and instructions that were given to us we made use of the best we could, depending on each of the groups’ assignments.

– as a teaching method we all agreed that it is useful, can be well adapted to any learning group and was a good team building experience at this point in our training.

Water Footprint

We were introduced to the concept of Water Footprint. It seemed in the beginning that we were handled the magic tool for measuring water consumption but, by the end of the day we were wondering it it’s the right tool, the right model and how it can be improved. The complex model introduced us to notions as blue water, green water and grey water. We found out to our surprise 140 liters of waters are needed to produce a cup of coffee. That is something to think about next morning when we’re sipping our coffee! Other interesting factual things we found out was that in Germany only 2.3% of the consumed water is the one consumed directly by a person: that would be 124 liters of water per person per day, that compared with the indirect consumption (the water consumed for all the products bought and consumed by that person) that amounts to 5288 liters per day. Impressing! Don’t you think?

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The cooking workshop

After the information about the water footprint of food, we proceeded to our next learning phase. We learnt hands-on how to juggle the ingredients that went into making our lunch for the day, keeping in mind the facts we had just found out. Divided into two groups, we took a good amount of time to judiciously choose each product. We accounted the water footprint values depending on weight, so that in the end we could evaluate what was the final value of our meal.

The opinions on this learning method were mostly positive, especially due to the more relaxed setting for interaction and the feeling that we were not under time pressure. Still, the overall opinion about food choice in connection to the water footprint was that it can get fairly confusing, having to balance out facts like source(local/imported), context of production, carbon emission for transport and packaging, and so on, to see which is the smallest compromise.

The article study group

After enjoying our lunch, we were again split into small groups in order to read, resume and the debate articles that were meant to highlight the importance of the water footprint in food production, and other aspects of sustainability. The articles turned out to have a too focused view on the water footprint aspect, and overlooked essential aspects, the very ones we already mentioned above as a conclusion to our cooking workshop.

It’s not enough to compare water footprint numbers related to the food products we consume in order to lead a sustainable life. You should care for where your food comes from, keep your choices local and seasonal! Don’t use alternatives to fuel as an excuse to drive as much, when the real solution is cutting down on the frequency of car use! And the examples could continue.

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To conclude a day full of information acquiring I will quote Mihaela (from Romania) by saying “The concept of water footprint is highly ambiguous, as the elements, such as water, are part of cycles, so we are part of realities more complex, that go beyond these numbers.”

We fully empathize, and at the same time feel this information has further empowered us to living responsibly.

Berlin and Water I

Topics of the day

  • Berlin Watertable: Successful Resistance to privatized Waterworks?
  • Rally in the City: Discover the water related dimensions of Berlin 

Summary by the participants:

2nd day of the workshop

8.30 Everybody is prepared for another hard-working day thanks to the healthy and tasty vegetarian food we had for breakfast.

10.00 The meeting in the Green Room was shorter that we would expect because we soon got out for an active day that began with a guided tour through the project Cultural and Educational Centre Raoul Wallenberg (host-facility) related to sustainability and water treatment. This was a really pleasant and full of practical information moment about how they adapted an old school building that looks more like a Moselle Castle into a sustainable multifunctional space. Among the good practices and the interventions used here we can mention turning an asphalt yard into a garden, an own system of collecting and using the rain water for the shared garden and a roof covered with solar panels .

11.00 The day continued in the same active way because we received the visit of Dorothea Harlin, one of the initiators of the „Berlin Watertable”, a small group of engaged citizens who shared with us her six year experience of fighting for water as a common, not a commodity. They managed to held a referendum to force the secret PPP (Public Private Partnership) water contract to be published and they miraculously won for the first time in the Berlin history. This case is an inspiration for citizens in other countries as well as Dorothea revealed to us as a very inspiring person.

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12.30 Lunch came with Spinach-Quiche with rucola-salad providing energy for the most active part of the day: exploring the town in small Rallye groups with the map in one hand and the tasks in the other.

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Here you have some examples from our own experience:
East Side Gallery – Our group of four had to investigate on the significance of The Berlin Wall and how the banks of the Spree river were used during the division of Berlin (Cold War). We took notice of the land use on a certain sector of the Spree river banks. (Ioana)
Radialsystem V & Virchow Memorial – Our group of four had to investigate on the original function of the Radialsystem V building and its role in the development of the water supply system in Berlin and also to find out which is the connection between the Radialsystem V and the Virchow Memorial. (Dana)
Rummelsburger Bay, Stralauer Peninsula – Find how the area was used in the past (e.g. historic buildings) and the appearence today. (Anabela&the other 4 members of the group)
We interviewed passerbyes, we took pictures and notes and will share our experience with the other groups tomorrow. What about your experience on the topic of water?

19.30 Dinner – another portion of green energy (Quinoa Salad and Endives)

20.30 Although we were tired from the ralley, we found enthusiasm growing while each of the participants from Italy, Portugal, Romania and Germany shared their background experience in NGO’s, water and other sustainable topics.

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Resources

Materials, Presentations, ….

Water is life
Introduction to the topic by OBUK
Part 1:
Waterislifepublish

Water and Sudstainability – the learning partnership
Waterpartnershippresi2

M. Henn: TTIP, water-privatization  the role of international organizations
Presentation Henn 14 March 2015 Water Global Players

Presentation by Dorothea Härlin, Berliner Wassertisch
Water and Sustainability – Berliner Wassertisch 1
Water and Sustainability – Berliner Wassertisch 2
Water and Sustainability – Berliner Wassertisch 3
Water and Sustainability – Berliner Wassertisch 4

Water footprint
Presentation by Arjen Y. Hoekstra

The journey of the jeans
long journey of a jeans

Tobias Schäfer (Grßne Liga): Environmental impacts of dams & river modification
TS River_ecosystems_water_policy

Presentation/ Workshop about Water and Energy
by Mihail Dumitriu
water and energy

Daniela Setton (BĂźndnis 90/ Die GrĂźnen Brandenburg): Impact of opencast mining on water in Berlin & Brandenburg

Christiane Gerstetter (Ecologic Institut Berlin): Water conflicts & climate change
WaterConflicts_and_CC

Existence of right to water in international human right law,
by Alireza Mohammadi Aghdam (participant of the training)
and Ameneh Dehshiri
human right to water -blog