Location and Venue

The ICCM 2011 will be held at the internationally renowned Technische Universität Berlin (www.tu-berlin.de) that is located in Germany's capital city Berlin (www.berlin.de) at the heart of Europe.

Venue

© TU Berlin

Horst-Wagon-Hall H1012

Hauptgebäude (Main Building)
Straße des 17. Juni 135
10623 Berlin

Directions

 

A map of the TU Berlin campus can be found here.

Technische Universität Berlin

© TU Berlin/ Weiss

The internationally renowned Technische Universität Berlin is located in Germany’s capital city at the heart of Europe. Our activities focus on achieving four sharply-defined core goals: building a distinctive profile for our university, ensuring exceptional performance in research and teaching, providing our graduates with excellent qualifications, in addition to a forward-looking approach to efficient university governance. The TU Berlin strives to promote the accumulation of knowledge and to facilitate technological progress by adhering to the fundamental principles of excellence and quality. Strong regional, national and international networking with partners in science and industry is an important aspect in all these endeavors. Our research and teaching endeavors are characterized by a broad spectrum of academic disciplines, ranging from engineering science to natural science, planning science and economics, as well as the humanities and social sciences.

Berlin

© Rainer Sturm / pixelio.de

Berlin is a truly vibrant city that never stops reinventing itself. The dynamism that Berlin draws from its history and from the creative potential of its residents makes Berlin one of the most interesting cosmopolitan cities in the world. It is a city where people from various cultures and nations have the opportunity to meet and communicate. Reminders of the political and cultural events that shaped the nineteenth and twentieth centuries can be found on nearly every street corner throughout the city. Few other world cities have repeatedly undergone such fundamental transformation. Still, Berlin has been able to evolve from a divided city into a European metropolis.

Berlin is truly a “city of science” with the TU Berlin campus as its center. Located in the “City-West” area, our main campus spans the area between the celebrated Kurfürstendamm boulevard and the central train station, Berlin’s most striking new landmark. The creative environment surrounding the TU Berlin – coupled with its central location and spatial and technical possibilities – make it a popular venue for conventions and congresses.

The district of Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf provides an attractive living environment, which is characterized by culture, cinemas and night life. Charlottenburg is no longer just a tourist and shopping area – it is now very much a first-rate location for scientific activities. Research and its practical application have long traditions here. Today, science and industry go hand in hand, as illustrated by companies conducting intensive research in the fields of biotechnology, computer sciences or automobile production that have expressly chosen to locate their facilities in close proximity to our university campus.