Jörg Schröder is an architect and urban planner, full professor for Territorial Design and Urban Planning at Leibniz Universität Hannover (LUH), and Dean for Research of the Faculty of Architecture and Landscape. His focus is on urbanism for sustainable transition, circularity, design research, and territorial innovation. He is coordinator of the Circular Design Innovation Alliance (CiD), funded by the European Union. Further projects include reCITYing and CFC in the EU Creative Europe Programme.Alissa Diesch is an architect-urbanist and works as a professor and DAAD long-term lecturer for sustainable development at the School of Architecture, Urbanism and Design at Universidad del Norte in Barranquilla, Colombia. She did her doctorate about the rural heritage of Bogotá at Technische Universität München and worked from 2018 to 2024 at the Chair for Territorial Design at Leibniz Universität Hannover. Her research interests are urban transformation and cultural heritage with a perspective towards circular futures in Latin American and European cities and territories.Riccarda Cappeller works across architecture, urban transformation, visual sociology and art. Her practice merges design research and artistic processes, exploring the co-creation of urban knowledge. She teaches and researches at the chair for territorial design at Leibniz Universität Hannover (LUH) and develops workshops for various institutes. Her awarded doctoral dissertation frames architecture as a performative practice and proposes new methods to grasp urban contexts and create spatial experiences.Anna Pape works at the intersection of architecture, urbanism, graphics and art at Leibniz Universität Hannover. She studied Architecture and Urban Design in Hannover and Brussels. In the EU Circular Design Innovation Alliance (CiD) she researches on urban transformation and develops new educational formats. She is also part of raumlaborberlin. Engaging Architecture as an interdisciplinary approach to ecological, economic and social issues, she has been working on different dynamics of urban development that enable common practices on land use for community-driven and common resources.Martynas Germanavičius, born in 1996, is a researcher, curator, and producer working in the fields of architecture and the arts. He has been working at Architektūros fondas since 2020, where he initiated and leads international projects such as the Open House Europe cooperation project, and represents various organisations. He is keen in exploring the relationships and influences of energy, materiality and the collective imagination in the processes of spatial production.