Munich Means Business
Transcription
Munich Means Business
Munich Means Business Leveraging growth The Department of Labour and Economic Development ten years on Christian Ude, Mayor of the City of Munich 4 Munich at the dawn of the new millennium The Department of Labour and Economic Development ten years on Dr. Reinhard Wieczorek, Councilor Head of Department of Labour and Economic Development, City of Munich 6 Go global – go Munich 8 Facing challenges, crafting change – Siemens sets sail for the 21st century Dr. Heinrich v. Pierer, President and Chief Executive Officer, Siemens AG 10 Munich Re – a global player at home in Munich Dr. Hans-Jürgen Schinzler, Chairman of the Board of Management of Münchener Rückversicherungs-Gesellschaft Aktiengesellschaft, Munich 12 HypoVereinsbank – a bank, its markets, and its home financial center Dr. Albrecht Schmidt, Management Spokesman, Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank AG BMW – the joy of Munich Prof. Joachim Milberg, President and Chief Executive Officer, BMW AG Knowledge – the stuff of the future 34 36 Munich – melting pot for the IT industry Prof. Georg Nemetschek, Founder and Member of the Managing Board, Nemetschek AG 38 14 Into a new communication age with the Internet and UMTS Dr. Eberhard Beck, Head of the Munich office of Deutsche Telekom AG 40 16 “Munich Network” – the new technologies promotion group – a “one-stop shop” for fast-growing high-tech firms Eberhard Färber, former Managing Director, Munich Network 42 Munich as a biotechnology region Prof. Horst Domdey, Member of the Managing Board, BioM AG 44 Munich – a world-class media location Dr. Hubert Burda, Chief Executive Officer, Hubert Burda Media Holding 46 18 20 The Technical University of Munich – a synonym for technological progress Prof. Wolfgang A. Herrmann, Principal of the Technical University of Munich 22 The Max Planck Society – foundational research to serve the public good Prof. Hubert Markl, President of the Max Planck Society 24 The Fraunhofer Society – innovation that shapes the future Prof. Hans-Jürgen Warnecke, President of the Fraunhofer Society 26 28 To Munich with love – insights into the life of a local entrepreneur Gabriele Lechner, Member of the Managing Board, Camgaroo AG 30 Munich – the venture capital hub Falk F. Strascheg, General Partner, Extorel Management- und Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH 32 From idea to startup – the Munich Business Plan Competition Werner Arndt, Managing Director, MBPW GmbH 33 The “Literature House” – old medium, new partnership Dr. Ulrich Wechsler, President of the Stiftung Buch-, Medien- und Literaturhaus, Munich The media hub – Media Works Munich (MWM) Otto Link, Head of the Munich office of IVG Immobilien GmbH Strong on soft location factors Munich’s booming property market 62 Theresienhöhe – 64 a choice cut in the heart of Munich Dr. Lutz Mellinger, Member of the Board, Corporate and Investment Banking Division, Deutsche Bank AG Moving ahead with a modern mix of industries The Ludwig-Maximilians University – creative minds, new synergies Prof. Andreas Heldrich, Principal of the Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich Starting a business in Munich Business and technology centers – successful models in Munich Karlheinz Reiber, Managing Director, MGH-Münchner Gewerbehof und Technologiezentrumsgesellschaft mbH, Head of Business Promotion at the Department of Labour and Economic Development A new face in Schwabing Dr. Helmut Röschinger, Managing Partner, ARGENTA Internationale Anlagegesellschaft mbH Made-to-measure infrastructure 48 50 The opera cult Sir Peter Jonas, Director of the Bavarian State Opera 54 Welcome to “Museumsville”! Prof. Helmut Friedel, Director of the Municipal Art Gallery in the Lenbachhaus 56 Kunstpark Ost, Kunstpark Nord – the really cool places to be in Munich Franz Kotteder, Editor-in-chief, Munich Culture/SZ Extra 58 The Munich Olympic Park – the gift of the century has a future in the new millennium Wilfrid Spronk, Managing Director, Olympiapark München GmbH 60 68 From Munich to Shanghai – trade show strategies in the 21st century Manfred Wutzlhofer, Executive Director, Messe München GmbH 70 Munich’s global hub Willi Hermsen, Managing Director, Flughafen München GmbH 72 Infrastructure – nothing but the best for Munich Dr. Kurt Mühlhäuser, Managing Director, SWM GmbH 74 Empowering change 76 Employment and the structural transition in Munich Helmut Schmid, DGB District Chairman, Munich 78 The Munich Employment and Qualification Program Jürgen Lohmüller, Managing Director, Anderwerk GmbH 80 Reconciling ecology and the economy – Ökoprofit® shows the way Dr. Karl Niederl, Director, Environment Department, Municipal Corporation, Graz, Austria 82 Photographic sources 52 66 84 Leveraging growth The Department of Labour and Economic Development ten years on Christian Ude, Mayor of the City of Munich It is now ten years since Munich launched its Department of Labour and Economic Development, as the Social Democrats (SPD) had promised prior to the local elections. Georg Kronawitter, the mayor at the time, managed both to push through the new department and to have it headed by Dr. Reinhard Wieczorek, his number one choice. All this happened at a time when signs that the local economy was overheating were matched by fears that German reunification and the resurgence of Berlin might drive Bavaria into the wilderness. The first thing that changed, however, was the overall mood: intensive dialogue took the place of public controversy; cooperation became the hallmark of many committees; new joint projects began to crop up. It did not take long before the various chambers recognized the benefits of the new department: one permanent point of contact that consistently provided reliable support. For a decade now, the department has been assisting countless companies on location and relocation issues and expansion plans. It has an extremely successfully track record – a fact substantiated by the large number of high-tech firms, media companies and financial service providers that have moved to Munich, although public support is admittedly by no means the only reason for this trend. Dr. Wieczorek and his department position themselves and act as a catalyst to growth, and can rightly claim some of the merit for the city’s outstanding economic performance to date: the lowest unemployment rate of all German cities; the most vacancies for the past three decades in a row; and the best opportunities in competition with other leading European regions. Projects such as the Media Works Munich competence center, the high-tech business park in Messestadt-Riem, life sciences parks in the west of Munich, and an impressive presence at international trade shows have all sharpened Munich’s profile as a venue for innovative, high-growth industries. The fact that Munich also attracted record numbers of visitors last year is likewise attributable to intelligent tourist promotion campaigns that have successfully added elements of science and culture to enrich Munich’s existing image as a venue for congresses and urban tourism. Despite the impressive employment figures, the department has never forgotten that is first and foremost a “Department of Labour” – i.e. that it also needs to look after those who, even in the years of plenty, find themselves excluded from the labor market. On this score, the Munich Employment and Qualification Program has provided an attractive range of training, development and occupational programs to help reintegrate the long-term unemployed in today’s labor market. Nor should one forget that the department is responsible for managing the city’s own investments. This means participating in the dynamic development of the exhibition grounds and the airport; but it also – and above all – involves actively managing the municipal utilities, which have been organized as private enterprises for the last three years. Much remains to be done to maintain Munich’s leading position. The need for advice to new business startups is growing. Competition between cities is hotting up. Business promotion at local level is being faced by ever greater demands. Municipal utilities are having to fight ever harder to survive. In the tourist industry, too, the competition never sleeps … All of which makes the Department of Labour and Economic Development more important than ever before. The department should take it as a compliment that, ten years on, no-one would dream of questioning what, at the time, was a close-run majority decision to give it a go. 5 Munich at the dawn of a new millennium The Department of Labour and Economic Development ten years on Dr. Reinhard Wieczorek, Councilor Head of Department of Labour and Economic Development, City of Munich Back on April 1, 1991, when the fledgling Department of Labour and Economic Development created by the red-green majority in the city council first opened for business, Riem was still the venue for flights to and from Munich. Visitors to and exhibitors at trade shows caused regular congestion in the Westend. The exhibition grounds, an awkward, unsightly lump behind the city’s famous Bavaria statue, were effectively off-limits to the locals. For two years, not a square meter of extra commercial space had been allotted. There was no congress center. And the decision to make Berlin the republic’s “new-old” capital seemed like another nail in Munich’s coffin lid. The economy collapsed; and the downfall of the Bavarian capital was trumpeted as a foregone conclusion – especially by the political opponents of the new majority in the city hall. Ten years on, virtually every survey one cares to consult puts Munich up among the frontrunners – if not in pole position – in terms of economic prowess, prospects for the future, and attractiveness to and popularity among both employers and employees. The airport opened near Erding in 1992 is booming: a second terminal is currently being built at a cost of DM 2.3 billion. Almost immediately after its inauguration in 1997 at the former airport site, the new exhibition center needed to erect another two 10,000 m2 halls in short order. Munich’s International Congress Center is bursting at the seams; parts of it are booked solid through to 2006. On the site of the old trade show grounds on the Theresienhöhe, what will be one of the city’s most attractive downtown districts is taking shape. Munich’s reputation as a European center for information and communication, as a desirable media and (above all) multimedia location, is known far and wide. The city offers new space to life sciences firms, for instance, which – like startups and young companies in other disciplines – seem unable to resist Munich’s magnetic pull and are springing up left, right and center. At the same time, this sustained boom is being built on a solid foundation laid by craftsmen, traditional production companies and service providers. Unlike other cities, Munich has thus been spared the worst ravages of unemployment. For the last decade, Munich has responded to structural change with a proactive employment policy, mirroring the ongoing transition at annual conferences on employment – and has remained the German city with the lowest unemployment rate, the highest per-capita investment rate and the highest per-capita purchasing power. By the same token, the city’s impressive array of universities and academies, its science companies, the research departments operated here by true global players, its patent offices and Max Planck Institutes all make Munich uniquely important as a center of knowledge – the stuff of which the future is made. In spite of such go-ahead dynamism, however, in spite of the strong focus on preparing and building for the future, Munich’s traditional values remain intact. As soon as the sun starts to warm the city, a bevy of beer gardens and street cafés lure locals and visitors alike to bask in the beauty of the Bavarian capital: the ochre yellow of the Theatinerkirche casts a golden glow over the splendor of the Munich Residenz; a warm wind from the Alps makes for clear blue skies; the dazzling white of the Siemens head office, built by Richard Meier, is offset perfectly by Stefan Braunfels’ Modernist Pinakothek which, together with the Lenbachhaus, at last gives the modernist era too a home in Munich. It would be presumptuous to claim that the merit for such advances lies only with local government, or with the Department of Labour and Economic Development alone. The fact that so many companies are today proud to be based in Munich – and that so many more want to follow their example – is the fruit of the combined efforts of the city council and the mayor, the various municipal departments, the decentralized involvement of the district committees and, by no means least, the people of Munich themselves. Witness the eager willingness of so many to contribute to this small tribute to the first ten years of the Department of Labour and Economic Development. My colleagues and I would like to thank all those who have made this possible. A favorite saying of Dr. Dieter Soltmann, Honorary President of the Chambers of Industry and Commerce in Munich and Upper Bavaria, most definitely applies in some measure for Munich too: “The economy isn’t everything: but nothing else works without it.” 7 Facing challenges, crafting change – Siemens sets sail for the 21st century Munich Re – a global player at home in Munich HypoVereinsbank – a bank, its markets, and its home financial center BMW – the joy of Munich Illuminated stairwell at the SiemensForum on the Oskar-vonMiller-Ring; Architect: Richard Meier 8 Go global – go Munich Munich’s global strength is rooted in a healthy mix of global players and SMEs, large corporations and one-man businesses. And in a dynamic blend of high-growth industries. Craftsmen’s firms and the manufacturing industry rub shoulders with modern service providers and growth industries such as finance and biotechnology in a breathtaking but balanced business portfolio. Innumerable international companies have come to appreciate both the economic prowess and the quality of life offered by this location. A highly qualified local population is yet another key to Munich’s magnetic attraction for the business community. With such a wealth of talent, Munich can confidently rise to the challenges of globalization and the knowledge society. Bavarian Minister-President Edmund Stoiber recently put it in a nutshell: scarcely any company is as tightly bound up in Bavaria’s emergence as a modern high-tech business locations as Siemens. And nowhere is this fact more apparent than in Munich. Siemens’ presence in the Bavarian capital goes back more than a century. Today, Munich and Berlin serve as the group’s joint headquarters. Wherever you look – at the street lights, the power supply, the telephone network, the subway trains, or the world’s biggest array of solar panels on the roof of the New Exhibition Center in Munich-Riem – Siemens has been in on developing the city’s infrastructure from the very beginning. Over the years, a partnership of fruitful dialogue and constructive collaboration has grown up between Munich and its biggest corporate citizen. 10 The SiemensForum built by architect Richard Meier on the Oskar-vonMiller-Ring Today, at the dawn of the 21st century, both our company and the Bavarian capital are squaring up to face challenges of tremendous significance. A look back at the 1990s shows that Siemens is now in the third phase of a comprehensive transformation process. The first was the need to cope with the dramatic price declines that swept over large swathes of our markets in the wake of deregulation. In what we called the Top program, we accelerated our processes and applied ourselves to higher productivity and customer-oriented innovation, to growth and the transformation of our corporate culture. Then we were hit by the full force of globalization, to which we responded in the form of a ten-point program. We are optimizing the entire group’s business portfolio to position all our lines of business as market leaders. We have developed new management systems that reward performance and increase the value of the company. And we have made our financial reporting practices more transparent to satisfy the demands of the capital market. So we now find ourselves in the third phase of transformation. The key task here is to electronically network the entire corporate value chain, effectively pooling our traditional industrial skills with all the benefits of “electronic business”. Having watched parts of the so-called new economy fall by the wayside for lack of substance, we can now step in and prove that companies such as Siemens are ideally placed to reap the lasting benefits of the Internet. New economy, yes – but backed by the substance of the old economy. The road to “Siemens as an e-business company” is marked out by five milestones: – – – – – The first is the electronic networking of our business relationships with customers. We already generate 10 percent of our sales online. We want to quickly boost this figure to 25 percent and – in our consumermarket business, such as with computers and mobile phones – to as much as 50 percent. The second is the electronic networking of our business relationships with suppliers. Here again, 10 percent of our annual procurement volume of 35 billion Euro is currently handled electronically. This figure should shortly rise to at least 50 percent. The third is the electronic networking of all internal links in the value chain: from research and development through production to delivery logistics. The fourth is the electronic networking of our know ledge resources in a system of “knowledge management”. All projects, the people who work on them and the solutions they produce are archived in a database. Thanks to our global corporate network, all our employees worldwide will in future have fast and easy access to this entire body of knowledge. The fifth is the marketing of our e-business expertise to external customers. We want to take the experience of electronic networking within the company and put it to sound commercial use. The age of electronic business has only just begun. It offers tremendous opportunities not only to companies, but also to entire locations and regions – provided, of course, that they commit themselves to making the most of what the dawning age has to offer. On this score, the Munich region is extremely well placed. It is already the leading information and communication technology cluster in Germany and, indeed, in the whole of Continental Europe. Literally “bit by bit”, the Bavarian capital has asserted itself as an I&C capital too. Two of the predominant aspects of I&C in the region are microelectronics and software – both key technologies which, together, account for some 8000 firms in the Munich metropolitan area. Nearly a third of the 25 biggest software companies in Germany are located here. By no means the least reason for the emergence of this I&C cluster in Munich is the confluence of favorable conditions at this south German location. The region’s research and higher education landscape, for instance, is second to none. Around 85,000 students are registered at Munich’s ten universities and colleges of higher education, almost 30 percent of whom are studying technical and/or scientific disciplines. A whole series of high-caliber special research areas are based here, prime examples being in information processing and semiconductor technology. The Fraunhofer and Max Planck Institutes, too, both provide fruitful channels for the transfer of knowledge and technology between the research and business communities. Other advantages of the location include the growing availability of venture capital; Munich’s position as the venue of the European Patent Office; the large number of international technology shows held here; and, last but not least, the region’s genuine high-tech labor market. Sixteen percent of the local active population are classified as highly qualified – a higher proportion than in any other major German city. Every tenth person who works in the German IT/electronics industry is employed in or around Munich. All in all, the city could not be better positioned to establish itself as one of Europe’s leading business locations in the competitive arena of today’s new economy. That is why Munich will remain one of Siemens’ most important centers of innovation on into the 21st century. Facing challenges, crafting changes – Siemens sets sail for the 21st century Dr. Heinrich von Pierer, President and Chief Executive Officer, Siemens AG In the event of a short circuit, superconductive current limiters act as reclosing fuses; the business potential is vast 11 “Walking Man” by Jonathan Borofsky (1995), outside Munich Re’s administrative building on the Leopoldstrasse Having crossed the threshold into the new millennium, we are currently in a phase of frenetic market development. E-business, startups and biotechnology are just a few of the buzzwords that will help shape economic and social developments in the years that lie ahead. The opportunities are vast: but the risks, too, are many and varied. As a result, professional risk management will be needed in future more than ever before. This is one challenge which the insurance industry in particular is having to confront. Munich is a location both ideally suited and well equipped to rise to the future challenge of risk management. Here, the dynamic tension between new challenges and new opportunities meets the long and illustrious tradition of Munich’s insurance industry. The cornerstone was laid a good 120 years ago by Munich Re, followed in short order by the Allianz. Today, no fewer than 80 insurers have made their home in the Bavarian capital. In so doing, they have made this one of the world’s leading insurance hubs. Given such a pedigree, Munich is sure to be the cradle of many an innovative development in risk management in the future, too. Munich Re has spent the last decade positioning itself carefully to face what the future holds. The creation of the ERGO insurance group, Germany’s second-largest primary insurer, has, for example, taken Munich Re beyond its traditional reinsurance activities and positioned it as a mainstream insurer covering the entire spectrum of insurance services. Munich Re – a global player at home in Munich Dr. Hans-Jürgen Schinzler, Chairman of the Board of Management of Münchener Rückversicherungs-Gesellschaft Aktiengesellschaft, Munich Munich Re’s head office on the Königinstrasse, built in 1913 by the architects Oswald Eduard Bieber and Wilhelm Hollweck Last year added the finishing touches to the group’s forward-looking policy: a newly formulated set of corporate principles; and the vision of becoming one of the world’s leading risk insurers and financial service providers. These moves gave the whole of the Munich Re group a clear strategic orientation for the years that lie ahead – years in which we have set ourselves ambitious goals. Munich Re intends to consolidate its position as the global leading reinsurer. Represented by ERGO, we also aim to rank among the leading primary insurers in the retail segment. We further aim to grow our new subsidiary, MEAG, also based in Munich, into one of the very best asset management companies. 13 Strategic considerations notwithstanding, the company is and remains a Munich “local boy”. We take our responsibility as a corporate citizen very seriously. Responsible dialogue will remain the hallmark of our relationship with our home city. Munich Re trusts the City of Munich as a provider of key stimulus, a guarantor of a favorable business climate. Accordingly, Munich will continue to be more than just an important hub of information and knowledge for the insurance industry: it will also provide fertile soil in which to cultivate the innovative ideas that the future demands. Munich Re looks forward to many more decades of close and constructive cooperation that will serve both its interests and those of the city. Even in an age when everything is global and digital, simply having a mailbox – virtual or otherwise – is not enough in the finance market. Like so many other branches of industry, financial service providers need to be physically close to each other. They draw on a common pool of market resources, including the labor market, and look to the “producers of knowledge” at universities and in the scientific community. Competition is their lifeblood. In return, financial service providers give their place of residence the benefit of their standing and expertise, as well as the concrete advantages of division of labor across the levels of transaction, production and distribution. Munich is undisputedly the second most important financial center in Germany. It has three core strengths: a phalanx of top-flight insurers; one of the country’s most active venture capital markets; and a battery of powerful banks. The HVB group is proud to be headquartered in this financial center and does much to benefit everyone concerned. 14 HypoVereinsbank – a bank, its markets, and its home financial center 1. Carefully planned strategic expansion has helped the HVB group to become Europe’s third-largest banking group, with 65,000 employees, total assets of 680 billion euros, and 17.3 billion euros in equity capital. Size and cost-cutting moves are, however, less important than the impact of combining market strength with a clear strategic focus. In adopting this stance, the HVB group positively affirms its intention to be a part of shaping the future of Europe’s banking landscape – and still to be a key player once the dust has settled. The process of consolidation is only just beginning: the globalization of the financial markets, European monetary union, the Internet, and the decline in margins in traditional banking business will all lend further momentum. A financial center is not an anonymous technological platform: it is a complex web of relationships between companies, competitors and partners, between customers, proprietors and employees, between the business and political communities and the public at large. This web has to grow, and requires intensive nurturing. Politics must have a hand in ensuring that financial business can be conducted for the good of all. And the public mood, too, must be open to the needs of the financial sector. All conditions that can be found in ample measure in Munich. Because Munich understands that the finance industry is both a crucial economic factor and a catalyst of growth and employment. 2. The HVB group has carved out a keener profile in retail banking. It now serves some 8 million customers in the retail and corporate customer segments – mostly small and medium-sized enterprises in the latter case. Its core competences include property financing, asset management, structured financing, integrated corporate finance in particular, and a powerful portal to the international financial markets, all of which adds up to a well-rounded, attractive portfolio. This portfolio also reflects the general orientation of Munich as a financial center, with its traditional focus on mortgage bonds (the true heavyweight on the asset management market), its enviable strength in public and private placements, and its deep roots in custom-tailored investment banking. Munich thus contrasts with and complements Frankfurt and London, for instance, both of which focus primarily on trading and global investment banking. 3. As a bank to the regions, HypoVereinsbank concentrates on Europe’s growth markets. Its merger with Bank Austria made it not only the market leader in the tightly integrated economic region of South Germany and Austria, but also the number one in Central and Eastern Europe. This, too, has brought change to Munich as a financial center, broadening its scope to include Germany’s neighbors to the east. These countries are home to 110 million people, will lead the growth tables in the next few years, have a comparative dearth of banks, are lagging behind in cashless payment transactions, and evidence low market capitalization in the corporate sector. Taken together, these factors imply enormous pent-up demand for financial services. And the openness of the local populations to modern forms of banking is a clear sign that these countries intend to catch up sooner rather than later. Furthermore, one consequence of a pension system that is fully funded by capital (as opposed to a pay-as-you-go system) is that the capital market in Central and Eastern European is expected to evolve very rapidly. Dr. Albrecht Schmidt, Management Spokesman, Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank AG (the HVB group) HypoVereinsbank’s new offices at the Arabellapark; the deep, glass-roofed atrium stands next to the skyscraper The striking “Hypo-Haus” at the Arabellapark; both of these spectacular buildings – the new offices and the skyscraper – are the work of Munichbased architects Bea and Dr. Walther Betz 15 The BMW group is rightly regarded as one of the preeminent global players in the automotive industry. The group has a presence in virtually every market the world over. You have to go a very long way indeed to find a country where you would look in vain for a BMW. And that is not all: from individual components to entire vehicles – such as the Z3 roadster – the BMW group today manufactures at locations around the globe. Mexico, the UK, Austria, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, the USA, South Africa, Egypt, Russia and the Philippines are just some of its production venues outside Germany. Today, the BMW group is at home all over the planet. For the first time, well over 800,000 BMWs – as many cars as you will find in Munich in a year! – were shipped to customers around the world in fiscal 2000. 16 Being a global player does not mean forgetting or – worse still – denying one’s roots, however. A future always needs a past. In this sense, BMW remains what it has always been – the “Bavarian Motor Works” with its headquarters in Munich. Our “four-cylinder” office block, right next door to the Olympic Center, is one of the city’s best-known landmarks. This is the nerve center of our global business – the focal point from which we manage the 100,000 or so people who work for us worldwide. Munich is our center of gravity, the hub from which we systematically work outward. As we see it, globalization has nothing to do with negating the traditional ties that have proven so valuable over so many years. On the contrary: it is out of our strong roots in Munich that we have been able to grow to global stature and penetrate new markets. Taking the same image a step further only makes the point all the more clearly: no tree that does not have deep roots can ever grow strong and tall. Munich has everything a global player of the caliber of the BMW group needs. Outstanding educational facilities and the resultant highly skilled workforce are just one example. A technology leader such as BMW depends on being able to employ the best people there are. Collaboration with universities and research institutions is another area from which we draw strength. Experience has shown that cross-fertilization between business and science spurs both on to scale ever greater heights. There are still more benefits to be enjoyed in Munich. An excellent infrastructure is one; and proximity to key component suppliers and partners is definitely another. Yet there is something more subtle that plays an equally crucial role: Munich is a dynamic, innovative city, a city that is open to the world. Where better could a worldclass enterprise such as the BMW group choose to make its home? The “four-cylinder” tower – the BMW group’s headquarters in Munich; Architect: Prof. Karl Schwanzer The BMW group’s tradition in Munich goes back a long way. It is also one of the city’s biggest employers: over 29,000 people are on our local payroll – about a quarter of our global workforce. These Munich-based employees alone had a combined net purchasing power of around DM 1.8 billion in 2000. As well as being a big seller, the group is also a major buyer in Munich, procuring considerable volumes of goods and services every year. Yet the company’s ties to the city cannot be fully expressed in numbers alone. BMW also partners a wide range of projects and events in the realms of art, culture and sport. “Munich and BMW” is more than just a traditional relationship: it is a partnership that is lived out day in, day out. We value Munich as a business location. We like it here. BMW – the joy of Munich Prof. Joachim Milberg, President and Chief Executive Officer, BMW AG Always on the cutting edge – production at BMW 17 The Ludwig-Maximilians University – creative minds, new synergies The Technical University of Munich – a synonym for technological progress The Max Planck Society – foundational research to serve the public good The Fraunhofer Society – innovation that shapes the future Molecular farming at the Fraunhofer Institute for Environmental Chemistry and Ecological Toxicology: proteins used as the basis for pharmaceuticals are “manufactured” in plants A comparison with German and international cities puts Munich up among the leading knowledge centers. Eleven institutes of higher learning, numerous professional academies and vocational colleges, and a range of private development and training facilities inject a constant stream of highly qualified people into the local labor market. Leading non-university research establishments such as the Max Planck and Fraunhofer Societies, the DLR (German aerospace research institute), the GSF (environment and healthcare society), and the Ifo Institute for Business Research further enrich the city’s impressive research landscape. Both the European and German patent offices and a number of patent service providers help translate all this knowledge into concrete products and services. Knowledge – the stuff of the future 19 “The economy of the 21st century will be a knowledge and information economy”: already, this statement has become something of a cliché. Increasingly, individuals and businesses can only stay competitive if they possess analytical skills and have access to relevant knowledge. More than ever, the importance of a “business location” is inseparably intertwined with its quality as a center of knowledge and science. Munich is a scientific center of outstanding caliber. Only Berlin has more registered students. Munich, meanwhile, is home to scientific organizations of the stature of the Max Planck and Fraunhofer Societies. Nearly a dozen institutes of higher learning are flanked by no less than three universities in the Munich metropolitan area. 20 As valuable as such a concentration of institutions and resources can be, this alone is not enough to meet the challenges of a knowledge society. The question is: how can quantum leaps in technical knowledge be put to good use? This question concerns both the direction of university research and the way it is organized. But it also directly concerns the skills that future members of the knowledge society must acquire if they are to survive – and indeed thrive – in the face of constant change and ever greater complexity. The Ludwig-Maximilians University – creative minds, new synergies Prof. Andreas Heldrich, Principal of the Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich Main building of the Ludwig-Maximilians University on the Geschwister-Scholl-Platz; Architect: Friedrich von Gärtner The Ludwig-Maximilians University (LMU) formulated its response to the question in a set of principles that are anchored in its development plan for the years 2000 through 2004. This whole body of principles can be summed up in the root meaning of the term universitas: as the economic significance of knowledge continues to grow, we see no reason to abandon the commitment of a genuine university to cover a comprehensive range of disciplines. Rather than limit ourselves to applied knowledge, which is fleeting at best, we therefore see it as our mission to promote an interdisciplinary, networked approach to knowledge. The LMU’s universal orientation draws strength from its acknowledged achievements in many individual disciplines. The leading position we occupy in attracting DFG research funding testifies to our superlative quality in specialized areas. Such a breadth and quality of research and education makes the LMU better suited to this interdisciplinary philosophy than most universities. Our response to the challenges of the knowledge society is thus to continuously network and recombine the entire diverse array of disciplines. At the same time, our ability to shift paradigms in this way is the methodological ramework that enables us to survive as applied knowledge relentlessly changes and evolves. There is no end of examples of how the LMU helps Munich stay competitive as a business location: there is its singularly international flavor (some 13 percent of its students come from abroad); its attraction for foreign scientists (witness, for instance, the highest number of Alexander-von-Humboldt scholarships for young scientists from abroad); the support provided to business startups, unique in the whole of Germany and exemplified by the startup office on the LMU’s high-tech campus; and the development of contact database to speed up knowledge transfer to the business community. Munich as a business location needs Munich to be a center of knowledge and science. The LMU can best serve both goals if it remains what it is: a venue for scientific diversity in both study and research – a universitas in the classical sense. We intend to demonstrate just how “modern” such integrated diversity – the root meaning of universitas – can be in our plans to focus on the area of “communication and media sciences”. The LMU aims to bring together expertise from a wide range of disciplines in this new field of study and research. The courses that result will combine technical aspects with elements of design, philology, economics, law and social studies. This mix will serve the needs of the communication and media industries better than the isolated disciplines that have prevailed in the past. And there can be no better venue for such courses of study than Munich, a fast-growing media and Internet location in its own right. The Ludwig-Maximilians University’s genetic engineering center in Grosshadern 21 22 The Technical University (TU) of Munich is the only technical university in Bavaria that, since its inception in 1868, has played a pivotal role in the free state’s development from an agrarian culture to one of the world’s leading high-tech regions. The TU has repeatedly made major contributions in the fields of science and technology. Under various names and at various times, the university has brought forth an impressive list of ground-breaking inventions: Carl von Linde’s liquefication of air (1896); the synthesis of hemoglobin by Hans Fischer (Nobel prize, 1930); Mössbauer absorption, named after its inventor Rudolf Mössbauer (Nobel prize, 1961); the founding of the discipline of organometallic chemistry by Ernst-Otto Fischer (Nobel prize, 1973); the determination of the three-dimensional structure of a photosynthetic reaction center by Robert Huber (Nobel prize, 1988); and so the list could go on. Bavarian engineers such as Oskar von Miller, Rudolf Diesel, Theodor Ganzenmüller, Karl Max von Bauernfeind, Wilhelm Nusselt, Willy Messerschmitt and Hans Piloty all attained to worldwide acclaim early in their careers. And TU alumni today occupy leading positions in many of Bavaria’s industrial companies, especially in the German automotive industry. From the university’s earliest days, its professors and staff have had a significant impact on the development and growth of Bavarian industry. The clamor for “innovative products” – from intelligent services to new medicines for export – grows all the louder in times of economic weakness. The TU Munich forms a crucible in which knowledge and research meet to spawn innovative ideas for new products: products that originate in the pioneering spirit of scientists and engineers and are fashioned and molded by business and industry. Both society and the government will need to set greater store by scientists’ and engineers’ potential for creative ideas if suitable alternatives to the scarcity of natural raw materials are to be found in the future. Research, therefore, is very definitely the order of the day. Break time on the steps of the new Audimax at the TU Munich The TU Munich has set itself some very ambitious development goals in areas from life sciences through medical engineering to material sciences and high technology. The local presence of high-tech firms from a variety of industries helps keep basic research in touch with reality, as well as boosting research work in applied disciplines. At the same time, the university also collaborates with a number of small and medium-sized niche companies in the component supplier industry, and with youthful startups in the booming biotech and IT segments. The volume of external funding, without which research would be inconceivable today, is a telling indicator of just how fruitful such cooperation is. In 1999, the TU Munich attracted external funding worth over DM 200 million – a telling gauge of the quality of its research work. The 13 faculties that make up the TU Munich seek to pass on their substantial knowledge base to the 19,000 or so students currently registered. The fact that many of the university’s chairs are held by professors with hands-on experience of business and industry also helps ensure that the up-and-coming generation of scientists gets a real-world focus in their training. The TU Munich sees it as part of its mission to educate tomorrow’s engineers, scientists, architects, doctors and teachers in applied aspects of their disciplines, communicating methodological expertise that is (preferably) right on the cutting edge of scientific progress. Innovative new courses of study are designed to respond to rapidly changing market demands: examples include graduate courses in technical, financial and business mathematics, materials engineering, molecular biotechnology, biochemistry and bioinformatics, plus master’s courses in medical, communication and microwave engineering. New business startups from within the university fold are also playing an increasingly important role in the area of knowledge and technology transfer. Knowledge transfer is no longer being left to chance. Instead, state-backed business plan competitions and the development of startup centers both provide crucial stimulus. Numerous young scientists from the ranks of the TU Munich have already developed innovative products and/or processes which they are now marketing successfully. The TU Munich is also careful to give its students the commercial grounding they will need for their future careers. Potential entrepreneurs find fertile soil awaiting them in Munich’s dynamic startup scene. Starting in the winter semester 2001/2002, a completely new course in “technical business studies” will be added to the curriculum – to instill an astute business mindset in those with a love of technology. The Technical University of Munich – a synonym for technological progress Prof. Wolfgang A. Herrmann, Principal of the Technical University of Munich Entrance to the new Audimax on the TU’s main campus, Arcisstrasse; Architect: Prof. Rudolf Wienands 24 The Max Planck Society – foundational research to serve the public good Prof. Hubert Markl, President of the Max Planck Society There can be little doubt that knowledge and skills will be the crucial elements in the new economic order. The exact form this new order will take still remains unclear. One thing is for sure, however: tightly meshed, open, worldwide networking will play a pivotal role. It follows that research organizations such as the Max Planck Society – which focuses on basic research, is open to applications and works closely together with the world’s top research centers to push back the boundaries of human knowledge – are not a luxury to which countries that have grown accustomed to success treat themselves. They are an indispensable part of the bedrock of a society that is increasingly coming to depend on the knowledge and skills of the many, not of the few. Bavaria’s evolution from an agrarian culture to a knowledge-based industrial society is evidenced not only by its impressive number of successful and world-famous global high-tech players: its plethora of new and traditional universities, institutes of higher learning and nonuniversity research establishments all tell the same story. The numerous Max Planck Institutes are an integral part of this elaborate landscape. Since the end of the Second World War, a total of twelve of these institutes have set up shop in Bavaria – all of them in and around Munich, taking in the adjacent communities of Martinsried and Garching. Over 2400 staff, of whom 700 are scientists, are committed to gaining new insights into material sciences, energy research, particle physics and astrophysics, biochemistry and the neural sciences, as well as focusing on disciplines such as psychiatry, psychology and the important field of the legal sciences. The last entry in this list will surprise only those who have failed to grasp the ongoing need for new regulation that is spawned by a high-tech society in which knowledge and intellectual property rights are constantly and rapidly being renewed – and this in the context of European integration and, indeed, globalization. The applied business knowledge alone that has emerged from the Max Planck stable is witnessed by the nearly 180 patents filed and 45 license agreements signed in the last decade by nine Max Planck Institutes in the Munich metropolitan area. In addition, no less than 13 new companies have been spun off from Max Planck Institutes in Bavaria alone. These companies are already creating very highly skilled jobs; more such startups are in the pipeline. DNA fragments rendered visible under UV light are examined by a scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry For over 30 years, the Max Planck Society has entrusted technology transfer to Garching Innovation GmbH, its Munich-based subsidiary which applies for patents, negotiates licenses, and advises and supports spin-off companies on behalf of the entire Society. Also, the 350-strong staff of the Society’s general administrative headquarters have been based in Munich since 1962, and had the privilege of moving into widely acclaimed new premises on the Hofgarten in 1999. Cell experiments in a biochemical laboratory today can produce a new vaccine tomorrow. Methods used to analyze astrophysics data can be adopted in early cancerscreening tests. The results of long-term psychological studies can influence the structure of schools and curricula. Advances in patent law can speed up the commercial application of new knowledge. The foundational research in which the Max Planck Society engages today, with the backing of the federal and state governments, might tomorrow find its way into the global research community as a key that opens up far-reaching new insights into the real world – and also opens the door to prosperity and sustainable development for very many people. Bavaria in general, and Munich in particular, excel at this kind of research. A patch-clamp measuring station at the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research; the patch clamp is used to discover causeand-effect relationships at cell level 25 26 Managing innovation: advances in biotechnology and environmental analysis – the picture shows toxicological and aerosol research at the Fraunhofer Institute – generally lead to greater efficiency, lower costs and tangible market benefits Innovation is the driving force in the history of civilization. Innovation is born of man’s innate instinct to do things better, more easily, more cheaply. Technology and business both subscribe to the same principle: to achieve results with as little input as possible. Or, to turn the equation around, to maximize the utility of a given measure of input. Today we are in the throes of a structural transition of similar proportions. And today technology has, if anything, become even more important to production and employment throughout the whole economy – more so in Germany than, say, in Japan or the USA. For some years, youthful, technology-oriented companies have been the only ones to create new jobs. Goethe wrote “What cure thou knowest, apply!” Another saying – “Research turns money into knowledge; innovation turns knowledge into money” – succinctly captures the importance of innovation for Germany’s future as a business location. Hugo Geiger, Bavaria’s secretary of state for the economy fifty years ago, was quick to perceive how crucial research would be to the nation’s economic rebirth in the wake of war and devastation. Accordingly, the Fraunhofer Society was launched in 1949 as an organization to promote applied research. The choice of Munich as its location was no coincidence. Economies tend to follow innovation cycles, each new cycle ushering in a prolonged economic upswing. The steam engine, the railroad, electricity and the automobile have been some of the key innovations in bygone eras. After an extended downturn in many areas of the old economy, information and communication technologies are now asserting themselves as the catalysts of today’s structural transition. Innovative technologies are permeating every segment of economic activity and sparking off a new era of business beginnings. Even now, genetic engineering and biotechnology are already heralding the start of the next cycle. The Fraunhofer Society – innovation that shapes the future Prof. Hans-Jürgen Warnecke, President of the Fraunhofer Society The transition to a knowledge society has dramatically increases the pace of innovation: knowledge is now available worldwide. Yet only the first movers – those who first succeed in translating global knowledge into practical innovations – reap the benefits of prosperity and employment. The store of public knowledge to which companies have access is created by both foundational and applied research. Each makes its own contribution. The one tends toward fundamentally new strategies and in-depth theoretical research; the other concentrates on specialized knowledge that can be applied in practice by using standardized, efficient processes, examining aspects such as shelf-life and security, and then minimizing costs and getting products to market fast. The Fraunhofer Society sees itself as a driver of the innovative process, bringing business and science together, bridging gaps, and accelerating the overall process. Largely thanks to past investments, Germany still occupies a strong position. Yet the gaps are widening in many areas of technology. Losing its overall leadership position would not be such a bad thing if new technologies were emerging to move into the breach. One major cause for concern, however, is that Germany as a whole is falling behind in the most significant areas of future economic growth: information technology and biotechnology. Seen in this light, the Munich region’s achievement in carving out a leading position in precisely these key technologies – a fact acknowledged by the global business community – is all the more remarkable. The Fraunhofer Society, too, plans to redouble its activities in these areas over the next few years. Munich has recognized its window of opportunity and moved quickly to lay a secure foundation for continued prosperity and employment. This electronic label was developed at the Fraunhofer Institute for Reliability and Microintegration (IZM) in Munich; the thin, flexible but very robust chip brings electronics to the routine tasks of daily life 27 Starting a business in Munich 28 Everything it takes to launch and grow a successful startup is available in Munich in an abundance and diversity unrivaled anywhere else in the country: excellent business ideas devised by highly qualified and equally highly motivated specialists, leading research institutes and businesses; a network of professional service providers and knowledge resources, such as the Munich Business Plan Competition, the Munich Network (FNT) and the Munich Business Startup Office (MEB); more than 30 venture capital companies; a large number of business angels; 20 incubators and accelertors; and 12 technology and startup centers. Young startups need a creative environment – such as the one at the new center for information technology, planning and construction built for Nemetschek AG on the Konrad-Zuse-Platz in Messestadt Riem; Architect: Ulrike Lauber To Munich with love – insights into the life of a local entrepreneur Munich – the venture capital hub From idea to startup – the Munich Business Plan Competition Business centers and technology centers – successful models in Munich I really don’t know what had gotten into me that day in 1986 when I left home, husband and the romantic village in the picturesque Allgäu region behind me and set off for Munich with my two sons (aged three and four at the time), an old 2 CV, and DM 500 in my pocket. After the boys and I had spent the first couple of weeks in a basement room in Munich’s Moosach district, I was soon able to afford an apartment of my own. Working as a freelance trainer in the computer industry and, later, as an author at the Sybex publishing house, I had no trouble providing for the family. Coming to Munich from a rural setting, the sheer diversity and pulsating rhythm of the city was the most fascinating thing at first. The openness of the locals soon made me forget my home-sickness; and there seemed to be no end of things I could do for my career and in my leisure time. Once I had had my first technical books published I decided to start my own publishing house in 1987. A colleague and friend had written a great tutorial manuscript. My lector at the time claimed to be interested in publishing the book, but first wanted to wait and see how the market developed. Things were moving too slowly for me, so I applied for a trading license from the City of Munich and published the book on my own. 30 Unlike today, it wasn’t fashionable to be self-employed back then – especially not for women in the media industry. There was no venture capital, no advice for startups, and no business plan competition. So, having invested all my hard-earned money in this first book, I was out on a limb: either it sold well or I could shut up shop again right away. I was fortunate: the whole thing ran like clockwork. We succeeded in placing a few good articles in trade journals; and advertisements quickly attracted a lot of orders. People in England and America even expressed an interest. With the help of a friend, who later took over marketing in England and America, the book was trans-lated into English a short time later. That was the first book. The first of many. To Munich with love – insights into the life of a local entrepreneur Gabriele Lechner, Memerof the Managing Board, Camgaroo AG Over the years, my work and leisure activities brought me into contact with lots of interesting people. At one cultural event, I even bumped into the mayor, Christian Ude, who showed a considerable interest and asked a lot of questions about the Internet, which was still in its early days at the time. He spontaneously agreed to give his political backing to the IRC, one of the first public, international Internet conferences, and to make himself available to the growing Internet community for a question-and-answer session. The event, which we initiated and organized, was held in spring 1995 in the Pasinger Fabrik and caused quite a stir in the media. The mayor answered all the questions personally and by hand, typing his comments (laced with his characteristic dry humor) into the computer at an impressive speed, despite the fact that we had placed a secretary at his disposal. Since then, the Lechner publishing house has been transformed into a new media agency. For “new” media (Internet, CD-ROM, video, animation) and “old” media (brochures, ads etc.) alike, we handle everything from conception through design to programming. We serve a number of big-name customers and have made a name for ourselves as a creative and reliable partner. I had been toying with the idea of setting up an Internet portal for some years. I wanted something that would offer information and products to the whole spectrum of video users. Many years’ experience had shown me that there was more than just an information gap here: it is also difficult for users to actually buy the software and hardware they need. The idea wouldn’t go away, so I spoke to some associates and to other members of the board of directors at the Federal Association of Young Entrepreneurs (Bundesverband Junger Unternehmer), to which I had been elected in 1998. The idea was a big hit. Some of them spontaneously expressed an interest both in providing financial backing and in rolling up their sleeves and working on the project. That was when I decided to found a stock corporation. The time was ripe. Startup fever had broken out. Kids who were still at school were suddenly becoming CEOs and didn’t know what to do with all the millions they were making. We soon had a handful of friends together who would invest their money on a private level; one of them was an “old” friend from the publishing industry, Florian Langenscheidt. So we soon fought our way through the first round. After a few teething troubles and a lot of organizational work, we finally knocked Camgaroo AG into shape, complete with Executive Board, Supervisory Board, Articles of Association – the full works. I cautiously looked around for a few venture capitalists. Having spoken at length to one of them (he didn’t want to get on board until shortly before the IPO), I decided to do what I could with the money we already had for the time being. I wanted to stay independent for as long as possible. Since then we have launched a magazine for digital film fans – the Camgaroo magazine. The online community was opened at www.camgaroo.com right on cue for the Munich “Media Days” (Medientage) and is currently undergoing further development. Early next year, the Camgaroo Internet shop will be opening its virtual doors for business. And we will also set about producing digital videos for business, advertising and training purposes. Maybe we will make use of some venture capital next year, when we start moving toward flotation. There are still millions lying around waiting to be invested. It is amazing what has happened in Munich in just a few short years. Programs, services, training courses and competitions have been launched that company founders could only have dreamed of ten years ago. The Munich Business Plan Competition (Münchener Business Plan Wettbewerb, or MBPW), for example, for which I do volunteer “jury service”, gets a large number of startups up and running every year. Bring dedication, a willingness to take risks, creativity and a logical mindset to Munich and you can “move mountains” – even if you speak a different local dialect and happen to be a woman. Munich has become my second home. When I think back over the last 14 years, my life sometimes seems like what you see at the movies. I wish Mr. Wieczorek and the Department of Labour and Economic Development all the very best on their tenth birthday. Keep up the good work! Just one thing: lower the trade tax when you get a chance … 31 32 Munich – the venture capital hub Times have changed – Munich, an internationally respected startup region Falk F. Strascheg, General Partner, Extorel Management- und Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH The days when entrepreneurs and politicians in Munich and Bavaria used to gaze in open-mouthed awe at economic developments “across the pond” are long gone. One thing we have learned in recent years is that economic growth is fueled by innovation. To put it more provocatively: growth is the offspring of annoyance. Young people – and those who are still young at heart – want to do something about the things that annoy them. The want to find a way to stop cell death; invent a new lubricant-free bearing; discover faster algorithms for Internet applications; make more efficient carbon filters for diesel engines; find non-invasive ways to measure blood-sugar. All these ideas stem from scientists, inventors, thinkers and tinkerers who have taken part in the Munich Business Plan Competition (Münchener Business Plan Wettbe-werb, or MBPW) and who wanted to change something – on their own initiative. The ideas bred in the life sciences and I&C technology segments are as fresh and “state-of-the-art” as anything coming out of America; those in the field of mobile communications even have a slight edge. Technology, business ideas and sound management are undoubtedly central to the success of innovative companies. Two other important ingredients are often for-gotten, however. The first is the structure of the location: what resources does it have to support a given industry, and what specialized service providers are available? The second is the whole matter of finance. Venture capital combines both of these components. Venture capital companies are perceived by the public as financial service providers that supply equity capital to innovative young businesses. Few people are aware, however, that the venture capital industry does more than just “throw money” at companies: it also provides essential support in the form of expert advice on business development, and by making its own networks available. It is no coincidence that Munich has both the highest density of venture capital firms in Germany and the largest number of business startups. Saying that a city is a venture capital hub is ambiguous: it could mean that the city is either a major source or a major recipient of VC support. In the case of Munich, both are true. A recent study of how Internet and e-commerce startups in Germany are financed found that 32 percent of all projects are financed by VC backers from Munich. (By comparison, Berlin, Hamburg and Frankfurt each accounted for 11 to 13 percent; no other city made it above 5 percent.) The same study, conducted by the Oestrich Winkel European Business School, also noted that 25 percent of all the firms funded by venture capital are based in Munich (compared to 13 and 12 percent in Berlin and Hamburg respectively, with all other cities again below 5 percent). The German venture capital industry dates back to the early 1980s. From the very beginning, Techno Venture Management (TVM) in Munich established itself as the country’s market leader. Although almost all the VC companies that were active back then have since thrown in the towel, TVM still ranks among the leading venture capital investors in the biotechnology and IT segments to this day. Technologieholding, a company launched in Munich in 1987, did particularly well, growing in just a few years to become Germany’s biggest and (financially) most successful VC company, with satellite offices scattered around Germany. In February 2000, Technologieholding was sold to British-owned 3i, the world’s biggest private equity group. Further new venture capitalists set up shop in Munich in the 1990s, two of which – UCA and Knorr – are now publicly traded. Of the many Munichbased firms in this sector, Wellington and Earlybird are enjoying exceptionally dynamic growth. By no means least, one must not forget the numerous corporate ventures in the Munich area, five of which are operated by Siemens alone. Without such a highly developed venture capital industry, the intensity with which Munich has brought forth innovative new companies would have been inconceivable. By the same token, the city’s VC industry itself could never have grown so strong if it were not for the feisty entrepreneurial spirit of local company founders,the city’s excellent infrastructure, and the all-round attractiveness of Munich as a location. Developments in recent years – backed by Bavarian government programs such as the “High-Tech Offensive” and other innovation-promoting agendas, and spurred on by the City of Munich’s own relocation and startup agendas – bear witness that Munich has recognized the signs of the times. International congresses on growth issues and a massive local base of venture capital have supported these advances. We in the Munich region have learned to apply such innovative ideas profitably within our network of knowledge and capital resources. McKinsey & Company, the Munich Network (FNT), the region’s universities and research establishments and its major corporate players have joined forces to set up a network designed to give backing and support to company founders and entrepreneurs. Its name: the Munich Business Plan Competition (MPBW). The role of the MBPW – from idea to success If they are ever to mature into business models from which their progenitors can live, innovative ideas must be formulated in a way that capital backers can understand. What is so sensational about the MPBW is that capital is freed up merely on the strength of an elucidated idea: a business plan. No more plundering your granny’s savings account! Instead, the personal qualities and expertise of an innovative can-do team can open the door to capital backing – worth millions in some cases – for their plan. Most candidates need help in putting together a business plan. This assistance is provided free of charge at over 50 MPBW events. These events put them in touch with the people who have the know-how they lack: more than 300 coaches, mentors and jurors, and over 50 business angels are on hand to answer questions and provide useful hints to the would-be entrepreneurs. To put candidates under a degree of pressure in formulating their business ideas, certain hurdles have to be surmounted within a fixed time-frame. To help people overcome these obstacles, and to transfer knowledge about starting a business, the MPBW lays on an extensive program of presentations, crash courses and workshops. As an added incentive, prizes totaling DM 155,000 are awarded for the best submissions. The success story – integration in an international network The four Munich Business Plan Competitions held to date have spawned over 110 new companies which today employ nearly 800 people – and will have more than 3000 people on their payrolls by the end of 2001, if all goes according to plan. A gratifying result that has met with international acclaim. Cooperation with other, similar competitions in the USA and Europe gives participants in Munich the ideal opportunity to present a global business model. Capital investors in the USA in particular keep a very careful eye on developments in the Munich region. The sponsors, backers, supporters and everyone involved in the MPBW’s projects have all had a hand in writing this success story. Together, they all contribute to sustaining the Munich region’s position as a model business location. From idea to startup – the Munich Business Plan Competition Werner Arndt, Managing Director, MBPW GmbH 33 34 Business and technology centers – successful models in Munich Karlheinz Reiber, Managing Director, MGH- Münchner Gewerbehof- und Technologiezentrumsgesellschaft mbH, Head of Business Promotion at the Department of Labour and Economic Development Business centers were not invented in Munich: multistory commercial buildings were set up to accommodate small and medium-sized businesses in newly industrialized Berlin as far back as the end of the 19 th century. Yet the idea’s renaissance did begin in the Bavarian capital. Their forerunner was the craftsmen’s park set up on the Friedenstrasse in 1964 by the Chamber of Handicrafts for Munich and Upper Bavaria. Yet business centers only really began to catch on in the early 1980s, when the City of Munich, the Chamber of Industry and Commerce and the Chamber of Handicrafts teamed up to launch MGH (Munich’s business center company) and establish the first series of parks. One milestone was the conversion of the former Metzeler tire factory into the Westend business center, which began in 1982 and today spans some 27,500 m2 of rented space and provides an attractive home to more than 100 firms. As part of the city council’s busi-ness park program, whose aim is to build a comprehensive network of such parks, five have now been completed with a total of some 55,000 m2 of rental space. The Ostbahnhof site is currently in its third phase of development, which will add a further 13,000 m2. And plans for another new business center in Giesing are currently being drawn up. In large cities, space is always in short supply. Business centers use it more efficiently, and also reduce traffic. They serve as a tool to support small and medium-sized enterprises; they contribute to a healthy functional mix and hence to the vibrancy of urban district centers; and they provide business startups with the small rented premises that are otherwise often difficult to come by. It is thus no wonder that Munich’s business center model has become a hot export: many other cities in Germany – especially in the eastern German states – and around Europe are busily following suit. In the first half of the 1980s, the idea behind business centers – gatherings of small businesses under one roof and on attractive terms, to make it easier for companies to work together and share communal facilities – also gave rise to the notion of technology centers. Technology centers have proved a resounding success especially at locations where an appropriate “knowledge environment” exists. The chances of startup and survival for relatively high-risk, innovative new businesses have improved dramatically in these centers. At the same time, technology centers stimulate innovative activity among SMEs in the area of forward-looking technologies, and accelerate the concrete implementation of R&D results furnished by higher education and research establishments. For some years, those centers that have focused on particular industries and niche areas and have “docked” onto knowledge centers (such as universities and the Max Planck and Fraunhofer Institutes) have been especially successful. Even large corporations, venture capital companies and management consultants have now started to set up “business incubators” to enable them to cultivate promising startups directly and benefit from their technological potential and value creation. The Munich Technology Center (Münchner Technologie-zentrum, or MTZ), founded in 1984, was one of Germany’s pioneers in this sector. Today, 10,800 m2 of space on the city’s Frankfurter Ring is available to startup research, development and production firms. A strong focus on information and communication technologies, medical engineering and biotechnology has emerged. The number of people employed by the companies that use the center grows at an average rate of 44 percent every year. The fact that some 40 percent of the total space was re-let in 2000 is a tribute to the dynamic nature of this incubator. It is so successful that the City of Munich has now initialized plans for a completely new technology center as the hub of a new technology park. Another project that has made the world sit up and take notice is the Biotechnology Innovation and Startup Center (Innovations- und Gründerzentrum Biotechnologie, or IZB) in Martinsried, which is funded by the Free State of Bavaria and has already been expanded several times over. Proximity to the university hospital in Grosshadern and to the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry and Neurobiology is undoubtedly a key factor in the success of this enterprise. To provide attractive premises to rapidly expanding biotech firms, Munich is now planning to develop a life sciences park offering a varied assortment of premises at Freiham, west of Martinsried. Right now, the range of higher education and research facilities is also being enlarged and a start-up center for “green” biotechnology set up in Weihenstephan/Freising. As part of Bavaria’s Software Offensive, a further startup center is being set up right next to the computer sciences, mathematics and mechanical engineering faculties for new companies operating in related sectors. The software campus on the Hanauer Strasse has already been helping young entrepreneurs in the IT industry to get their businesses started since summer 2000. Additional technology centers and numerous incubators in and around Munich add the final touches – and all help to ensure that Munich remains one of Europe’s top locations for technology companies and startups. 35 Moving ahead with a modern mix of industries 37 View of the Theatinerkirche from the lobby on the third floor of the “Literature House” on Munich’s Salvatorplatz Munich – melting pot for the IT industry Into a new communication age with the Internet und UMTS “Munich Network“ – the new technologies promotion group – a “one-stop shop” for fast-growing high-tech firms Munich as a biotechnology region Munich – a world-class media location The “Literature House” – old medium, new partnership The media hub – Media Works Munich (MWM) Studies by respected management consultants, business research institutes and journals provide regular confirmation: Munich is the beating heart of Germany’s high-tech industry and one of Europe’s leading regions in other forward-looking growth industries. In both information and communication technologies (I&C) and the life sciences, Munich ranks second in Europe, after London and Cambridge respectively. The Bavarian capital is also the country’s top media location. For over 30 years, Nemetschek AG, Munich, has been delivering standard software, information technology and consulting services to control the integrated process of planning, constructing and using buildings and real estate. More than 160,000 customers the world over work with IT systems from the Nemetschek group. Founded as an engineering consultancy in Munich in 1963, Nemetschek today has 13 international subsidiaries, 41 regional offices and over 400 sales partners in more than 80 countries. The group is present on every continent and was listed on the Neuer Markt of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in 1999. 38 A long-standing company based in the Bavarian capital since its inception 37 years ago, Nemetschek AG has carved out a solid niche as one of the region’s innovative enterprises and most attractive employers: the company posts annual sales of DM 245 million and employs more than 1000 people, 400 of them in Munich. In many ways, Munich is the ideal location for an international player of the likes of Nemetschek. With the rolling foothills of the Bavarian Alps on its doorstep, a stunning array of leisure and cultural facilities and a generally high quality of life, there is no question about the city’s strong attraction for entrepreneurs and employees alike. Yet if that was all, it would not be enough. When I was looking to launch the business, it was the “hard” location factors that convinced me. And the countless IT startups today prove that Munich has lost none of the magnetic pull it exerts on the enterprising and upwardly mobile. One major advantage is that excellent connections by road, rail and air put all Europe’s key business centers – from Moscow to Madrid – within easy reach. That makes it vastly simpler for a corporate HQ to coordinate and integrate its offices and subsidiaries around Europe. Situated at the heart of Europe, Nemetschek AG has grown relentlessly from the very beginning. We initially needed undeveloped commercial land to expand our operations. And even our most recent location decision was a clear statement in favor of Munich: Concentra GmbH is currently erecting a new office building in Munich-Riem for which we will be the tenant. The move will go through before the end of the year. A combination of successful trade shows (such as Systems) and a concentrated media landscape leverage the transfer of knowledge between industry players. Given the dizzying speed of technological progress, staying on the ball has never been as important as it is today. That is why cooperation between research and industry is indispensable to innovation and the development of new products. Here again, Munich need shun no comparison. The Fraunhofer Institute is just one of the organizations whose work in information and communications technology complements that of the higher education establishments. Nemetschek and the Fraunhofer Institute are currently collaborating on a research project entitled “The Multimedia Workplace of the Future”. The aim is to develop a communication infrastructure based on which intelligent “wizards” and delegation systems will be able to operate. The project is structured in a way that very quickly produces results which can then be further developed as spin-off products – an excellent example of Munich’s healthy symbiosis between foundational research and hands-on product development. Another important by-product of this impressive research landscape is that the universities and other higher education establishments train up urgently needed young talent. The IT industry in particular benefits from the above-average level of employee qualification in Munich: 10.7 percent of Munich’s active population are university graduates; 5.5 percent graduated from other institutes of higher education. Quite apart from which, Munich is known to be a melting pot for the computer industry. More than 155,000 people in the region earn their living in the I&C industry. Munich thus also offers ideal conditions for recruiting new staff. Munich – melting pot for the IT industry Prof. Georg Nemetschek, Founder and Member of the Managing Board, Nemetschek AG Whether or not Bavaria becomes a new “Silicon Valley” depends to some extent on the political arena. The Bavarian state government, which we engage in a permanent and constructive dialogue, is doing everything within its power. The same goes for the City of Munich – above all in the form of the Department of Labour and Economic Development and in the person of Councilor Christiane Thalgott of the Urban Planning and Construction Department. All our points of contact in local and regional government have proven to be flexible, professional, and able to act quickly. Moreover, with over 30 VC companies, Munich stands out as Germany’s number one source of venture capital. Most of these companies are active investors in the information and communications technology industries. The indicators are all pointing up; so there is no time to waste. A new dimension in design: the D-board, a digital drawing board developed by Nemetschek AG 39 How times change! Already, we are caught up headlong in the age of information and communication. Today, around 30 percent of German households have PCs. Everyday life would be inconceivable without mobile phones. And the rise of the Internet is palpably changing the society in which we live. The Internet has emerged as a crucial factor of competition for firms of all shapes and sizes. The trend in user growth worldwide – 200 million or so people were already on the ’Net in 1999, while 2.9 million German (.de) domains were registered by August 2000 – speaks for itself. Technical possibilities are racing ahead of the market. E-commerce will establish the Internet as a key factor of business, and will radically change value chains as we know them. Back in 1990, the 64 kbps bandwidth offered by T-ISDN was the non plus ultra in data transfer for private households. Now, T-ISDN and T-DSL together provide access to bandwidths of up to 768 kbps and more. Existing users of T-ISDN will already appreciate the convenience afforded: the integration of telecoms services out of the wall; and the easy combination of phone and fax services. This creates the ideal complement to existing services and enables high volumes of data to be transferred through broadband pipes. T-ISDN and T-DSL constitute a brand new “dynamic duo” that can be mixed and matched to implement made-to-measure telecoms solutions, to bridge the “last mile” at low cost, and to give business users access to innovative data communication solutions such as T-Net-ATM and T-InterConnect. Mobile communication has become a regular feature of everyday life. Some 18 million people currently use T-Mobil’s digital T-D1 network – not just for phone calls, but increasingly also for mobile data transfer. Mobile WAP services were launched about a year ago, providing direct access from WAP mobile phones to suitably edited Internet sites: the information available via this channel currently ranges from the latest global news to hints about restaurants and events in the user’s immediate vicinity. Short messages (SMS) have also rocketed to popularity in recent years. The figure of some 300 million short messages per month handled by our network at the end of last year has already doubled to around 600 million. Deutsche Telekom was quick to prepare the ground for the convergence of mobile communications with the Internet. Last summer, our General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) introduced a mobile network technology that supports 40 kpbs mobile data transfer rates over mobile phones – approaching ISDN levels. Soon UMTS will usher in the third generation of mobile communications: this new technology will permit mobile data transfer rates of up to 2 Mbps, bringing the dream of “mobile multimedia” into breathtaking reality. The Telekom group is one of Germany’s biggest employers, with a 207,000-strong workforce, of whom some 5200 are based in Munich. Together with its subsidiaries and affiliates, Deutsche Telekom is today positioned as a high-tech telecoms corporation whose products and services lead the field in many different areas. In Munich’s IT metropolis alone, Deutsche Telekom provides cutting-edge telecommunications services to more than a million retail customers, 57,000 SMEs, and around 2800 large corporate customers – the likes of BMW, Allianz, Microsoft, Siemens, and the New Munich Exhibition Center (Neue Messe München). DSL, the broadband communication infrastructure for the next generation, offers a completely new Internet experience: ultra-fast speeds for all applications, from surfing to complex multimedia – – Into a new communication age with the Internet and UMTS Dr. Eberhard Beck, Head of the Munich office of Deutsche Telekom AG – – “No, sir. The Americans need the telephone, perhaps, but not us. We have plenty express couriers.” Sir William Preece, Chief Engineer at the Royal Mail, speaking to Alexander Graham Bell in 1896. “I am convinced that there will be no demand for more than five computers worldwide.” Thomas J. Watson, President of IBM, 1943. “There is no reason why anyone would ever want to have a computer at home.” Ken Olsen, Founder and President of Digital Equipment, 1977. “No-one will ever need more than 640 kilobytes!” Bill Gates, CEO of Microsoft, 1981. At the same time, Munich is a permanent major building site as far as Telekom is concerned. 8500 square meters of technology premises on the Marsstrasse are currently being converted to ultra-modern office space, where employees of the group’s technology office will be located in future. In addition, work on a “Telekom Center Munich” in the Dingolfingerstrasse is scheduled to begin in spring 2001. This new center will be one of the biggest construction projects within the city’s central ring-road (Mittlerer Ring) and will accommodate some 2500 stateof-the-art jobs for service and sales staff. Both building projects are designed to further optimize customer care in the Munich area. 41 The Munich Network (formerly the New Technologies Promotion Group, or “FNT”) is the top address for innovative, growth-oriented entrepreneurs and startups in the Munich region. The journal “Tornado Insider” put it very succinctly in August 1999: “The Munich Network is almost a one-stop shop for the advice entrepreneurs need at all stages of growing a new high-tech business.” The Munich Network seeks to help fast-growing technology companies – especially in the areas of information and communication (I&C) and life sciences – along the road from business idea to market success. It also aims to establish the Munich area as Europe’s leading center of entrepreneurship. To this end, the Munich Network has launched a high-caliber “entrepreneur network” which brings together founders and entrepreneurs, investors and consultants in an informal setting. Major corporations (such as BMW, Microsoft and Siemens), innovative medium-sized companies (such as IXOS and SCM Microsystems), successful startups, leading venture capitalists, investment bankers, consultants, universities and research institutes all rub shoulders within this network. The Munich Network is always willing to provide advice or useful contacts on specific issues relating to company planning, finance and growth. 42 Special emphasis is placed on personal networking, which has become the Munich Network’s hallmark. The Munich Network forums are a classic example. Held several times a year, these events attract around 250 participants on average and have become one of the highlights of the startup scene. The forums aim to motivate people by exposing them to successful role models. Entrepreneurs are invited to present their success stories, and subject specialists address the gatherings on issues of strategic relevance (such as share offerings, stock options, mergers and acquisitions, corporate venture, global expansion, and so on). International networking opportunities are afforded by the annual Munich Network congress, which is attended by well over 600 delegates from all around the globe. The 1998 congress looked at “marketplaces for growth companies”; 1999 focused on “international business angel networks”; and the theme in 2000 was “making professional entrepreneurs”. Since May 2000, the Munich Network has also been organizing VentureCity, a monthly get-together for business founders and investors. These meetings give young entrepreneurs a chance to make initial contact with capital backers in a relaxed atmosphere. Between 500 and 650 visitors attend the VentureCity events: over half are startup entrepreneurs, and around a third are venture capitalists and business angels. Alongside information and contact events, the Munich Network has also set up another three events and institutions whose specific mission is to help new business startups and young entrepreneurs. The Munich Business Plan Competition (MBPW): The Munich Network has been holding the Munich Business Plan Competition every year since 1997 (a task delegated to Munich Network subsidiary MPBW GmbH as of 1998). This is both the biggest and the most successful regional competition. Teams that have taken part in the competitions to date have already set up now fewer than 103 companies. “Munich Network”– the new technologies promotion group – a “one-stop shop” for fast-growing high-tech firms Eberhard Färber, former Managing Director, Munich Network The Munich Entrepreneurial Academy: Since November 1997, the Munich Entrepreneurial Academy has been communicating a broad spectrum of relevant knowledge – such as starting and financing a company, drawing up a professional business plan, successful marketing, focused market analysis, selecting, managing and motivating employees, and employee participation schemes – in the context of practical workshops. Besides the benefit of this training, many of those who have attended the academy have gone on to find venture capital investors and business partners. The Munich Business Angel Network: In May 1999, the Munich Business Angel Network started out as a regional forum of successful and experienced entrepreneurs who wanted to offer capital, experience, contacts and personal commitment to support promising startups. By October 2000, the network had already invested over eight million marks in a total of twelve separate projects – making the Munich Business Angel Network the most successful regional network of its kind in Germany. The work of the Munich Network has played a major part in elevating the Munich area to the status of one the leading high-tech and entrepreneurship centers both in Germany and in the international arena. In Germany, the Munich region is the undisputed number one. In international comparison, it holds equal rank with Tel Aviv right behind the two leaders, Silicon Valley and the Boston area (according to a study by the Boston Consulting Group). The initiators and proponents of the Munich Network are in no doubt that Munich will continue to consolidate and expand its leading position in Europe. The Munich Network is and remains fully committed to the goal of encouraging more and more young people to take the plunge and unfold their entrepreneurial prowess. 43 1973 is generally regarded as the year in which biotechnology was born. Back then, the American scientists Stanley Cohen and Herbert Boyer first succeeded in cloning genetically engineered DNA molecules in foreign cells. Since then, biotechnology has blossomed into a forward-looking, multibillion-dollar industry. The (German) Association of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers in Research estimates that, by 2015, some 42 percent of all drugs will be produced with the aid of genetic engineering techniques. In 1999, Germany alone registered 176 patent applications for biotechnology-related pharmaceuticals. 44 The Munich region ranks among the foremost biotechnology research and development locations in Germany, perhaps even in Europe. It is currently home to over 120 pharmaceuticals and biotech firms. Over 100 of these are small to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs); and of these, more than three-quarters were either launched or moved to Munich in the “startup boom” from 1997 to 2000. Developments on the labor market in recent years far outweigh the mere number of companies, however. Munich’s biotech SMEs today employ in excess of 2000 people – compared with the 300 or so who worked in this line in the city prior to 1997. Munich’s focus as a biotechnology region is squarely on research and development into medication and diagnostic agents – the segment known as “red (or medical) biotechnology”. Munich’s dynamic development as a biotechnology region in recent years is by no means least the product of a uniquely conducive climate: two universities, two university hospitals, two other institutes of higher learning, an environmental and healthcare research company (Gesellschaft für Umwelt und Gesundheit), and three Max Planck Institutes with a strong bias toward biology all give the region vast pool of scientific knowledge. This in turn lays the foundation on which biotechnology research can be applied by businesses at the sharp end of the market. The large number of venture capital companies based in Munich and the funding options made available by the Free State of Bavaria further simplify the task of launching new firms. More than 45 biotech companies in the region are partly financed by venture capital. Lastly, a series of technology transfer hubs – such as Garching Innovation, Innovative Technologies Neuherberg, transfer centers rooted in higher education, and BioM AG – help ensure that innovative ideas are implemented swiftly and smoothly. BioM AG was founded in 1997 with a mission to coordinate scientific, business and political aspects, to promote Munich as a biotech location, and to support companies during the startup phase. One of BioM’s initial tasks was to coordinate the allocation of public funding within the framework of the federal government-backed BioRegio competition. Without doubt, this competition was also instrumental in establishing Munich as a biotech region: the Bavarian capital was one of the three winning regions in Germany. Munich as a biotechnology region Prof. Horst Domdey, Member of the Managing Board, BioM AG Since then, a total of around DM 50 million in public funding has been injected into nascent biotech firms. The focus of BioM’s activities has today shifted to facilitating the growth of networks. Press and PR work on behalf of the location plays a central role here. Involvement in trade shows and the staging of information events for the biotech companies themselves are likewise part of the BioM AG portfolio. Teamwork is a key to every successful startup BioM AG assists would-be research startups by providing initial advice free of charge, passing on contacts to the business and scientific communities, helping with the search for laboratory and office space, and providing what is known as “seed financing”. These funds are made available from the proceeds of the sale of shares in BioM. Aided by the money invested by BioM AG, young companies are then able to raise additional capital in the form of dormant equity holdings from tbg, a technology holding company, and Bayern-Kapital. The future doubtless holds many further challenges for Munich as a biotech region. New research and development ideas must be identified. What is now needed is for the location to achieve a “critical mass” that will enable it to remain competitive at national and international level. This in turn will demand more extensive networking and even better knowledge transfer between established firms and startups. Closer cooperation between companies is also a must in the interests of consolidating the industry. And, of course, corporate expansion will fuel huge new demand for space and suitably qualified people. The whole issue of “infrastructure” ill thus take on new significance for Munich’s young biotech companies. The ground must be staked out as early as possible to ensure that the industry can continue to grow and remain competitive. The Biotechnology Innovation and Startup Center (IZB) in Martinsried provides 7500 m2 of space for fledgling companies – and an ideal setting for them to realize their business ideas 45 We are living in exciting times. The entire panorama of media and communication industries has witnessed explosive growth in recent decades. Within a short space of time, society has undergone a series of developments that are unparalleled in world history. From print to radio to TV and, since the early 1990s, on to the digital revolution. Spearheading this advance is the Internet, which has opened up completely new ways of communicating and sharing knowledge. 46 The media are a major driving force behind the new knowledge society. The 45 million or so computers hooked up to the Internet around the world already shovel the equivalent of the entire intellectual output of the 19th century back and forth every day. Yet the importance of the media does not end there: they are equally a powerful engine of economic growth. Some 700,000 people in Germany are today employed in the new media industry; and even this figure is expected to leap to 1.1 million by 2002. New businesses are popping up like mushrooms all over the place. The entrepreneurial spirit is enjoying a veritable renaissance. Munich – a world-class media location Dr. Hubert Burda, Chief Executive Officer, Hubert Burda Media Holding In light of all these developments, countries, regions and individual cities are pulling out all the stops to attract the productive and creative forces that empower this new economy. In the new media landscape that is emerging, Munich has staked its claim with notable success. A study by the Boston Consulting Group cites the Bavarian capital as the world’s number four for Internet and information technologies. Compared with the rest of Germany, Munich easily leads the field in both old media and new. In the age of bits and bytes, soft location factors are rising to new prominence. The main emphasis has shifted from machinery and equipment to people and the attractiveness of the location. Munich’s recipe for success is its unique blend of all the right ingredients: “hardware” in the shape of large companies; plenty of startups; what are known as “centers of excellence” for training and re-search; the natural beauty of the regon; and, of course, the whole field of entertainment. The latter aspect is of particular importance to young people coming from abroad. No festival in the world is as famous as the “Oktoberfest”. Young people want to find a fun location where they can enjoy life and live and work to their own rhythm. More flexible shop opening times, for instance, are of considerable significance in this context. And the unique flair of facilities such as the Loden-Frey park and the Kunstpark Ost needs to be there in abundance. Hubert Burda Media, a company with 4500 people on its payroll, is proud to be present in Munich. The city is home to more than “just” a series of leading print media, including “Focus”, “Freundin” and “Das Haus”: more and more Internet firms such as Focus Digital, in which Hubert Burda Media holds an interest, are throwing down their roots in Munich. Hubert Burda Media is further committed to a wide array of initiatives (the LMU university council, the Internet advisory council, the MIT agency for media and information technology – now operating under the name gotoBavaria) that benefit both the city and the region. Hubert Burda Media is thus playing an important part in maintaining and adding to the attraction of Munich as a media location. These days, speed is everything. “Be fast or be last,” is a fitting epithet. Munich has indeed got off to a flying start. Yet the city on the Isar can ill afford to rest on its laurels: the competition – both national and international – never sleeps. We need to take a leaf out of the global leaders’ book. Silicon Valley, Boston and Tel Aviv must serve as our benchmark. What really sets these regions apart is their ability to network quickly. If we, too, succeed in bundling all our energies intelligently, if business, politics and the universities can work closely together, closing ranks to rise to the major challenges of the day, there will be no stopping Munich’s onward march to still greater success. Permanent innovation is the key: new technologies and new media formats offer users a wider choice and greater diversity 47 Both the concept behind Munich’s Literature House (Literaturhaus) and the way it has been realized present an impressive calling card for public-private partnerships. When the chance arose to convert the former Salvator school into a literature house, the first question was that of cost and financing. The listed building dates back to 1886, but had suffered severe war damage and was thus badly in need of repair. The first two points on the agenda were therefore the need to restore and convert the building, and the need to find the money to do so. DM 20 million was the sum ultimately needed. 48 View of the Literature House on the Salvatorplatz; Architect: Prof. Uwe Kiessler and Partner; in the background: the Theatinerkirche A quote from Oskar Maria Graf is engraved in this stone table at the Literature House; Artistic concept: Jenny Holzer A small group of dedicated Munich publishers and book vendors got together to form an initiative and broached the subject with the mayor and the members of the city council. It was also necessary to enlist sponsors both in the industry and beyond. Finally, a concept for a publicprivate partnership was crafted that would take the form of a joint foundation backed by the City of Munich and a group of private donors. Munich contributed a free 50-year leasehold and funds of around DM 12 million. Private donors and sponsors put up the remaining DM 8 million. Ongoing program and project work is financed along similar lines by a mix of public subsidies, private sponsorship funding and revenues taken. The joint Literature House project was born of the conviction that electronic media alone are not the source of all knowledge and education, but that literacy and the ability to express oneself are the bedrock of all media skills. This is the only way to tap into the raw material of knowledge. Ultimately, information and media can only be handled intelligently if one is able to absorb it and structure it selectively. Literacy is thus the very cornerstone, the sine qua non of the media world. Seen from this angle, literature houses that serve as central, public places of literary discourse take on a singular social significance and occupy an important place in the media society of the future. Since it was opened in summer 1997, the Munich Literature House has become a melting pot for critical and creative responses to the issues of the day. It makes an important contribution to the literary life of the city. If you like, it makes a clear statement that TV and the Internet are rooted in literature and literacy – that both stand on the shoulders of Gutenberg. The “Literature House” – old medium, new partnership Dr. Ulrich Wechsler, President of the Stiftung Buch-, Medien- und Literaturhaus, Munich In just two short years, Rosenheimer Strasse 145 (just behind the city’s Ostbahnhof) has been transformed into Munich’s biggest media campus: Media Works Munich, or “MWM” for short. Having so many media enterprises at such close quarters inevitably generates synergies and mutual stimulus between tenants, many of whom cooperate officially and even give work to each other. The previous tenant, the textile firm Konen, moved out in 1996, leaving around 40,000 m2 of empty space. So the owner of the property, IVG, began looking for a way to continue using the now-vacant production and factory buildings on into the future. In close collaboration with the City of Munich, an idea grew and took shape: to take the facilities of the former textile plant – designed in the “loft” style of the 1930s – and rent it to creative minds in the media industry. In other words, to reinvent the location as a media center. It is also fascinating to see what the various tenants have done with their premises. Rempen & Partner, an advertising agency, has created a vivid “red world” (red is the color of the firm’s logo), while TV production company H5B5 has conjured up a Mediterranean flair with an exotic blend of sunlight yellow, sienna, and lush greenery. Since last summer, the generously dimensioned inner courtyard has boasted a fountain as the focal point of the entire complex. 50 The point of departure was the idea of preserving the original character of the premises, effectively providing a kind of high-quality shell which tenants could then redesign to suit their own requirements. This concept made it possible to let the premises at extremely attractive rates. Bright and beautiful: the premises of TV production firm H5B5 Media AG at the media competence center Media Works Munich The media hub – Media Works Munich (MWM) Otto Link, Head of the Munich office of IVG Immobilien GmbH The idea met with considerable enthusiasm. Well-known media firms such as ProSieben subsidiary H5B5, the Düsseldorf-based top 30 agency Rempen & Partner, the radio program service provider BLR Radio Dienst, and any number of startup media companies all moved into the MWM. Equally important, the location also offers a concentration of media training and development facilities that is probably unrivaled anywhere in Germany. Examples include the Bavarian Press Academy (Akademie der Bayerischen Presse e.V.), the German Acting Academy (Deutsche Schauspieler Akademie), the Catholic Media Academy (Katholische Medienakademie), and the training and development channel AFK. Since its launch, the MWM has also made a name for itself among international media companies. Eurosport and the British publishing house Future Publishing recently signed agreements to move into the premises. The former textile factory is now fully let. Owing to sustained heavy demand, a new “Media Bridge” building of around 20,000 m2 is to be erected on the same site. Completion is slated for 2003. At Media Works Munich, each company is completely free to do its own thing: “red” and “open” are important words in the vocabulary of the Rempen & Partner advertising agency 51 52 Come to Munich and you come to a comprehensive compendium of culture … The world-famous Kammerspiele, the Residenz Theater, the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, the Bavarian Radio Orchestra, the National Theater and the Deutsches Theater, the old and new “Pinakotheken” (soon to be complemented by a third) and a kaleidoscope of no less outstanding art galleries, the Deutsches Museum, the Gasteig cultural center and the Literature House, Kunstpark Ost and Tollwood, the Feierwerk and Alabama halls, cabarets and discos, the Munich Film Festival and Film Museum, a plethora of beer gardens, the Englischer Garten, the Alps and their foothills, the lakes, the Munich Marathon, the cycle tours … Is there no end to the list? Strong on soft location factors The opera cult Welcome to “Museumsville”! Kunstpark Ost, Kunstpark Nord – the really cool places to be in Munich The Munich Olympic Park – the gift of the century has a future in the new millennium 53 The Muffat Hall – once part of a power station – is today much in demand as a venue for multicultural events; the exciting tension between aging industrial architecture and all the trappings of a modern meeting place create a unique vibrancy 54 The opera cult Sir Peter Jonas, Director of the Bavarian State Opera Vincenzo Bellini’s “I Puritani”, directed by Jonathan Miller; premiere performance: May 26, 2000, at the National Theater in Munich The history of the Bavarian State Opera begins in the year 1653. Back then, Munich had the first free-standing opera house in Germany. Since then, the “Staatsoper” has become a veritable institution in the life of the city. Among the first of the ensemble’s permanent homes was the Cuvilliés Theater, opened in 1753. Mozart’s Idomeneo premiered here in 1781. In 1818, the opera ensemble moved into new quarters at the newly built National Theater on the Max-Joseph-Platz. The Wittelsbach family’s decision to build this 2100-seat theater evidenced a visionary prowess of the kind one would perhaps associate with a Bill Gates today. When the National Theater opened its doors, Munich had a population of just 54,000. Statistically, that meant that four percent of the local inhabitants attended the theater each evening. Scaled up to today’s ratios, that was the equivalent of 50,000 visitors a day. And that was just the opera-goers! Since those days, what was once the preserve of monarchs and their royal courts has, happily, been demo-cratized. The National Theater in Munich, a central hub of European music at least since the time of Richard Wagner, is a prime example of how opera houses can add to a city’s stature. The building itself is a powerful argument for opera as an artistic form. It is no exaggeration to say that the Bavarian State Opera furnishes a useful and esthetic example of why society should invest in an opera ensemble (what we call “state subsidies” in the current vernacular). The legal entity behind the Bavarian State Opera supports us in our mission, which is not to be a provider of entertainment or diversion, but to act as an accessible form of social conscience on the very highest artistic level and with an absolute commitment to artistic integrity, yet at the same time subject to sound principles of professional business management. When our critics wryly observe how well-off we are, given that Munich is, financially, such an “isle of the blessed”, our retort is that the island is made of rubber: we have to blow it up ourselves. It is true: we receive state funding that is generous indeed. It is equally true, however, that no opera house in Germany generates revenues of the same magnitude or offers a comparable program, guaranteeing at least one performance every day – the majority of which play to a full house. We are privileged to welcome nearly 600,000 visitors a year – more than the two big Berlin opera houses put together, and with greater ticket revenues. Yet we are not the only cultural institution in Munich to turn in such an impressive performance. Art and culture are very important aspects of life in Munich: listen to a debate on promoting the arts anywhere in the world, and you are more than likely to hear positive references to Munich. When it comes to the arts, Munich is far less conservative than its reputation. It is the world’s secondlargest book publishing venue. Its assortment of museums ranks fifth in the world. It offers a wider variety of high-quality musical events than any other city apart from London. How many other cities can boast three top orchestras, all headed by prominent conductors – and not just since Trias Mehta, Maazel and Levine have been in command? The only thing I could still wish for is that Munich would bundle its cultural energies more efficiently – its private, local and regional energies – to foster an image even more in keeping with its significance and wealth of potential. Paris, London, Vienna, even Berlin … All the world knows that these are cultural centers par excellence. But do they know that the same is true of Munich? 55 Georg Friedrich Händel’s “Rinaldo”, directed by David Alden; premiere performance at the Munich Opera Festival 2000 in the Prinzregenten Theater 56 There can be few cities besides Munich that have a comparable density of museums covering such widely varying themes and yet with such consistently high quality. Each of Munich’s collections has its own distinctive character: each museum accommodates its own unique kaleidoscope of perspectives. The most fascinating thing, however, is how such a network of museums has been woven together throughout the fabric of the city. Munich’s museums of art, for instance, are not ostracized on an island or packed together under one roof (as they are, say, in Berlin or Paris). Instead, despite their relative geographic proximity, each maintains a respectful distance toward all the others within an area that is also home to two universities and an assortment of related institutions. Having so many variegated areas of know-ledge – research and education, art collections and exhibitions – together at such close quarters gives Munich a very special flavor. The Modernist Pinakothek will soon add another important link to the city’s artistic chain. The greatness and quality of exhibits and the sheer breadth of coverage offered by Munich’s museums is nevertheless neatly and charmingly packaged into manageable dimensions at the different venues. Munich offers a tremendous opportunity to weave a vibrant, living web of cultural institutions where the humanities rub shoulders with the sciences and each discipline cross-pollinates all the others. Munich has a tightly meshed network of cultural facilities that provide a safe haven, an effective and much-needed counterweight to the business – and “busy-ness” – of this thriving metropolis. The beauty of Munich is that, whichever museum you choose to visit, you will always find superlative quality on every side. Glyptothek – the Achaeans: the east and west gables of the Doric Temple of Athena on the island of Achaia, depicting a scene from the Achaeans’ advance on Troy Lighting by Dan Flavin to mark the opening of the “Lenbachhaus” art center above the Königsplatz subway station Architect: Prof. Uwe Kiessler and Partner Welcome to “Museumsville”! Prof. Helmut Friedel, Director of the Municipal Art Gallery in the Lenbachhaus Munich 2001: A tiny provincial nest surrounding the ramshackle residence of some second-rate monarch. The streetlights go out at nine because the locals are all long since tucked up in their beds. The town is enfolded in contemplative tranquility … save for the odd artist, actor or cultural editor gazing wistfully into the night, muttering “Oh, Berlin” and yearning for a city that is still awake and alive even at this ungodly hour ... That, at least, is the impression you get if you read some of the trendy magazines which, eleven years after the fall of the Wall, still occasionally feel constrained to lament the tragic fate that has befallen Munich since Berlin again took over as the nation’s capital. Artistic license has evidently been allowed to run riot: the reality could not be more different. The question one ought to be asking is not “Where do you go to dive into Munich’s nightlife?”, but “Is Munich’s nightlife damaging the local economy?” Take a stroll around the Kunstpark Ost near Munich’s Ostbahnhof of a Thursday night, for example, and you might be tempted to wonder what all these thousands of young people are going to look like at the office the following morning – or later the same morning. Will they still be able to lift a pencil, let alone engage in more strenuous physical or mental activities? Here in the Kunstpark, the bar is packed out until the early hours when “normal” people are donning their ties and trotting off to work. People throng to the 30 or 35 clubs, halls and bars (you never know the exact number at any given time) to have fun, go to rock concerts, dance at techno discos until their knees give way – or just prop up some trendy bar, downing unheard-of cocktails until the world gradually seems to fade from view … Its operators are proud to inform you that the Kunstpark Ost is Europe’s biggest amusement center: if you can’t find something to your liking here, someone has probably switched your life-support system off. 58 Four in the morning at the “night canteen” in the Kunstpark Ost Fortunately, that is not the case for most people. Which is why culture and leisure are such a natural part of what are often referred to as a location’s “soft” factors. Soft factors are of relevance to those people who are so much in demand that they can choose where in the country they want to work; people who are picky about where and how they live, and what they can do in their free time. Another reason why Munich is such a desirable business location: most big companies have long since discovered that they have to offer their staff more than just a job – even at the risk of having to follow the “afterwork parties” (starting at six) that several Munich discos have introduced with “instead-of-work parties” that go on all day and all night. And it is not as if Munich only had the Kunstpark Ost. Looking for an alternative? Try the Feierwerk, die Alabama Hall, the Zenith, the Muffat Hall, Club 2, the Einstein, or any number of smaller clubs, discos and watering-holes that host Munich’s “in” culture. Or you could do an about-face and go for something decidedly more haute culture: from the National Theater to a range of smaller playhouses, not to mention the galleries and concert halls in the Gasteig and the Residenz … Even people who have devoted considerable energies to exploring the local culture never cease to be amazed that, despite such an apparent surfeit of offerings, you still (as often as not) have to queue for hours to get tickets to even the most off-the-wall avant garde festival. Rumors of Munich’s cultural demise would, therefore, appear to be greatly exaggerated. The only people who still complain are the ones who haven’t been here for years. Incidentally, the city fathers recently decided that a new “Kunstpark Nord” was also to be set up out in Freimann. Fortunately for the local economy and its leisure-weary workforce, however, the newcomer will only be opening for business (read: pleasure) when the Kunstpark Ost has to close down. A good thing, too! After all, when it comes to “soft” location factors, we really ought to give Berlin a fair chance! Everyone wants to be in on the Feierwerk summer festival 59 Kunstpark Ost, Kunstpark Nord – the really cool places to be in Munich Franz Kotteder, Editor-in-chief, Munich Culture/SZ Extra Stage diving at the free & easy festival at “Backstage” on the Donnersberger Brücke When the Olympic sports facilities were handed over to Olympiapark München GmbH in early October 1972, no-one knew exactly what would become of this extraordinary park, whose architecture has remained so strikingly idiosyncratic to this day. The last few niggling doubts have nevertheless long since bowed to one incontrovertible fact: the Olympic Park was the gift of the century to the Bavarian capital. This statement is true on many levels. The park not only numbers among the world’s leading sports and leisure centers, with a worldclass spectrum of sporting, cultural and commercial events, as well as presenting an exceptionally diverse program for countless thousands of amateur sports fans and tourists alike. In the course of its 28-year history, the Olympic Park has also emerged as an important factor in the local economy. 60 The Munich Olympic Park – the gift of the century has a future in the new millennium Wilfrid Spronk, Managing Director, Olympiapark München GmbH There are many reasons for the park’s lasting success. One is that, from the word go, a whole lot of creative ideas and commitment went into filling the facility with life and vitality even after the end of the Olympic Games. To date, the park has registered 134.6 million visitors at 7500 events and in its assorted recreational facilities. Yet, the sheer number of events and the extent to which the facilities are used are only one side of the coin: the other is the business aspect. Here again, however, astute planning and proactive management have consistently contributed to a positive bottom line. In 1999 alone, the company posted a robust operating result on sales revenues of DM 48 million. And this figure does not include the revenues generated if one also counts the sales netted by event organizers and resident firms: the actual sum total is likely to be between eight and ten times higher. Should all these interim goals be achieved, it would theoretically be possible for Munich to set its sights higher still and apply for the Olympic Games for a second time after 2010. This would have to be an application for the Winter Games. But even that would be a historic success, were it to come about: no city has ever hosted both the Summer and the Winter Olympics. IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch himself once said he was proud of Munich, which, in his view, had made the best post-Olympic use of its facilities of all previous host venues. A view which confirms a journalist’s claim that the 1972 Olympic Games and the Munich Olympic Park were indeed the “gift of the century” to the Bavarian capital. 61 Four examples illustrate the business importance of the Olympic Park for the City of Munich. Studies conducted by the University of Hamburg found that every person who visits a soccer match at the Olympic Stadium also spends at least DM 50 in the city, over and above the price of their ticket. Given that the stadium attracts between 1.8 million and nearly 2 million spectators every year, that amounts to a tidy sum. Another example is the 1997 Champions League Final between Borussia Dortmund and Juventus Turin: this one event alone was the cause of an exceptional high volume of arrivals and departures – 931 flights in all – at Munich Airport on the day of the match. Again, the “Three Tenors” concert with Luciano Pavarotti, Plácido Domingo and José Carreras in 1996 yielded handsome rewards for the city’s shopkeepers and hoteliers in particular. Finally, the Compaq Grand Slam Cup was held in the Olympic Hall every year from 1990 through 1999. Especially for Munich’s restaurant and hotel industries, the event was a major money-spinner in the run-up to Christmas each year. This became acutely apparent in 1997, when the dates of the tournament were shifted to coincide with the Oktoberfest – causing revenues to drop noticeably in December. Besides serving as a venue for major events, the Olympic Park in Munich also fulfils two other important social functions: as a center for mass and recreational sporting activities; and as a tourist venue. A range of fun sports, recreational pursuits and tour programs (taking in the Olympic swimming pool, the ice rink and the visitor service) have often been put on here and are now emulated by other municipal operations, often in collaboration with the Olympic Park. Talk about sports in Munich and you simply cannot avoid the subject of the Olympic Park. This success did not just happen, however. Above all now, as the competition from major sports arenas in Germany and abroad becomes ever fiercer, the park cannot afford to rest on its laurels. A whole series of structural and technical changes will need to be made if the facility is to be able to com-pete with rival venues for major events such as the European Athletics Championships and the World Cup Soccer tournaments scheduled for 2002 and 2006 respectively in Munich. The need to convert the Olympic Stadium – the first demand asserted by the Munich Olympic Park– naturally takes top priority. In the long term, however, there is also no alternative to a thorough overhaul of the Olympic Hall. Venus Williams in action; the Ladies’ Masters tournament will be held in Munich from 2001 Panoramic view of the Olympic Park; Architects: Behnisch and Partner; Landscsaping: Prof. Dr. Günther Grzimek Theresienhöhe – a choice cut in the heart of Munich A new face in Schwabing 62 Facade of the “Fünf Höfe” (“Five Courts“) on the Theatinerstrasse, the redesigned headquarters of HypoVereinsbank Architects: Herzog and De Meuron Munich has the lowest vacancy rate for commercial property anywhere in Europe. For years, the city has consistently been hitting new peaks in the letting of office premises. A million or so square meters of office space was re-let in 2000 alone. Each year, 5000 new dwellings are completed. All of which puts Munich top of the league of German cities. Ambitious projects for a very broad and diverse array of uses are currently in planning, under construction or nearing completion. A small selection includes Messestadt Riem (16,000 residents, 13,000 jobs); the Central StationLaim-Pasing development axis (17,000 residents, 11,000 jobs); Parkstadt Schwabing (1500 dwellings, 11,000 jobs); the “Fünf Höfe” urban district (35,000 m2 of office space, 30 shops and restaurants); and Mercedes City (77,000 m2 of net space). Munich’s booming property market 63 Theresienhöhe – a choice cut in the heart of Munich Dr. Lutz Mellinger, Member of the Board, Corporate and Investment Banking Division, Deutsche Bank AG The city’s dynamic economic growth, the robust health of the local property market, with very low vacancy rates and rising rents, and above all the superb location in the heart of Munich – these were the considerations that clinched the decision by Deutsche GrundbesitzInvestmentgesellschaft mbH (DGI), a subsidiary of the Deutsche Bank group, to acquire a 28,000 m2 plot of land on the Theresienhöhe off the City of Munich for its open “grundbesitz-invest” fund in September 1999. The site of the former exhibition center is now being transformed into an attractive new 45-hectare urban district comprising office space, cultural facilities, apartments, shops, and open spaces. The spacious Bavaria Park will also be opened to the public. And, as an added bonus, the district will be relieved of the burden of traffic to and from the exhibition grounds. All in all, the Theresienhöhe therefore presents a tremendous urban development opportunity – both to the Westend district adjacent to the city center and for investors. 64 The size and pre-eminent location of the DGI site – at what used to be the main entrance to the exhibition grounds – makes it one of the most outstanding elements of the overall project to develop the Theresienhöhe. In close and uniquely constructive cooperation with the City of Munich, the DGI organized an ideas and implementation competition, inviting the participation of eight respected architects from Munich, Hamburg, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Rome and Vienna. The task of these specialists was to come up with a development solution which was economically efficient and satisfied the highest architectural standards, but which also harmonized well with the surrounding district. The winning solution had to meet with the unreserved acceptance of both the City of Munich and its citizens. The office premises now under construction will combine maximum flexibility, efficiency and functionality, and can be split into smaller and larger units in line with demand. Ten percent of the 70,000 m2 of gross floor space that is planned has been earmarked for residential accommodation and will be supplemented by retail and service units. The core of the winning design (submitted by KSP Engel and Zimmermann, a Cologne-based team of architects) is a single, imposing office building with a sweeping glass facade. This centerpiece will be flanked by three additional office blocks and one residential building. The company is investing 230 million euros in this development project. Construction work is likely to begin in the spring of 2001; completion is scheduled for the first quarter 2003. The project is already a winner: it will help revitalize the urban district and further enhance the magnetic attraction of Munich’s city center. May I take this opportunity to congratulate Munich and its population on this choice morsel! Theresienhöhe – the old makes way for the new: the winning design from the urban development ideas competition Architects: Steidle and Partner Theresienhöhe – a 70,000-m2 project owned by Deutsche Grundbesitz-Investmentgesellschaft mbH Architects: KSP Engel and Zimmermann 65 66 It had been said that Munich had reached the end of its development curve. Regional politicians had declared the city to be “plastered to death”. Creating new jobs was seen as counterproductive, if not impossible. That was back at the start of the 1990s. Times have changed, however, and with them the general mood. In the meantime, Munich, which last grew by incorporating adjacent communities in 1936, has proved that vast development potential still remains within its existing boundaries. The turning point came when Christian Ude took office as mayor of the city. Ude gave the go-ahead for an urban development policy whose tough, no-nonsense motto was “Compact, urban, green”. This meant that space would in future be “recycled” intelligently. The densely packed urban landscape was to be – and still is being – loosened up by the carefully and sensibly planned development of public and private open spaces. A concept which proved that high-quality, modern urban development is still possible even within the relatively tight constraints of Munich’s city limits. A number of impressive examples have proven this to be the right strategy. – Moving the airport from Riem to Erding made room for extremely important infrastructure projects, The New Exhibition Center and International Congress Center have already been built. A new urban district to accommodate 16,000 people is growing – complete with a major shopping and leisure center, offices and commercial premises. The National Garden Exhibition is due to be held on the site in 2005. – Moving the exhibition center out to the edge of the city paved the way to convert the Theresienhöhe into a new urban district center with a balanced mix of accommodation, office buildings and small busines ses. The park inherited from the former exhibition center will substantially improve the quality of life in the new district. – One particularly remarkable example is Parkstadt Schwabing, a project at the “gateway to Munich” – where the city’s central ring-road feeds in to the Munich-Berlin freeway. On this derelict industrial site that used to house oil tank facilities, concrete facto ries and shipping firms, and where 90 percent of the ground was sealed, a completely new part of Schwabing is now taking shape that will include extensive public and private parklands accounting for 55 percent of the total surface area. The initiative for this project lay solely with the private land owners. Headed up by ARGENTA, a Munich-based development company, twelve land owners have agreed to bear the very considerable expense associated with the social and traffic infrastructure (subsidized accommodation, kindergartens, roads, paths, bridges and underpasses) and to share all costs between them. All on a voluntary basis. A new face in Schwabing Dr. Helmut Röschinger, Managing Partner, ARGENTA Internationale Anlagegesellschaft mbH The former industrial monolith, with all its eye-sores, is now gone; work on improving the land has begun. The parks and open spaces will be ready by fall 2001. Parkstadt Schwabing will provide 1500 new dwellings and 12,000 jobs in an office and small-business setting. The above examples show that Munich has by no means exhausted its urban development potential. Having understood the need for sound urban planning, an appropriate construction density and conducive building laws, the city’s leaders have created a suitable economic framework for such development. It is this framework which enables property owners to shoulder the high cost of eliminating obsolete forms of land use and creating the kind of infrastructure that will support new uses. 67 All of which only adds to the attraction of Munich, a city with an exemplary mix of work, leisure and quality of life. Parkstadt Schwabing – 40 hectares of development potential in the north of Munich: room for 12,000 jobs, 1500 dwellings and lots of open spaces; the winning design from the urban development ideas competition; Architects: A. Perret, I. Lewitan and Prof. R. Schmidt Made-to-measure infrastructure 68 Munich’s infrastructure is truly one of superlatives: Germany’s second-biggest airport; its most modern exhibition and congress center; excellent links to the national and international freeway network; an efficient system of local public transport with almost 4900 km of regular lines; an advanced telecommunications and network infrastructure with five city loops and numerous gateways to highspeed wide area networks; exemplary healthcare facilities, including 57 hospitals; a comprehensive array of educational establishments, with nearly 400 schools; Germany’s biggest adult education scheme; the biggest municipal library in the country; the Bavarian State Library, flanked by a number of specialist libraries; 4500 km2 of recreational and sports facilities; and so the list could go on. Made-to-measure infrastructure From Munich to Shanghai – trade show strategies in the 21st century Munich’s global hub Infrastructure – nothing but the best for Munich 69 Facade of the technical city hall: 1200 offices covering 82,000 m2 of usable floor space Architects: Ganzer and Unterholzner 70 “Messe München”, the Munich exhibition center operator, has positioned itself as a competent, market-oriented and global partner to the international business community. It does this – with a leading-edge infrastructure and a marketoriented program of events in Munich – by continually optimizing the quality and scope of its services – by offering global support to its customers in the main business centers of up-and-coming market regions in Europe and on other continents – by cooperating on an international level with exhibition operators in Central Europe – and, not least, by intelligently deploying electronic media and enhancing the value of trade show participation for its customers. International demand for exhibition space – both among exhibiting companies and the various trade show organizers – has been increasing relentlessly in Munich, especially since the new exhibition center opened its doors in February 1998. Every year, an attractive program of events draws over 30,000 exhibitors from more than 90 countries and over two million visitors from some 150 countries to trade shows and related events in Munich. Some of the highlights of the year include capital goods exhibitions for the construction and the environmental technology industries, trade shows for drinks technology firms, the logistics and transportation industries, forestry, electronics, computing and new technologies, and events for high-end consumer goods such as sports products, sportswear, jewelry, and watches and clocks. Another example of effective international cooperation in the context of exhibitions and trade shows is the Central European Fair Alliance (CEFA). Together with its counterparts in Bratislava, Budapest, Graz, Klagenfurt, Ljubljana, Prague, Vienna and Zagreb, the Munich exhibition center operator has set itself the task of creating a powerful platform for trade show cooperation that will benefit customers who take part in events at all these locations. From Munich to Shanghai – trade show strategies in the 21st century Manfred Wutzlhofer, Executive Director, Messe München GmbH A major step toward continually optimizing the services which Messe München provides to international business is the intelligent use of new media before, during and after trade shows. Online media effectively expand a trade show’s sphere of influence far beyond the physical limits of the exhibition grounds, and can likewise extend market communication beyond the duration of a given show. Messe München is working on a way to set up trade show-initiated and trade show-induced business platforms in suitable forms which the expo community – exhibitors, visitors, the media, and Messe München itself – can then grow and expand very effectively. For all its strategic measures, Messe München remains committed to building a service portfolio that brings marketplace players together wherever possible. Special forms of international support have also been designed that are tailored to the specific needs of small and medium-sized enterprises. Mountains next to the center’s lake: part of “Gran Paradiso”, a work of art by Stephan Huber, which stands outside the west entrance to the new exhibition center The International Congress Center Munich (ICM) has projected the city to the ranks of the top five congress venues in Germany. In terms of seating capacity (7000) it ranks second. Sustained strong demand and long-term bookings are a clear indication that the ICM has enabled Munich to successfully plug a gap in the market for major international congress events. North view of the halls on the new exhibition grounds; the exhibition center tower is pictured at left; Architects: Kaup, Scholz, Jesse and Partner An international sales network in more than 80 countries all around the globe adds to the international nature of events held in Munich and at other locations. Additional representations and subsidiaries are to be set up in future in Europe and on other continents. This will provide customers and partners alike with even more efficient support and expose the trade show stands in Munich to even more potential business partners throughout the world, enriching and augmenting the process of intercontinental dialogue. The construction and operation of a new exhibition center in Shanghai lends a new, concrete dimension to our claim to be “competent, market-oriented and global”. To improve the efficiency of the services they provide in East Asia, the trade show companies of Düsseldorf, Hanover and Munich have embarked on a strategic alliance and arenow working together to build the Shanghai New Inter-national Expo Center. In this project, the partners aim to bundle their skills and energies, share the financial burden and the risks involved, and, in collaboration with the Shanghai Pudong Land Development Corporation, their Chinese joint-venture partner, to engage in ground-breaking and successful exhibition activities. West entrance to the new exhibition center in Messestadt Riem The doors of the Bavarian capital are open to the world. The city harbors vast economic potential and lays rightful claim to cultural excellence. All of which, however, makes Munich heavily dependent on an efficient, reliable transport infrastructure. In the field of local passenger transport, Munich played a pioneering role by building its first subway (“U-bahn”) and mass transit (“S-bahn”) lines in the run-up to the 1972 Olympic Games. When the new airport went into service two decades later, the city again set a new benchmark. 72 Munich’s global hub Willi Hermsen, Managing Director, Flughafen München GmbH Since the new Munich airport opened in May 1992, more than just the traffic volume has changed, however: the traffic structure, too, has shifted dramatically. Transit traffic still played only a comparatively minor role at Munich-Riem but has emerged as a powerful engine of growth at the new location. The 1.3 million or so transit passengers registered in 1992, the year of the grand opening, rose to a figure of 5.7 million in 1999. Such rapid growth bears witness to a far-reaching change in the function of Munich airport: it documents Munich’s elevation to the elite ranks of Europe’s leading air traffic hubs – a crucial qualitative factor for Munich as a business location. The opening of the new airport was timed perfectly to coincide with a rapid increase in the volume of air traffic in Munich. Whereas fewer than eleven million passengers were counted in 1991, the last year of operation at the former site in Munich-Riem, the number of arrivals in and departures from the new airport shot up to 21.3 million in the eight years that followed. The volume of passengers doubled as traffic through Munich airport consistently increased, pushing Munich up from fourteenth to ninth place among Europe’s most heavily frequented passenger airports. The airport’s ability to position itself as a new hub has been helped in large part by the strong commitment of Deutsche Lufthansa, which has gradually been cultivating Munich as its second German gateway since 1995. Lufthansa alone now services more than 80 destinations non-stop from Munich. All told, Munich airport now has regular links to 220 destinations around the world, includ ing such attractive long-haul destinations as Atlanta, Bangkok, Cape Town, Chicago, Dubai, Kuala Lumpur, Mauritius, Miami, New York, Peking, Philadelphia, San Francisco, São Paulo, Toronto and Washington. Airlines can only make a profit on the majority of these long-haul routes because their departures from the Munich hub are supported by a finely-meshed network of connecting and feeder flights, thereby ensuring a heavy influx of transit passengers. To consolidate Munich’s new-found role in international air traffic over the long term, the airport is already being expanded to prepare it for the challenges that still lie ahead. A second passenger terminal, currently being built to the east of the airport, will go into operation in 2003 and will be able to handle 20 million passengers. Flughafen München GmbH and Deutsche Lufthansa AG are sharing the entrepreneurial responsibility for the construction and operation of Terminal 2. The new terminal will be used exclusively by Lufthansa and its Star Alliance partners. As an efficient relay station in the networks operated by this major airline alliance, the new terminal will be specially tailored to the unique requirements of transit traffic. On the apron at Munich airport Architects: Prof. von Busse and Partner Blees, Büch, Kampmann North view of the building site for the new terminal, which will open in 2003; Architects: Koch and Partner The second terminal will also help Munich to continue to compete with other European rivals. Transit passengers will not be the only beneficiaries: in future, travelers departing from Munich’s natural catchment area will also enjoy the wide range of destinations and comprehensive service that only a fully-fledged air traffic hub can offer. Travelers from the Munich metropolitan area itself – who make up 38 percent of all passengers who board at the airport – likewise stand to benefit. In addition, extended airport operations will positively impact the local economy and job market. Some 20,000 people already work for over 400 companies at the airport, making it one of Bavaria’s largest employment locations. Around 5300 airport staff live in Munich itself. Incessant growth in the number of visitors testifies to the unmitigated attraction of the city on the Isar. For millions of visitors from Germany and abroad, their stay in Munich begins at our airport. Munich has always prided itself on being a “global city with a big heart”: all the better, then, that it can now justifiably claim to be a “global city with a big hub”, too. The airport is well able to give visitors from around the world the welcome they deserve when they arrive in Bavaria. 73 Munich is regarded as one of Europe’s most attractive business locations; yet it also offers a quality of life that leaves others green with envy. SWM GmbH, Munich’s infrastructure utility, has a lot to do with this: providing competitive energy services; piping in top-quality drinking water from Bavaria’s Alpine foothills; operating an exemplary local public transport system; and running 16 attractive indoor and outdoor swimming pools. 74 Infrastructure – nothing but the best for Munich Dr. Kurt Mühlhäuser, Managing Director, SWM GmbH It is no coincidence that SWM GmbH is successful today and has every prospect of a very bright tomorrow. Just as the former energy and transport monopolies have given way to a lively competitive landscape, so the “Munich municipal utility” – which used to have marked bureaucratic leanings – has now been transformed into a dynamic business operation that is actively shaping the infrastructure markets of the future. Back in the mid-1990s, the SWM GmbH management set about the groundwork that would bring fundamental change to the company. It all started when a rigorous system of cost management was implemented, a move to which the company’s robust state of health today is largely attributable. Modern management methods redesigned the way major projects were handled, drafted a new power station concept, and bundled its electricity, gas, district heating, drinking water and telecommunications networks. The resultant synergies were impressive, saving hundreds of millions of marks in a cost-cutting drive that has since proved sustainable. The utility’s transformation to a limited liability company [GmbH] in 1998, coupled with its fundamental internal reorganization, has made the company as a whole much leaner and fitter – and has also enabled it to rebuild and consolidate its market- and service-oriented operations. Even while still in the throes of transition, SWM GmbH was busily improving the quality of life and range of leisure facilities in Munich to get the city in shape for the future. Large sums of money were invested to modernize local swimming baths, to safeguard the supply of drinking water, and to expand what is already a world-class public transport system. Only recently, the company moved into the telecoms business, too – a commitment that has quickly emerged as yet another success story. SWM GmbH has invested around DM 100 million in state-of-the-art optical fiber technology. On the basis of the resultant high-speed network, the SWM subsidiary and Munich city carrier M"net, launched in 1996, began offering its customers advanced telecoms services such as fixed-line, Internet and telephone services. Break-even was reached in fiscal 1999; revenue and profit expecta-tions continue to point upward. Fierce competition in the energy market since the late 1990s has nevertheless wrought the most visible changes at SWM GmbH. An innovative package of measures evidenced the fresh wind that was blowing through the company – and was well-received by its customers in Munich. The package included competitive prices, tailor-made offers for corporate and retail customers, and an aggressive series of marketing and sales activities designed to win new customers and cement the loyalty of existing ones. Meanwhile, the entire local population has been able to follow the evolution of SWM GmbH’s umbrella brand strategy. Everyone in Munich is now familiar with motifs and products that bear the big “M” symbol. The brand has come to stand for full-line, local service and top-quality products. One of the company’s premium products, for instance, is the enhanced security service introduced in 2000 for its electricity customers. Customers who use this service have faults and problems rectified faster; and inspections and minor repairs to all house utility installations are carried out free of charge. Corporate customers, too, value the security ex-pertise offered by SWM’s service portfolio. This expertise is an important aspect of SWM’s location advice service, which helps high-tech companies optimize the attraction of their location in Munich. The next few years will once again put SWM’s corporate development to a stiff test as market dynamism increases and competition for locations intensifies. SWM is called on to continually improve its services and sharpen its competitive edge. Consistent cost management, a stronger customer orientation and a keener competitive focus will remain the central thrust of all that we do. Strategic local and supraregional alliances are also taking on ever greater significance to enable us to track market developments with the aid of suitable partners. Our objective remains to provide corporate and retail customers in and around Munich with the best possible infrastructure – our way of helping to ensure that Munich stays out in front. 75 Munich’s utility company optimizes the city’s electricity, gas, water and district heating infrastructure. Subways and indoor and outdoor swimming pools are also part of its portfolio. M"net, an SWM subsidiary, operates a powerful, high-speed metropolitan area network for telecommunications services Employment and the structural transition in Munich The Munich Employment and Qualification Program Reconciling ecology and the economy – “Ökoprofit®” shows the way 76 The Munich Employment and Qualification Program, the Verbund Strukturwandel GmbH, the city’s project to smooth young people’s transition between school and vocational training and a series of other tools and projects are just some of the ways in which the Department of Labour and Economic Development is accompanying the structural transition on the labor market. Administrative reforms aim to bring the city’s public sector closer to the people it serves by presenting a new range of offers, including multiservice urban district centers, longer opening hours and shorter turnaround times. Munich’s city portal (www.muenchen.de) – a project initiated in collaboration with the Chambers of Commerce Industry and Handicrafts – is currently putting Munich on the virtual map with an array of interactive information, services and offers of cooperation. Empowering change The Wettersteinplatz subway station Architects: Raupach and Schurk; color design by Alfons Lachauer 77 The instigation of the Department of Labour and Economic Development ten years ago met a pivotal demand of Munich’s trade unions. Given the importance of economic activity in and for the city, the Munich branch of the DGB (Germany’s association of trade unions) believed it was imperative on the one hand to create a dedicated unit and, on the other hand, to systematically involve and promote the interests of the workforce in the city’s economic development. A local economic policy that relied on input from employers alone would have been too short-sighted. 78 Munich’s development since then is the proof of just how successful this strategy has been and still is. Munich has had the lowest unemployment rate of any large German city for many years. The DGB sees two main reasons for this: one is the intensive qualification and employment policy pursued by the City of Munich; the other is an business promotion unit that has always sought to maintain a balanced mix of production and service industries, of large and small companies. Sustaining such diversity despite setting specific priorities is crucial both to the economic development and to the trend in employment in the city. This is the only way to cushion and absorb the changes wrought by structural changes. One aspect is the variegated range of qualification programs, which offer carefully tailored work activities in a range of new forms to improve and adjust the level of qualification among both the active population and the unemployed. The focus to date has been on young people (especially those with few school qualifications), on women, and on people working in industries threatened by structural changes. The work of the Verbund Strukturwandel GmbH (VSW), a company set up to facilitate structural change, is another central pillar of this policy. In recent years, the Agenda 21 process has caused the City of Munich to step up its commitment to sustainable employment, for instance by offering additional training to people in the handicraft and construction industries. This is one area where much remains to be done. Improving the level of qualification in such areas is important if, for example, Munich’s older buildings are to be renovated in an environmentally compatible way, and if the many small and medium-sized enterprises are to be able to compete on a solid basis. The media industry is currently experiencing a singularly rapid phase of restructuring. New job profiles are taking shape, old one are having to change. If Munich intends to maintain its enviable position, it is essential to improve the conditions in place for initial vocational training, but also those for ongoing training and development, in line with the challenges that confront us today. Heavy investments by both the local authorities and other players are necessary but will undoubtedly pay off: a well-qualified labor pool is a key factor for any business location. The Munich arm of the DGB will continue to feed constructive input into the work of the Department of Labour and Economic Development in future, bringing the experience and needs of the workforce to bear as the process unfolds. Our aim is to ensure that the Munich economy does not become one-sided, but that it is shaped and molded by the interests of the people concerned. If we succeed in this mission, Munich will remain strong in the face of international competition. A baker at work: more and more women are making handicrafts their business 79 Employment and the structural transition in Munich Helmut Schmid, DGB District Chairman, Munich Handicrafts offer a solid grounding – and bright prospects Innovative, productive, therapeutic – Anderwerk GmbH as an example of the Munich Employment and Qualification Program Many of the tensions we know only too well today have their roots in the 1980s: economic crisis and stagnation on the one hand, quantum leaps in technology on the other. The PC took the world by storm; new production strategies were tested; the unions countered the crisis with a program for “qualitative growth” and the battle for a 35-hour week. Yet, all too often, these grand strategies and designs seemed to lose sight of the individual. At the same time, in the mid-1980s, the “Pasing Youth Workshop” was set up by the workers’ welfare organization on the western outskirts of Munich. The workshop dedicated itself to providing direct assistance for underprivileged young people, and to providing work and a chance to earn qualifications – albeit without any certificates to begin with – for all those who could not keep up with the ever faster pace of new technological challenges given the obsolete methods of training and career preparation. The following account of how the youth workshop grew and developed is just one of many similar developments at any number of other initiatives and startups. 80 The Munich Employment and Qualification Program The colorful mix of projects and subsidized companies in existence today only makes sense when one lifts the lid on a completely different side to economic development, where experimentation, alternative viewpoints and in many cases years of discussion have gradually led to the emergence of concrete models. One example was the attempt to shake off the polarity between classical psychoanalysis and anti-psychiatry and to take a different approach to dealing with mental illness. Practical approaches, in which the mentally ill were counseled and integrated instead of being isolated and shut out, moved center-stage. Psychosocial counseling centers and occupational projects sought to apply measured doses of gainful employment as a central aspect of therapeutic integration, rather than seeing the world of work as something compulsive and alienating. Thus, over time, was born the spectrum of psychosocial counseling centers and “integration firms” that we know today. In 1985, all these different approaches to employment, qualification and integration projects were put together and given reliable funding and backing under the aegis of the AFI (Arbeitsförderungsinitiative), a local authority employment promotion initiative. In 1991, the AFI became one of the pillars of the employment policy adopted by the newly founded “Department of Labour and Economic Development”; and at the end of 1993 it became an integral part of what is now the Munich Employment and Qualification Program (Münchner Beschäftigungs- und Qualifizerungsprogramm, or MBQ). AFI companies and projects sponsored under the MBQ today cover a wide range of “problem areas”, from integration firms for all forms of mental illness and isolation, through projects for socially deprived youngsters and facilities providing training and trial work opportunities for people on social security, to companies for older, longterm unemployed people. Jürgen Lohmüller, Managing Director, Anderwerk GmbH Two employees of the INBUS learning center work on a recycling project What is now the Anderwerk GmbH (which operated under the name Inbus from 1991 to 1999) has thus grown from a project centered around the “Youth Workshop” to what is effectively a medium-sized “company for new action in education and social work”. In terms of its legal structure and content, Anderwerk maintains its associa-tion with the workers’ welfare association; its commercial management and operative business, however, are completely independent. Despite criticism and disbelief from certain quarters, there is no lack of projects that center around occupation in general and gainful employment in particular. And it has long since been a recognized fact that “occupation” does not mean digging holes and then filling them in again: it rather means applying oneself to sensible, useful tasks – useful in the sense that concrete demand exists for such tasks, along with a willingness to pay for the acquisition and use of the end products. “Manufacturer’s pride” is elemental in fostering commitment and cultivating intrinsic motivation so that controls, checks and instructions are not needed every step of the way. Not a mark of the subsidies granted – which, incidentally, increasingly comprise a mix of funds from the relevant departments at the City of Munich, the Labor Office, and the Free State of Bavaria (especially those funds drawn from the European Social Fund) – is used to make the products cheaper. Instead, these resources serve as the “reward” (in the widest sense) for the educational and development work performed, which engenders stability and improves qualification. If you have ever ordered a made-to-measure item of furniture from Anderwerk (an angled kitchen unit, say, with a built-in desk module), you will know that you do not have to worry about the quality. However, social commitment noticeably reaches its limits when you receive the invoice! This is where market forces come into play! Alongside people with mental illnesses, whom we offer a dignified way of at least earning a sizeable part of their living by the work of their own hands, an entirely different category of people also falls within the scope of what we have come to see as our “target group”: older people – over 50 according to official statistics, but in practice often those who are past 45 – many of whom have seen their employers go bankrupt or have been forced out for their alleged “lack of flexibility or performance”. But how does one go about making the vast experience of older employees available to younger colleagues? How can it be transferred systematically? At Anderwerk, we have found that the disassembly and retrieval of valuable spare parts presents an interesting new sphere of activity – an area from which attractive training modules could undoubtedly be derived, including practical content and examples for which there would never be room in the busy routine of any “normal” vehicle repair shop. This example alone shows how employment and qualification companies can make a very innovative contribution both on a technical and organizational level and with regard to didactic methodologies. The 40 or so AFI operations and vocational youth assistance (BBJH) projects* in Munich concentrate heavily on such aspects. Their focus is not on homogeneous mass production that can compete with wage levels in, say, Portugal or Thailand. If you like, these companies seek to combine two complementary "product lines”: the goal of human development; and the creation of useful products or services for the customer. In either case, the end result is always “hand-crafted”; at most small-series production methods are used; and the customer’s exact specifications are followed to the letter. Projects, institutions and companies that advise, develop and operate under the auspices of the Munich Employment and Qualification Program have thus carved out a regular niche for themselves in the “Munich cluster” that is so highly regarded in Germany and throughout Europe. This cluster combines an almost unique array of every conceivable kind of vendor and supplier: producers and manufacturers; old and new economy companies; production-oriented service providers; and service-oriented production firms! * Thanks to the activities of the Youth and Labor Offices, BBJH projects have, in Munich in particular, emerged as a separate entity to which consulting, employment and qualification assignments are entrusted. 81 Economic activity that gave due consideration to ecological issues was long believed to be an inherent contradiction. Too much emphasis was placed on retroactive environmental protection. To then selfishly seek to make a “profit” on such clean-up operations was felt to be the ultimate irony. 82 Enter Ökoprofit® Graz, whose aim was – and always has been – to overcome old prejudices and shatter taboos. Ökoprofit (the name derives from the German acronym for “Ecological Project for Integrated Environmental Technology”) is a program of preventive corporate care for the environment. The project aims to apply concrete measures which improve corporate environmental protection – saving on energy and raw materials, reducing waste and emissions – and which thereby also cut costs. To achieve this goal, the Graz Environment Office, the companies that participate in the scheme, professional environment consultants, and an assortment of business associations collaborate in the context of workshops; advice is provided to local companies; and Ökoprofit® teams collate relevant environmental data and formulate environmental protection programs for the corporate sector. An extensive range of practical working materials lays the foundation for workshops and consulting sessions. Companies that successfully complete the Ökoprofit® program are distinguished accordingly by their local authority. Even though creating the right climate for innovation and sustainable development is actually one of their main responsibilities in this area, it still came as some surprise to find politics and public authorities boldly leading the way into such a potential minefield. However, it was only when the business and scientific communities also threw their weight behind the venture that the first verifiable successes were scored. Reconciling ecology and the economy – Ökoprofit® shows the way Dr. Karl Niederl, Director, Environment Department, Municipal Corporation, Graz, Austria A thoroughly professional attitude on all sides has helped earn the project the respect it needs if it is to unfold its full impact on a large scale. Today, the range of Ökoprofit® companies spans everything from small upstart businesses through solid SMEs to large enterprises of international standing. More than 300 firms in Austria have now discovered for themselves that cooperation between companies and local authorities to link business considerations with environmental constraints can be a profitable business, on several counts: by ensuring a positive image; by transferring knowledge and creating a competitive advantage; and simply by improving net income. The “club” of Ökoprofit® companies and municipalities has enjoyed strong international growth and will continue to act as a multiplier, convincing more and more businesses and local governments that practicing a policy of sustainability really does pay: the path from Ökoprofit® workshop to actual implementation is astonishingly short, direct and efficient. 83 The City of Munich was the first city in Germany to adopt the Ökoprofit® concept as part of its “Local Agenda 21”. Munich has since done much to help the idea of “applied sustainability” – in which local authorities can play an active, seminal role – to achieve widespread acceptance. Over 20 German local authorities, from small and medium-sized towns through rural communities to collaborative clusters to major cities, today implement the principles of Ökoprofit®. And the number is growing all the time. A practical example of how economic and ecological interests can be reconciled: over a 25year period, this former landfill site has been transformed into a leisure and recreation area Photographic sources 84 Munich Tourist Office, archive 20 Lenbachhaus, archive 56 ARGENTA Internationale Anlagegesellschaft mbH 67 BioM AG 45 BMW Press Corps., cover, 3rd from right, 16, 17 Achim Bunz, cover, 4th from right, back cover, 3rd and 4th from right, 15, 57, 61 Burda Media Holding 46 Karsten de Riese 70 Volker Derlath 53, 58, 59 Deutsche Bank 65 Deutsche Telekom 40 Fraunhofer Society 18, 26, 27 Werner Hennies, back cover, 2nd from right,73 Bernhard Hiepe 51 Wilfried Hösl 54, 55 HypoVereinsbank 14, 62 Chamber of Industry and Commerce 78, 79 City of Munich Department of Labour and Economic Development 22, 23, 71 (top), 72 Department of Urban Planning and Construction 64 Max Planck Societies 24, 25 Elisabeth Mühlbauer 80 Maria Mühlberger 60 Stefan Müller-Naumann 4, 5, 6, 7, 12, 13, 29, 36, 48, 49, 69, 71 (bottom), 76, 83 MWM 50 Nemetschek AG 39 Sophie Seitz 21 Siemens, cover, 2nd from right, 9, 10, 11 Stadtwerke München GmbH 74, 75 Jens Weber, cover, 1st from right, back cover, 1st from right Published by: Landeshauptstadt München Referat für Arbeit und Wirtschaft Herzog-Heinrich-Strasse 20 80336 München Chief editor: Dr. Reinhard Wieczorek Head of Department of Labour and Economic Development Councilor Editorial team: Rita Müller-Roider Petra Müller Claudia Hörter Layout and design: Büro für Gestaltung Wangler & Abele Veronika Wucher English translation: Nigel Robinson Printed by: Peschke Druck Circulation: 2500 Munich, May 2001