Exhibitions at Liebling Haus
The House Galleries
The Project Room at the Liebling Haus is an open platform inviting creators from various disciplines to actively engage in a critical inquiry of the question: What is the White City? It forms part of an ongoing, multidisciplinary, alternative, and collaborative research process that treats the White City as a framework for contemporary discourse on preservation, urbanism, identity, and culture in the city. As the open-ended extension of the permanent exhibition at the Liebling Haus, which tells one of many possible stories of the White City, the Project Room serves as a point of departure for an evolving narrative. This space invites artists, researchers, and practitioners to address current local and global issues, present diverse perspectives, and propose alternative narratives.
In the former apartment of the Scheuer family resides the gallery for temporary exhibitions. The apartment’s rooms host exhibitions that engage with architecture, urbanism, art, design, and sustainability, creating a compelling dialogue between the domestic character of a residential space and the dynamic nature of a flexible exhibition environment. In the original kitchen, the permanent exhibition Frankfurt Kitchen is on view.
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The Urban Planning traklin presents projects currently in development by the Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality’s Planning Department. This space offers the public a broad perspective on the city’s evolving landscape, highlighting key initiatives with the potential to transform specific areas or address pressing urban issues.
The traklin serves as a stage for planning in action, shedding light on the complexities inherent in urban development. It invites visitors to become familiar with the city’s environment before it changes, to understand the dilemmas faced by planners, and to become aware of how these decisions shape everyday life.
Alongside the exhibitions, the traklin hosts workshops, guided tours, and public discussions featuring experts and key stakeholders, offering insights into the various dimensions of the projects and encouraging civic involvement in the complex process of shaping urban life.
The Urban Planning traklin is part of Liebling Haus’s research lab and working spaces — environments dedicated to collaborative development and thinking in partnership with academic institutions from Israel and abroad, the Municipal Engineering Administration, the City Planning Department, and the Conservation Department of the Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality.