Our Mission Statement

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Our Vision

As a leading entrepreneurial university, we are a site of global knowledge exchange, shaping a sustainable future through talent, excellence and responsibility.

Our Mission

We inspire, promote and develop talents in all their diversity to become responsible, broad-minded individuals. We empower them to shape the progress of innovation for people, nature, and society with scientific excellence and technological expertise, with entrepreneurial courage and sensitivity to social and political issues, as well as a lifelong commitment to learning.

Our Core Values

Our core values form the foundation of our relationships with one another and with our cooperation partners:

  • Excellence: We cultivate an environment of curiosity, creativity and unconventional thinking across the disciplines and set the highest standards of performance in research, teaching, and innovation.
  • Entrepreneurial Mindset: We question the consequences of our actions, take on new challenges proactively, and continually enhance our working methods. We commit ourselves to socially reflected innovations and promote their commercial application by founding sustainable technology spin-offs.
  • Integrity: We draw our success from an inclusive community of talents from different backgrounds, cultures, ideas and perspectives. We act with respect for others and transparency in accordance with our shared values.
  • Collegiality: We respect and inspire one another in a vibrant culture of university community. We cultivate the academic, economic and social partnerships that make TUM a site of global knowledge exchange.
  • Sustainability and Resilience: We learn from our diverse experiences and see in persistent change the opportunity for the sustainable development of science, ecology, economy and society – from this we draw inspiration, motivation and resolve.

Our Guiding Principles

Governing Documents

An overview of central codes and regulations by which we shape research and innovation, teaching, and our governance as a top and modern university of international standing.

Governing Documents

Compliance

The TUM Compliance Office ensures the integrity and transparency of research, teaching and innovation based on the TUM Code of Conduct, the TUM Respect Guide, and the Statute on Safeguarding Good Academic Practice.

TUM Compliance Office

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News

  • 5/19/2016

Architectural competition: New build for Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Building with communication skills

The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) will move from the main campus in Munich to the research campus in Garching over the next few years. A new faculty building will also be constructed at the site. First prize in the architectural competition that was held to choose the design was won by Henn GmbH in Munich.

Architectural competition: New build for Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Architectural competition: New build for Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. (Bild: Henn GmbH)

The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (EI) is one of the leading engineering faculties in Germany. Among other things, it has received five of the prestigious ERC grants and can boast a Humboldt professor as well as a Leibniz award winner. The TUM main campus, with its 11 buildings set on approximately 30,500 square metres, currently hosts a total of 45 professors and around 4,000 students.

After years of use, the buildings can no longer meet the modern needs of teaching and research, nor can they cope with the increasing demand for space. That is why the department will move to the research campus in Garching in the coming years.

One of Munich’s building authorities, Staatliche Bauamt München 2, held a competition for the new EI faculty building. The aim of the competition was to design a "research facility that is modern and future-oriented in conceptual and artistic terms" to be built on approximately 45,000 square metres in total towards the western part of the research campus. The first phase of construction comprises 7,000 square metres.

A total of 20 works were submitted for the competition. The jury presented four prizes and four merit awards. First prize went to Henn GmbH in Munich. In the design, the faculty consists of four main bodies connected by a roofed communications area. The large lecture theatres are located here; this section can also be accessed from any direction. "The passageways of the EI area strengthen communication and help to form connections with the neighbouring scientific institutions", according to the report of the jury.

Turning of first sod planned for 2018

The first phase of construction work in Garching, with costs totalling €53 million, is planned for 2018. Towards the end of 2019 and start of 2020, 10 of the currently 45 professors are expected to move to the new buildings. Cost estimates for the second and third phases of construction stand at €200 million. In Garching, only very few lectures are expected to be held in the corresponding specialised master’s degree courses in the first phase of construction. All other lectures will continue to take place in the city centre.

Technical University of Munich

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