New Homes in New Lands

Socio‐Spatial Negotiations of Highly Skilled Indian migrants in Frankfurt am Main

Urban environments have been substantially transformed by increasing socio‐cultural diversity through transnational migration as a result of globalised economies in the late twentieth and early twenty‐first century. Highly Skilled Migrant professionals form a new class of migrants as a result of the intensified globalisation processes and border‐crossing flows. Within this framework of globalisation, my research proposes an architectural inquiry into the residential type of Highly Skilled Migrant (termed as “HSM” from now on) Indians, who form the latest stream within the existing heterogeneous ‘Indian Diaspora’ resultant of varied phases of earlier Indian migration to Germany. This group of newcomers, theorised as diasporic cosmopolitans, have been drawn to Germany as a leading member of the European Union, during the past decade and a half and adapted to a non‐Anglophone, global, living and working environment as the context for their rising socio‐economic aspirations. These aspirations are reflected in their housing choices.

Framed within the context of recent intense migration influx into Germany, where migrant integration into the local urban fabric represents a persistent challenge, this research project proposes to investigate the housing choices of the rapidly growing Indian diaspora in the metropolitan Frankfurt region as the convenors of both integrative and differentiated spatial practices linked to identity creation. This emergent Indian HSM group has been of little focus in Germany so far, but who are nonetheless residents of Germany and active contributors to the German economy. The research investigation will incorporate mapping urban positioning and connection of the Indian HSM to the existing Indian diaspora within the city and their relation to the location of ethnic commercial and religious institutions, spatial analysis of housing of Indian diasporic groups, participant observations and interviews with inhabitants and perusal of published material.

I would like to invite students to participate in this endeavour in understanding the spatial practices of new Indian HSM group through their housing choices in Frankfurt am Main.

This Project is supervised by Dr. Dhara Patel.

  • Interest in Migration studies/ Architecture
  • Basic knowledge in qualitative social science research methods

Additional Information

Capacity open-ended
Project available for Fall 2024
Credits 12 ECTS
Available via Remote Yes