AllesWirdGut is a Vienna and Munich-based international architecture firm covering the full range of architectural design. To date, AllesWirdGut has realized more than 60 projects in Austria and abroad.
AllesWirdGut was established in 1999 by Andreas Marth, Friedrich Passler, Herwig Spiegl and Christian Waldner. Meanwhile, the office has 65 employees from thirteen different countries. As a general design/construction management firm, AllesWirdGut realizes projects of any scale, from single-family homes to corporate headquarters, from the university to festival premises.
AllesWirdGut focuses on program and synergies — complementary and resources- saving functionality. Architecture is not an end in itself; what counts is usability. Good architecture is not supposed to cost more — but to do more! Anticipating the work and life scenarios of the future is a basic requirement of architecture created today; to be able to do so, AllesWirdGut work together with experts from other fields, with scientists and artists.
Among the best known projects by AllesWirdGut are the Niederoesterreich Haus in Krems (A) – Austria’s largest passive-house office building, the opera festival premises of St. Margarethen (A) or the design of the pedestrian zone on Maria-Theresien- Straße in Innsbruck (A) and the Center for Technology and Design in St. Poelten (A). Current projects include the planning of the Funke Media Office in Essen (GER) and the Headquarters of Doppelmayr in Wolfurt (A), the New Design University in St. Poelten (A), a school campus in Hamburg (GER), a residential estate in Luxembourg and the Provincial Government Office in Erlangen (GER). Lately realised projects include the magdas Hotel Caritas, the Vocational School for Administration and the social housing Aspern, all in Vienna.
The architecture of AllesWirdGut has been awarded several prizes and recognitions, most recently, the „State Prize for Architecture and Sustainability“, the „State Prize for Design, category: Spatial Design“ and the “Prix Luxembourgeois d’Architecture” for the redesigning in several stages of a former steel mill yard into a public square in Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg.