Frequently asked questions
How can I rent or buy accommodation in HafenCity? How green is the district? And what are the responsibilities of HafenCity Hamburg GmbH? Answers to frequently asked questions
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What does HafenCity have to offer for kids?
People who move into HafenCity often do pretty extensive research on their future neighborhood before they arrive. Families, for instance, want to know how their needs will be fulfilled in the emerging district; it also goes without saying that they have high expectations of social infrastructure locally. The basic framework in HafenCity is not only continually being improved and updated. Parents and children can also play a part in it. Their help was needed during the creation of the new Treasure Island playground at ViewPoint. First off it comprises 850 sq. m of space for play and a newly set up parents’ initiative also runs an all-weather playhouse that they designed themselves.
The Störtebeker SV sports club also offers the chance to get involved: a new generation of local soccer kids is already in training. If the sport hall of the Katharinenschule is included, the range of sports available is even wider. As well as music and sport courses in the afternoons, the primary school also offers school lunches and thus provides all-day supervision. Next door in the kindergarten, supervision of children is even more flexible - they can be cared for into the evening. Parents and children can also start looking forward to the planned education program in the Elbphilharmonie Concert Hall down at the end of the point.
But it’s not just institutional facilities that are family-oriented - HafenCity abounds with open spaces which can be used by kids and teenagers: Vasco da Gama square, for example, boasts a basketball court which is an integral part of the neighborhood and that parents and neighbors can easily keep an eye on. Both Magellan and Marco Polo terraces are popular with skaters, while climbers love the quay walls on Dalmannkai. HafenCity’s youngest residents are creative when it comes to making urban spaces their own through play. Some of them just have to step outside their apartment house door: In 2011, the Sandtorpark opened and many of the buildings on Dalmannkai incorporate open spaces.
More buildings and residential projects to appeal to families are being planned or are already under construction. Altogether, three large playgrounds are planed - in Grasbrookpark from 2012/13, Lohsepark from 2013 and at Baakenhafen. Then there’s even a grass sports ground planned in Oberhafen neighborhood. Even if much of HafenCity’s social infrastructure is still in the throes of development - many people are already convinced by the concept.







