Project implementation: Switzerland
Project development: Switzerland
“Öpfelchüechli” (“Fried Apple Rings”) is a film essay by David Menzi that explores the transformation of Swiss farmland into suburban sprawl and the parallel erosion of cultural memory. Central to the film is the memory of a dish from his grandmother’s kitchen, intimately linked to the apple trees that once surrounded the family home in Volketswil, a suburb of Zurich. As Menzi recalls, “Whenever I smell the aroma of the dish, I have very vivid memories of picking apples from the farmland.” Through these sensory memories, the film connects personal notes with broader issues of environmental and cultural change.
Using overlapping aerial images, found footage from the family archive, and sequences capturing the current landscape, Öpfelchüechli traces how the land was transformed into a generic suburban cluster of gas stations, parking lots, and industrial developments. The film creates a juxtaposition of different contemplative media that allows viewers to perceive both the changes in the landscape and in cultural memory.
Öpfelchüechli functions not only as a metaphor for the traces of a vanished landscape, but also as a reflection on the disappearance of biodiversity caused by urban sprawl. The film invites the audience to reflect on their own heritage and the environments they inhabit.
The film was inspired by and developed from conversations about “Urban Food” with Günther Vogt at ETH Zürich in 2022.
David Menzi (he/him, b. 1992) spent a year collaborating with professionals beyond the field of architecture in pursuit of post-disciplinary ambitions. He completed his architectural studies in Zurich, Switzerland, and Ahmedabad, India. Through his practice and encounters, Menzi explores issues of placemaking, narrative construction, collaborative processes, and more.