在铁路、
汽车、
港口、
企业、
博物馆与工业现场之间,
我观察一个工业文明如何组织移动、
制造产品、
培养人才与维持运行。
这里不仅有交通工具,
也有工厂、
维修体系、
技术转型、
人才流动与长期积累的产业经验。
从轨道、
车间、
展会到企业后台,
我记录德国工业文明,
如何在转型、
挑战与重新协调之中,
持续寻找下一阶段的发展方向。
Across railways,
automobiles,
ports,
companies,
museums and industrial sites,
I observe how an industrial civilization organizes mobility,
manufactures products,
develops talent and sustains its operations.
This is not only about vehicles,
but also about factories,
maintenance systems,
technological transformation,
talent mobility and accumulated industrial experience.
From tracks,
workshops,
trade fairs and corporate backstages,
this fieldwork explores how German industrial civilization
continues to navigate transformation,
challenges and renewal
while seeking its next stage of development.
很多人来到保时捷博物馆,会直接奔向911、赛车与速度神话。但让我停下来的,却是一辆1898年的电动车。从电、平台、混合动力、空气动力学,到战后重建与356的诞生,这座博物馆讲的并不只是跑车,而是一家公司如何在不断变化的时代里,一次又一次找到继续前进的方法。
Most visitors come to the Porsche Museum for the 911, racing cars, and stories of speed. What stopped me was a small electric vehicle from 1898. From electricity, platforms, hybrid technology, and aerodynamics to post-war reconstruction and the birth of the Porsche 356, this museum is not only about sports cars, but also about how a company repeatedly found new ways to move forward through changing times.
在慕尼黑德意志博物馆的桥梁与水利馆里,我原本以为自己是在看桥梁工程,后来才发现,真正出现在眼前的,是文明如何维持流动。从穿越阿尔卑斯山的隧道、早期桥梁的身体工程、德国工业文明对于承重与稳定的执着,到罗马输水系统、河流治理与生态复育,这座展馆不断重复同一个问题:如何让流动持续而不崩塌。桥、铁路、水利与河道看似不同,背后处理的却是同一件事——如何让重量、水流、时间与社会长期稳定运转。
At the Bridge and Hydraulic Engineering Exhibition of the Deutsches Museum in Munich, I expected to learn about bridges. Instead, I found myself exploring how civilizations sustain flow. From Alpine tunnels and the bodily experience of early bridge construction to Germany’s obsession with load-bearing stability, Roman aqueducts, river engineering, and ecological restoration, the exhibition repeatedly returned to the same question: how can movement continue without collapse? Bridges, railways, waterways, and hydraulic systems may appear different, yet they all address the same challenge—how to keep weight, water, time, and society moving in long-term balance.
德国田野调查第二站,我进入了斯图加特有轨电车博物馆。这里保存的,不只是几台旧电车,而是一整座山城如何一百五十多年都没有停止流动。从马车铁路、票务系统、城市轨道,到维修文明与后台系统,我第一次这么清楚地看到:真正成熟的城市,最后研究的,不是如何更快,而是系统老了之后,如何继续运行。
During my second fieldwork stop in Germany, I visited the Stuttgart Tramway Museum. What is preserved here is not merely a collection of historic trams, but the long-term urban backstage system that has kept a mountain city moving for more than 150 years. From horse-drawn railways, ticket systems, and urban tram networks to maintenance culture and infrastructure management, this museum reveals a deeper question behind modern mobility: a mature city is not defined by speed alone, but by its ability to keep old systems running long after they age.
从第一台奔驰发动机,到Crash Tests、Airbag、TÜV、新能源与自动驾驶,这篇德国田野调查,并不只是关于“汽车”,而是德国工业文明,如何一步一步把“速度”,组织成一种长期运行的国家系统。而站在奔驰汽车博物馆里,来自楚国的目光,也重新提出了另一个问题:当车开始自己判断、自己驾驶之后,人,还算不算“驾”?
From the first Mercedes engine to crash tests, airbags, TÜV, electric vehicles and autonomous driving, this field research in Germany is not merely about automobiles. It is about how German industrial civilization gradually transformed “speed” into a long-term, highly organized national system. And inside the Mercedes-Benz Museum, a gaze from the ancient state of Chu raises another question: when a vehicle can drive and decide by itself, does the human inside still count as the one who “drives”?
在德国 Speyer 科技博物馆里,我第一次真正把蒸汽火车、船、潜艇与国际空间站放进同一条文明线里。从楚国水路、到蒸汽火车、到太空站,人类始终都在学习同一件事:如何在离开原本环境之后,继续维持流动与生命。
At the Technik Museum Speyer in Germany, I placed steam locomotives, ships, submarines, and the International Space Station into the same civilizational line for the first time. From the waterways of Chu, to steam locomotives, to orbital stations, humanity has been learning the same lesson: how to sustain movement and life after leaving its original environment.