The University of Kaiserslautern was founded on July 13, 1970 by the state of Rhineland-Palatinate as a constituent member of the twin University of Trier-Kaiserslautern. 191 students matriculated in the winter semester 1970/1971 in the Faculties of Mathematics, Physics and Technology. In 1972 the Faculties of Chemistry and Biology were founded. At the same time the Faculty of Technology was split into the Faculties of Mechanical Engineering and Electrotechnology, Architecture/Regional and Environmental Planning/Educational Sciences. In 1975 the twin university was split into two independent universities: The University of Trier and the University of Kaiserslautern. The Faculties, which were established successively, continuously strengthened the university's scientific character: Electrotechnology, later Electrical and Computer Engineering, Computer Science, Engineering, later Mechanical and Process Engineering, Architecture/Regional and Environmental Planning/Civil Engineering and Social and Economic Studies. The official name of the University is Technische Universität Kaiserslautern according to the new law on Higher Education of the Land Rhineland Palatinate which came into force on September 1, 2003.
Organization
Faculties
These are the 12 faculties in which the university is divided:
The integration of engineering and natural sciences is one of TU Kaiserslautern's main objectives. The state of Rhineland-Palatinate funds several research initiatives at the University of Kaiserlautern:
Artificial Intelligence Enhanced Cognition and Learning
Mathematics applied to real-world challenges
Nanostructured Catalysts
Symbolic Tools in Mathematics and their Application
Center for Commercial Vehicle Technology
Sports facilities
The university has a Sports Hall in building 28 which includes facilities for badminton, gym, table tennis, etc. Running, hockey, basketball and football can be played in the accompanying sports grounds.
EMECS-thon – an embedded systems marathon open to all students from EMECS consortial universities and partner universities, where the participating teams have 48 hours to develop an embedded systems project from scratch. The event is carried out simultaneously in the universities of the EMECS consortium, as well as in several partner universities each year.