Falling Walls Foundation
Falling Walls Foundation is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Falling Walls Foundation.
Falling Walls Foundation is a company.
Key people at Falling Walls Foundation.
Key people at Falling Walls Foundation.
The Falling Walls Foundation is a Berlin-based not-for-profit organization, not a commercial company or investment firm, dedicated to breaking down barriers in science and society by connecting researchers, business leaders, policymakers, and innovators.[1][2][7] Inspired by the fall of the Berlin Wall, its mission centers on fostering global discourse, celebrating scientific breakthroughs, and promoting inclusive excellence through events like the annual Falling Walls Science Summit, awards programs, and targeted initiatives such as the Female Science Talents Programme and Young Entrepreneurs in Science Program.[1][4][5][7] Rather than investing capital, it builds impact by creating platforms for idea-sharing, networking, and career development, influencing the startup ecosystem indirectly via entrepreneurship support for early-career scientists and interdisciplinary collaborations across physical sciences, life sciences, engineering, social sciences, and humanities.[2][6][7]
Founded in 2009 on the 20th anniversary of the Berlin Wall's fall (November 9, 1989), the Falling Walls Foundation emerged from the inaugural Falling Walls Conference, channeling the iconic event's symbolism of breaking physical and intellectual barriers into a global platform for science and society.[1][7][8] Key figures and supporters include partnerships with the German government, academic institutions, foundations, companies, and NGOs, though specific founding partners are not detailed in available sources.[6] Over time, its focus evolved from annual summits to a broader ecosystem of programs, notably launching the Female Science Talents initiative in 2020 to address gender inequality in science and expanding awards like the Science Breakthroughs of the Year to spotlight global innovations.[5][6][8]
The Falling Walls Foundation rides the trend of interdisciplinary innovation, where breakthroughs in AI, biotech, climate tech, and social sciences demand cross-sector collaboration to address planetary challenges like sustainability and inequality.[1][7] Its timing leverages post-Berlin Wall globalization and rising STEM inclusivity needs, amplified by events like Berlin Science Week, positioning Berlin as a science hub amid Europe's push for research sovereignty.[1][5][7] Market forces favoring it include growing corporate and governmental support for science communication, plus demand for diverse talent pipelines in tech-driven economies, where it influences the ecosystem by bridging academia to startups—e.g., via entrepreneur training that translates research into ventures—and promoting women-led innovation to close gender gaps in tech leadership.[2][5][8]
With 2025 Science Breakthroughs already announced and the Summit drawing Nobel winners, the Foundation is poised to expand its global reach through digital platforms and hybrid events, potentially scaling programs like Female Science Talents amid AI ethics and climate urgency.[7] Trends like open science, DEI mandates, and research commercialization will shape its growth, evolving its influence from convener to catalyst for policy-tech alliances. As barriers in science persist, it remains uniquely positioned to channel "the next walls to fall," echoing its Berlin Wall origins in driving humanity's forward momentum.[1][7]