In 1980, INFORS AG settled into its new home at Rittergasse 27 in Bottmingen. The company was growing fast, and it soon became clear that expansion to the building across the street was needed. Expansion plans were shared with staff, and just a few days later, a team member jokingly suggested, “Why don’t we just build a bridge between the two buildings?”
While others chuckled, our founder, Alexander Hawrylenko didn’t. He saw efficiency. He saw possibility. Most of all, he saw a shortcut to save time walking across the street in the rain. Within days, Alex was already sketching out ideas for a Passerelle over a public road, which was a first for Bottmingen. Of course, the local authorities were not amused. Permits? Road rights? Historic preservation? Bureaucracy said “No.” But Alex wasn’t the kind of man to take “no” from someone with a rubber stamp.
He negotiated, explained, re-explained, charmed, and insisted (probably all in one conversation). After weeks of persistence, the Bottmingen council gave approval, likely realizing, “If we don’t approve this bridge, he’ll just build it anyway.” And so it happened: the first-ever Passerelle over a public road in Bottmingen was built. To top it off, INFORS HT even installed a pneumatic tube system discreetly under the Passerelle floor, allowing messages and small items to fly between departments in seconds: Efficiency at its Swiss finest. The result? Faster communication, stronger collaboration, and a daily reminder that at INFORS HT, no idea is too crazy.. if it works.