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Berlin: The Latest Architecture and News

10 Fires That Changed Architecture Forever

With no casualties, last week's fire at the Glasgow School of Art, which caused significant damage to parts of the building and gutted Charles Rennie Mackintosh's canonical library room, will be remembered as a tragic event that robbed us of one of the best examples of Art Nouveau of its time. The intention of the Glasgow School of Art is to restore the building in the hope that in generations to come, the fire will be all but forgotten, a strategy which has been largely well received by the profession.

However, in the case of other fires things have not gone so smoothly: for millennia, fire has played a big role in determining the course of architectural history - by destroying precious artifacts, but often also by allowing something new to rise from the ashes. Read on after the break as we count down the top 10 fires that changed the course of architectural history.

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Tempelhof Airport Plans Denied by Berlin Voters

A plan to build 4,700 homes on the site of Berlin's Tempelhof Airport was blocked by voters this weekend. The airport, which was built in the 1920s and has a long history as a key site during World War Two and the Cold War, was closed in 2008 and there has since been a debate over what to with the vast site, including a 2011 competition to transform it into a park and other facilities, and an outlandish unofficial plan in 2009 to create a 1km high mountain on the site.

However perhaps the the most popular idea has also been the simplest: in 2010, the airport was opened to the public without any changes, and become an impromptu urban park popular with kite-flyers and roller-bladers who circle the site's runways.

Read on for more on the story

GRAFT + Kleihues+Kleihues Design Work/Live Housing in Berlin

GRAFT and Kleihues+Kleihues has teamed up with Genossenschaft für urbane Kreativität (Cooperative for urban Creativity) to realize a complex of five towers centered around working and living in Berlin, Germany. Titled “Eckwerk,” the new complex is set to rise within the confines of an existing viaduct, whose shape and materiality served as the project’s main source of inspiration.

J. Mayer H. Wins Competition to Design Berlin "Experience Center"

J. Mayer H. has won an invited competition to design “Volt Berlin,” a new “shopping and urban experience” center near Berlin’s Alexanderplatz. The winning scheme offers a variety of experiential offerings, including multi-brand shopping, an indoor skydiving and event space, and a 7,500 square meter hotel, all within a single cubed complex whose organization is based off an uneven grid.

  • Architects

  • Location

    Alexanderplatz, 10178 Berlin, Germany
  • Photographs

    J. Mayer H.
  • Area

    29500.0 m2

Winners of the Berlin Natural Science Museum Competition Revealed

The winners of the international competition to design Berlin's new Natural Science Museum have been announced. The brief, which called for a large scale iconic building in the heart of the German capital, offered the opportunity for architects and students to design in a city founded in the 13th century.

Understanding that natural science museums are often simply seen as places for public spectacle, the organization behind the competition wanted to ensure that the "importance of the museum's specimen collections for documenting historical and present-day patterns of biological diversity cannot be overstated."

See the winning entry, along with the runners up, after the break.

Exhibition: 2D:3D Barkow Leibinger

Only 5 more days on the exhibition 2D:3D, an installation by Barkow Leibinger at the BDA Berlin Gallery. Covering the wall surfaces of the small gallery space with “tapete” or wallpaper the façade of the storefront gallery frames what Leon Battista Alberti described as a fenestra aperta. In this configuration the space of the gallery is a projection/ extension of the streetscape in the bourgeois residential historical Mommsenstrasse neighborhood.

Exhibition: New Moscow - Новая Москва, Urban Development by International Competitions 2012-2014

A new series of international architecture competitions are characterizing a clear change in the current urban planning strategy of Moscow. The initiator of these developments is the incumbent chief architect of the Russian capital, Sergey Kuznetsov. Together with his team, he has breathed new life into Moscow’s urban development since taking office in mid 2012. The exhibition New Moscow – Новая Москва presents two international competitions – from the fields of landscape planning (1st prize Diller Scofidio + Renfro, New York) and cultural building (1st prize Heneghan Peng, Dublin) – and through these demonstrates the great gains for the city’s urban planning that are being drawn from this open, global approach.

OMA Tops BIG, Büro Ole Scheeren to Design Axel Springer Campus in Berlin

After deliberating over the stellar proposals of three renowned firms, BIG, Büro Ole Scheeren, and OMA, Berlin-based media company AXEL SPRINGER SE has just announced that Rem Koolhaas' design is the winning proposal for their new office building.

The task of the competition was to create additional space for the media company, particularly its digital offers, and thus design a workplace fit for the future of online media. Koolhaas' design, which features a large 30-meter high atrium or "open valley" with interconnected terraces and public workspaces for both individual, collaborative, and mobile work, won favor with the jury for its forward-thinking concept. As Dr. Mathias Döpfner, Chief Executive Officer of Axel Springer SE, commented: “[Koolhaas] presented the conceptually and esthetically most radical model. The fundamental innovation of working environments will support the cultural transformation towards a digital publishing house."

For his part, Koolhaas had this to say: “It is a wonderful occasion to build in Berlin again, on this historical site of all places, for a client who has mobilized architecture to help perform a radical change…a workplace in all its dimensions.”

See more of OMA's winning proposal, after the break...

Berlin Wall Memorials Prove Controversial, Fall Behind Schedule

To commemorate the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall this autumn, Germany planned two memorials, one in Berlin and one in Leipzig. However, as Der Spiegel reports, not only are they almost certainly not going to be complete in time for the anniversary, they have both proven highly controversial with the local people. Will these designs turn out to be monuments to German reunification, or just monumental failures? Read the article on Der Spiegel to find out more.

Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt / Huber Staudt Architekten

Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt / Huber Staudt Architekten - Extension, Courtyard, Facade, DoorPhysikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt / Huber Staudt Architekten - Extension, Door, Facade, Handrail, StairsPhysikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt / Huber Staudt Architekten - Extension, FacadePhysikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt / Huber Staudt Architekten - Extension, Facade, Door, HandrailPhysikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt / Huber Staudt Architekten - More Images+ 6

Generator Berlin Mitte / Ester Bruzkus + DesignAgency

Generator Berlin Mitte / Ester Bruzkus + DesignAgency - Interior Design, Bedroom, Beam, BedGenerator Berlin Mitte / Ester Bruzkus + DesignAgency - Interior Design, Kitchen, Facade, Table, Bench, CountertopGenerator Berlin Mitte / Ester Bruzkus + DesignAgency - Interior Design, Facade, Beam, Arch, ArcadeGenerator Berlin Mitte / Ester Bruzkus + DesignAgency - Interior Design, FacadeGenerator Berlin Mitte / Ester Bruzkus + DesignAgency - More Images+ 9

Barkow Leibinger Win Competition For Berlin's Tallest High-Rise

Berlin's Barkow Leibinger has won an invited competition to design a new hotel tower and conference centre as part of Berlin's largest hotel complex, the Estrel. Establishing a new gateway to the center of Berlin from Schönefeld International Airport, the tower will stand at 175 meters (578 feet) making it the tallest high-rise in Berlin to date. Located on the Sonnenalle at the intersection of the Ship Canal, S-Bahn and Autobahn, the site acts as a threshold between the heterogeneous industrial and residential periphery of the city and the historical neighborhoods of Neukölln.

Townhouse B14 / XTH-berlin

Townhouse B14  / XTH-berlin - Houses, FacadeTownhouse B14  / XTH-berlin - Houses, Kitchen, Beam, Table, Chair, Sink, CountertopTownhouse B14  / XTH-berlin - Houses, Facade, BeamTownhouse B14  / XTH-berlin - Houses, Facade, Beam, Stairs, HandrailTownhouse B14  / XTH-berlin - More Images+ 25

Berlin, Germany
  • Architects: XTH-berlin
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  230
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2012
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  GIRA
  • Professionals: SchillerDrobka

Water Sports Centre / Oliver Mang Architekten

Water Sports Centre / Oliver Mang Architekten - Sports Architecture, FacadeWater Sports Centre / Oliver Mang Architekten - Sports Architecture, Arch, FacadeWater Sports Centre / Oliver Mang Architekten - Sports Architecture, FacadeWater Sports Centre / Oliver Mang Architekten - Sports Architecture, FacadeWater Sports Centre / Oliver Mang Architekten - More Images+ 14

"Too Radical to Implement Yet Too Relevant to Ignore": John Hejduk's Kreuzberg Tower

Robert Slinger, a founding partner of Berlin-based practice Kapok, narrates the story of a building "too radical to implement and too relevant to ignore." Having lived in John Hejduk's Kreuzberg Tower for eight years, Slinger "came to understand how Hejduk’s architecture both flexibly accommodates and yet asserts a presence which resists any attempts to co-opt it. Whilst impressed by its powerful exterior presence, its austerity and frontal directness left a strangely cold impression upon me."


"A house knows who loves it." – John Hejduk

"Too Radical to Implement Yet Too Relevant to Ignore": John Hejduk's Kreuzberg Tower - Residential Architecture"Too Radical to Implement Yet Too Relevant to Ignore": John Hejduk's Kreuzberg Tower - Residential Architecture"Too Radical to Implement Yet Too Relevant to Ignore": John Hejduk's Kreuzberg Tower - Residential Architecture"Too Radical to Implement Yet Too Relevant to Ignore": John Hejduk's Kreuzberg Tower - Residential ArchitectureToo Radical to Implement Yet Too Relevant to Ignore: John Hejduk's Kreuzberg Tower - More Images

Barkow Leibinger Places Third in Berlin’s Tallest Tower Competition

In a competition that ultimately crowned Frank Gehry as winner, Berlin’s Barkow Leibinger placed third with their 150-meter “faceted stacked building” proposal clad in glass. Aimed to be Berlin’s tallest building, the apartment and hotel tower is planned to be the city’s first high-rise residential development since the 1970s.

Frank Gehry Chosen to Design Berlin's Tallest Tower

Gehry Partners has been selected over David Chipperfield, Adjaye Associates and seven other practices in an invited competition for a 300-unit residential tower in Berlin. The winning proposal, deemed “the most compelling” by jury for its rotating stacks of sculptural, stone-clad cubes that rise up to 150 meters, is expected to be Berlin’s tallest skyscraper and Germany’s tallest residential tower.

“Gehry’s design is strong in visual expression and introduces an unusually eccentric, new pattern for this location. Nevertheless, the façade radiates agreeable tranquility. In addition, the design blends well with the neighborhood and conveys all aspects of metropolitan living,” commented Regula Lüscher, Senate Building Director.

Christmas Lights Berlin 2013 / Brut Deluxe by Miguel de Guzmán

Spanish architecture photographer Miguel de Guzmán has released a new video, just in time for Christmas. The video covers three light installations in Berlin designed by Brut Deluxe: the first, a huge light dome, the second consisting of five big three-dimensional light cubes, and the third, an artificial landscape built of 50 light shrubs. All of the installations are designed to create atmospheric spaces that can be entered and experienced. Check out more of his videos here, and some great pictures of the installations after the break...

Christmas Lights Berlin 2013 / Brut Deluxe by Miguel de Guzmán - LightingChristmas Lights Berlin 2013 / Brut Deluxe by Miguel de Guzmán - LightingChristmas Lights Berlin 2013 / Brut Deluxe by Miguel de Guzmán - LightingChristmas Lights Berlin 2013 / Brut Deluxe by Miguel de Guzmán - LightingChristmas Lights Berlin 2013 / Brut Deluxe by Miguel de Guzmán - More Images+ 14