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Bunker: The Latest Architecture and News

The St. Pauli Bunker Reopens as a Green Destination in Hamburg, Germany

Dating from the1940s, the air raid shelter in Hamburg’s St. Pauli district has been reimagined as a „green mountain,” with expansive gardens covering the top of the wartime structure. Known as the Hochbunker, translated as ‘high bunker,’ the location has undergone a substantial restoration and refurbishment process introducing restaurants, event spaces, and a hotel, together with a rooftop urban park. The bunker has opened to the public on July 5, 2025, with the purpose of reconnecting the community with the iconic structure and its complex history.

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Shanghai Modern Art Museum / Atelier Deshaus

Shanghai Modern Art Museum / Atelier Deshaus - Refurbishment, FacadeShanghai Modern Art Museum / Atelier Deshaus - Refurbishment, Facade, BeamShanghai Modern Art Museum / Atelier Deshaus - Refurbishment, Stairs, HandrailShanghai Modern Art Museum / Atelier Deshaus - Refurbishment, Stairs, Facade, Handrail, CityscapeShanghai Modern Art Museum / Atelier Deshaus - More Images+ 39

Dorte Mandrup Wins Competition to Construct Heritage Center Atop a WWII Bunker 

Dorte Mandrup Wins Competition to Construct Heritage Center Atop a WWII Bunker  - Image 1 of 4
© Mir

Danish firm Dorte Mandrup A/S has been announced as the winners of a competition to design the new Trilateral Wadden Sea World Heritage Partnership Center on a historic UNESCO naval site in Wilhelmshaven, Germany. Selected from 14 entries, the firm’s winning proposal will seemingly float atop an existing World War II bunker and house the offices of a joint Danish, German and Netherlandish corporation working to protect the Wadden Sea area.

750 Cubic Meters of Extracted Concrete Turned This Nazi Bunker Into a Gallery & Home

In a cultural capital like Berlin, where ‘pop-up’ stores appear in abandoned warehouses, local brands emerge from stores over-run with squatters, and nightclubs rave in power plants, it is only appropriate that an art gallery would find its home in a nearly indestructible concrete vessel. Such is the case with the “Berlin Bunker” in the heart of the fashionable “Mitte” district.

Monolithic and symmetrical, decorated only by thin strips of vertical windows on its four identical facades, this former Nazi air-raid shelter stands as a relic of Germany’s past.  Yet a closer look beyond its sharp-edged cornice reveals something unexpected: luscious green gardens and a luxurious penthouse, completed in 2007. This is the home of Christian Boros, the art collector whose private collection is stored and exhibited in the depths of the fortified bunker below.

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