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Bauhaus Dessau

Bauhaus Dessau, also Bauhaus-Building Dessau, is a building-complex in Dessau-Roßlau. It is considered the pinnacle of pre-war modern design in Europe and originated out of the dissolution of the Weimar School and the move by local politicians to reconcile the city's industrial character with its cultural past.[1]

The reconstructed Bauhaus-Building
Atelier-Building Prellerhaus
Bauhaus Dessau
Bauhaus Dessau – Entrance Area and Bridge Section

The building was constructed between 1925 and 1926 according to plans by Walter Gropius as a school building for the Bauhaus School of Art, Design and Architecture.[2] The building itself and the Masters' Houses that were built in the immediate vicinity established the reputation of the Bauhaus as an "icon of modernism".[citation needed]

War-damaged and structurally altered sections were largely reconstructed from 1965 onwards in the spirit of the original. The building was restored and partially modernized in 1976. Between 1996 and 2006, the building was restored and repaired in accordance with the principles of historical preservation.

Since 1996, the building complex has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Bauhaus and its Sites in Weimar, Dessau and Bernau, which also includes the Haus am Horn, the art school building and the main building of the Bauhaus University in Weimar, the Masters' Houses in Dessau, and since 2017, the Laubenganghäuser there as well as the ADGB Trade Union School in Bernau.[3]

Between 1925 and 1932, various other buildings by Bauhaus architects were also constructed in Dessau, including the Törten housing estate, the employment office and the Kornhaus restaurant.[4]

Bauhaus Building edit

Description edit

The building, constructed in the international style,[5] consists of five functionally structured parts, arranged additively in several wings. The reinforced concrete-frame structures were arranged on a flat site in such a way that there is no "front" in the customary sense.[6] In one of these wings was the " School of Arts and Crafts" (later to become a technical school), the workshop wing with its distinctive glass curtain wall and Atelierhaus. The wall's design evoked industrial innovation of a factory building rather than the tradition and civic elevation of an academic institution.[7] The Atelierhaus contained the dormitory studios for the students. The north wing of the crafts school and the workshop wing are connected by a two-story bridge. This was intended for administrative rooms and the building office of Gropius (later the Bauhaus architecture department). In a flat building between the workshop section and the Atelierhaus are the auditorium and stage as well as the Bauhaus cafeteria.

Apart from the then novel functional division of buildings, the most extraordinary feature of the complex, which caused quite a stir in those days, is the glass curtain of the workshop wing. The support columns were set inward to allow for an uninterrupted glass facade to stretch over all three floors as well as the entire length of the building. The impression is one of transparency, lightness and flatness. This novel, transparent monumental design overcame all prevailing ideas of aesthetics.

The absence of ornamentation consistently defines the entire complex. The "open" facade creates a new, also from an educational perspective, effective relationship between the inside and outside, giving the impression of freedom and clarity. However, the delicate glass facade with its steel frame caused major problems in terms of sun protection and building climate control. In summer, the building heated up considerably due to direct sunlight. A necessary sun protection system consisting of curtains destroyed the intended transparency. In winter the building cooled down very quickly due to the single pane glass and required extensive heating. Ventilation is provided by mechanically controlled slatted windows, which are very elaborate in detail.

Particularly striking is the protruding five-story building section, which is known as the Prellerhaus. After its completion in 1926, the 28 studios were used by young masters and students as living and working space. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe had studios converted into large classrooms in 1930. Since 2006 it has been available for overnight stays.

After the Bauhaus moved from Weimar to Dessau, the name of this part of the building was taken from the studio building of the same name in Weimar, which is named after its builder Louis Preller.

Characteristics edit

 
Corner of the workshop wing

As early as 1911, Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyer jointly designed the Fagus Factory in Alfeld (Leine). They used elements that would later become characteristic and determine the style: The entire building was organized according to function. The purpose of the building determined its form; its aesthetics resulted from its functionality. The facade design also foreshadowed its later usage. The revolutionary steel skeleton construction - load-bearing steel elements with brick infill covered by a flat roof - made it possible to forego structural reinforcement of the building corners. These "open corners" were supplemented with windows and balconies that wrapped around the edges, thereby conveying an impression of lightness. The curtain wall itself did not carry any load, but showed the load-bearing elements that had become integral parts of the design. New approaches were also taken in the color scheme. The outer walls were kept in a neutral, plain white, while the interior was painted in various colors between load-bearing and exterior elements. Each of the thirteen workshops made its own special contribution; the metal workshop, carpentry, stained glass, weaving, mural painting, and harmonization studies, among others, acted equally as both art and craft, all of which were united by the architecture workshop led by Walter Gropius, Hannes Meyer, and later Mies van der Rohe.

History edit

Background edit

The Bauhaus was renamed and reorganized in 1919 under the new management of Walter Gropius, who succeeded Henry van de Velde, as the successor institution to the Grand-Ducal Saxon Art School founded in 1906 by the Grand Duke of Saxony-Weimar. Walter Gropius, the architect, acted as director from 1919 to 1928. After the relationship with the increasingly right-wing dominated Thuringian state had become progressively more and more strained, the Bauhaus was forced to close down in 1925 due to political pressure. The declaration of closure had already been published in numerous daily newspapers on December 29, 1924. However, it only became legally binding after the expiration of the contracts, which were valid until March 31, 1925. The mayor of Dessau, Fritz Hesse, and his cultural advisor Ludwig Grote made it possible for Gropius to move the school to Dessau, where the Bauhaus was rebuilt between 1925 and 1926 according to Gropius' designs and recognized as the State University of Anhalt in 1926.

Formation edit

 
Rowac advertisement in a Bauhaus Dessau brochure - around 1927

In March 1925, Gropius' office was commissioned by the city of Dessau to design the community building for the Dessau School of Arts and Crafts (from 1926 onwards technical schools) and the Bauhaus. In September 1925, construction of the joint school building began. The topping-out ceremony was held on March 21, 1926, and the inauguration took place on December 4, 1926. The school had planned and carried out large parts of the furnishings themselves: Furniture and fixtures came from the carpentry workshop (seating in the assembly hall by Marcel Breuer). For the classrooms in the bridge wing as well as the workshops, Walter Gropius decided to use stools exclusively from the Chemnitz-based company Rowac.[8] The lamps were designed in the metal workshop mainly by Marianne Brandt, (lamps in the assembly hall by Max Krajewsky[9]) Furniture fabrics and curtain fabrics were made in the in-house weaving mill under Gunta Stölzl. The lettering came from the advertising workshop and the color scheme from the mural painting workshop.

With its foundation in 1926, an architecture department was also started up for the first time, which was headed by the Swiss-born Hannes Meyer in 1927. In 1928 Gropius resigned from management. Meyer, who was highly politically involved, succeeded him on April 1, 1928, and expanded the architecture department, but was also dismissed for political reasons on August 1, 1930, and emigrated with his family and a group of his students to Moscow. He was succeeded by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, who was unable to keep the Bauhaus out of the political turmoil, despite the school's professional and academic success.

Period of National Socialism edit

In 1931, a little over a year before Hitler's seizure of power, the NSDAP won 15 of the 36 seats in the municipal elections in Dessau, making it the strongest party. In their leaflet for the elections on October 25, 1931, the National Socialists support eight points, the first as follows:

"Immediate cancellation of all expenditures for the Bauhaus. Foreign teachers are to be dismissed without notice, since it is not in accordance with the responsibility which good community leadership must bear toward its people, that German comrades starve, while foreigners are paid in abundance out of the tax pennies of the suffering people. With the assistance of the municipality, German teachers are to be reassigned in Dessau or elsewhere. Accommodation must be provided elsewhere for the craftsmen schools in the Bauhaus. The demolition of the Bauhaus is to be initiated immediately."[10]

In the municipal council meeting on January 21, 1932, the NSDAP demanded that the building be demolished. This and the decision to cancel funding were narrowly avoided. On July 8, 1932, the National Socialist Alfred Freyberg, who was elected Prime Minister of the Free State of Anhalt, and the National Socialist art theorist and architect Paul Schultze-Naumburg visited Bauhaus Dessau. In the meantime, the voting conditions in the municipal council had changed, so on August 22, 1932, at the request of the NSDAP party, the decision was made to close the building. Mies van der Rohe still attempted to continue with the Bauhaus in Berlin as a private institute in Berlin-Lankwitz; but only a short time later (1933), the National Socialists finally forced the institution to close its doors. The Bauhaus building in Dessau served as the Gauführerschule in the Gau Magdeburg-Anhalt region.[11] A Gauführerschule or district leader school was a training institution of the NSDAP or one of its affiliated associations and was subordinate to the respective district authorities. Its goal was to develop the "ideological-political orientation" of the participants.

War- and Post-war Era edit

 
Reconstructed exterior of the building in 1983

In 1945 the building partially burned down after the heavy air raid on Dessau, and the glass facade of the workshop wing was also damaged. It was rebuilt in a simplified manner (the glass curtain wall was not reconstructed) and used as a vocational school, among other things.

In 1976 there was a first attempt to restore the original appearance, in which the destroyed glass curtain wall was reconstructed using a preserved remnant. For ease of maintenance, aluminum was used instead of steel. The Bauhaus was used as an educational center by the Office for Industrial Design, whose director Martin Kelm had been strongly committed to its preservation and reconstruction.

The Bauhaus director's house (Burgkühnauer Allee 1–6, now Ebertallee), along with half of one of the three Masters' Houses, were also destroyed by air raids. [12]

1994–1996 edit

Since 1994, the building in Dessau has been the headquarters of the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation, which is committed to "preserving the legacy of the historic Bauhaus and communicating it to the public" and "in light of this legacy, to making contributions to shape today's living environment".[13] Since 1996, the building complex has been on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

Restoration 1996–2006 edit

Between 1996 and 2006, Bauhaus Dessau was repaired and restored based on the plans of the 1920s and other findings for 17 million euros.[14]

The Bauhaus Dessau was included in the Blaubuch in 2001. This is a list of nationally significant cultural institutions in East Germany and currently includes 20 so-called cultural lighthouses.

After the last restoration work was completed in 2009, the building could once again be viewed almost as it was originally planned and built. Nevertheless, there are differences to the original building structure, which cannot be resolved due to the building's eventful history, modern necessities and considerations of monument preservation. These include, among others:

  • The glass facade of the workshop building was originally crystal glazed and therefore reflected much more strongly than today's conventional glass. On old photos by Lucia Moholy the original impression is still preserved.
  • Furniture and door handles were partly substituted with faithfully reproduced replicas. This was favored among other things by the fact that some of the old designs are now being mass-produced again. Other pieces, such as the seating in the assembly hall, are new one-off productions.
  • Some of the building materials used at that time were experimental, so that they required constant repairs, such as the floors made of stone wood screed or triolin.
  • The building was newly wired and electrified.
  • In the course of a fundamental redesign of the surroundings, the outdoor facilities were also redesigned.[15] The planner was the landscape architect Tobias Mann from Fulda.[16]

Current Usage edit

 
Present-day Logo

Today, most of the building is used by the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation, founded in 1994, which has the mission of preserving and communicating the legacy of the Bauhaus and keeping its ideas alive. To this end, it is active, among other things, in the preservation of monuments and in curatorial outreach as well as education and research. The foundation also maintains an in-house collection and research library. The former student quarters on the balcony side of the east wing are rented out for short stays. Furthermore, there is a lease agreement with the Anhalt University of Applied Sciences. Currently, six rooms on the ground floor of the north wing are used for teaching activities.

To mark the 100th anniversary of the Bauhaus in 2019, a newly built museum opened in Dessau's city centre on 8 September 2019.[17]

Masters' Houses (Meisterhäuser) edit

 
German commemorative stamp (2004)

Near the Bauhaus (Ebertallee 65–71, 51°50′36″N 12°13′14″E / 51.8432°N 12.2205°E / 51.8432; 12.2205), Walter Gropius built the masters' houses as accommodation for the masters of the Bauhaus. These also served as model houses for modern living. The client was the city of Dessau, and the Bauhaus masters lived there as tenants.

From east to west, there was Gropius' house and the double houses for Moholy-Nagy/Feininger, Muche/Schlemmer[18] and Kandinsky/Klee. The three double houses had identical floor plans, with one half forming nearly a mirror image of the other and rotated by 90 degrees.

Characteristic for the architecture of these houses is their cubic shape featuring a flat roof, their expansive, monochrome surfaces and their large windows, which create a connection between the inside and outside. This connection is also thematised by the expansive terraces and balconies as well as the numerous doors: From nearly every room there is a door providing access to the outdoors. Elements that are highly visible from the outside are also the radiators of the central heating system, with which "the contemporary" was to be conveyed outwards for everyone to admire. For example, this even led to the radiators in the bathrooms being placed in thermally unsuitable locations, just so that they would be clearly visible from the outside through the windows.

The large studio windows of the house reflect the trees out in front. These reflections mix with the trees behind the house, rendering these elements nearly invisible or, in a sense, transparent. It is not possible to say whether this effect of lightness or openness was initially intended by the builders, as the tree population at the time is not known in detail.

The master houses of Gropius and Moholy-Nagy were destroyed in a bombing raid in 1945. In the 1950s, a residential building with a traditional gable roof was built on the foundations of the destroyed Gropius house (Emmer Haus). The bombed half of the Moholy-Nagy house was demolished leaving an open space which left the Feininger house to stand alone (it is currently used by the Kurt Weill Centre).

In the 1990s, the remaining houses were extensively restored, partly with private funds. In the process, attempts were made to restore the original colour schemes of the interiors, which were based on the colour theory of the Bauhaus. Since each interior's colour scheme corresponded to its occupant, the rooms today feature exemplary colour combinations that only attempt to reflect the state of a room at a particular time.

The few existing historical photographs of the interiors show that the residents of the Masters' Houses adapted the interior design very much to the prevailing zeitgeist of the time, quite the opposite of the exterior appearance. Only Moholy-Nagy furnished his house according to the results, principles and products of the Bauhaus. In the Kandinsky house, one wall has been reconstructed true to the original with gold leaf.

Today, the Gropius and Moholy-Nagy Masters' Houses, which were destroyed during the war, have been rebuilt as abstract reinterpretations of the original architecture at the suggestion of the British architect David Chipperfield under the direction of the Berlin office Bruno-Fioretti-Marquez. The interior walls were designed by conceptual artist Olaf Nicolai with different types of plaster and shades of white, creating a changing impression depending on the incidence of light.[19] The official reopening of the Masters' Houses was carried out by the Federal President of Germany, Gauck, on 16 May 2014.[20] The earlier debate about whether the houses should be reconstructed true to the original has now become obsolete.[21]

A kiosk (Trinkhalle) built in the neighbourhood of the Masters' Housing Estate according to plans by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was demolished in the 1970s. In 2013, the kiosk was rebuilt as part of the renovation of the Masters' Housing Estate.

Törten Housing Estate (Siedlung Dessau-Törten) edit

In addition, a settlement with a total of 314 terraced houses (Großring, Mittelring, Kleinring) was built in Törten in what is now Dessau-Süd in 1926/1928. The settlement was also intended to be an example of how the rampant housing shortage of the Weimar Republic could be combated. The living spaces of the houses were accordingly quite small at 57 to 75 m2. At the same time, each house had a generous garden of 350 to 400 m2, which was intended to facilitate self-sufficiency. An industrial construction method with mass production of components ensured low costs.[22] The units were sold and not rented out in order to protect the owners from rising rents. Architecturally, the settlement also offered some novelties. In accordance with Gropius' maxim that building is also the design of life processes, the buildings took into account considerations of sun exposure at different times of the day and year and the processes in a residential building. Because of the flat roof construction, the houses were strongly criticised by conservatives.

The settlement has undergone numerous subsequent changes. The window facades in particular have been changed almost throughout. Numerous individual facade designs have softened the original uniform impression of the development, which is still well preserved despite these alterations. The Anton House in Doppelreihe 35 is largely preserved in its original condition and can be visited as part of a guided tour.[23][24] The house at Mittelring 38 was faithfully restored beginning in 1992 and is now used by the Moses Mendelssohn Society.[25]

The Konsum building (a kind of enclosed department store), designed by Walter Gropius in 1928, became a centre of the Törten housing estate. It consists of two interlocking cubes, a horizontal shop section and a vertical three-storey residential section. This is how it is still used today. These days, the former shop section houses an information centre on the Törten settlement, which offers daily guided tours.

Arcade Houses (Laubenganghäuser) edit

As part of the planned expansion of the Törten estate, the arcade houses (Mittelbreite, Peterholzstr.) located to the south and built from 1929 to 1930 were conceived. They were built under the direction of Hannes Mayer, who was Gropius' successor as director of the Bauhaus. In contrast to the buildings of the original Törten estate, the arcade houses (Laubenganghäuser) are multi-storey apartment buildings with the namesake, external arcade passage (Laubengang), which connects the flat entrances with the stairwell. In accordance with Meyer's slogan "people's needs instead of luxury needs", the living spaces here were also kept extremely compact. 48 m2 were supposed to be enough for a family of up to four. The units were rented out for a small fee.[26] Today, a model residence that has been faithfully restored to its original state can be visited.

Since 2017, the arcade houses are part of the Bauhaus UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Building reconstruction edit

In August 2019, researchers and students from the University of Kassel, under the direction of professor Philipp Oswalt, built a residential building in the Laubengang estate according to the plans of the architect and Bauhaus teacher Ludwig Hilberseimer.[27]

Additional buildings edit

The Fieger House is located near the settlement in Südstraße. The house, built in the summer of 1927, is the only realised design by Carl Fieger from a series of plans for small houses that were to be built using a rational construction method with versatile rooms. As a privately used residential building, it is not open to the public.

 
Stahlhaus from Georg Muche and Richard Paulick

The so-called Steel House (Stahlhaus) was built in 1926/1927 and was a joint work by Richard Paulick and the Bauhaus master Georg Muche. They wanted to continue the rationalisation efforts of Walter Gropius (prefabrication of concrete parts) by using prefabricated steel plates in a dry assembly process. The Steel House remained an experiment, however, because it struggled greatly with the "hot-cold problem" due to the properties of the material. After restoration, it housed an information centre on the Törten Housing Estate until June 2011. Today it can be visited during daily guided tours.

 
The former employment office

The first city employment office (Arbeitsamt) (today the Office for Regulation and Transportation of the City of Dessau-Roßlau) was built in 1928/1929 according to designs by Walter Gropius. Gropius' private architectural office also carried out the construction. Richard Paulick was heavily involved in the construction of the employment office. The external impression was, however, massively altered by retrofitted wooden windows.

The Kornhaus sightseeing restaurant was built in 1929/1930 on behalf of the city of Dessau and the Schultheiss-Patzenhofer brewery directly on the Elbe dyke according to plans by Carl Fieger. The name recalls an old granary that stood here directly on the Elbe from the mid-18th century until the 1870s. The building is still used as a restaurant today.[28]

Bauhaus tour edit

 
Bauhaus tour signpost

The Bauhaus Tour is a 17 km long bicycle route. The signposted circular route connects all the monuments of Bauhaus architecture in Dessau.

Literature edit

  • Kirsten Baumann: Bauhaus Dessau. Architektur, Gestaltung, Idee. Jovis, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-939633-11-2.
  • Wolfgang Thöner: Das Bauhaus. Führer durch seine Bauten in Dessau. Edition RK, Dessau 2006, ISBN 978-3-934388-19-2.
  • Neue Meisterhäuser für Dessau – Die reparierte Siedlung. Sonderpublikation der Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau, 2013, 52 S., no ISBN.
  • Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau (Hrsg.): Neue Meisterhäuser in Dessau, 1925–2014. Debatten. Positionen. Kontexte (= Edition Bauhaus. 46). Spector Books, Leipzig 2017, ISBN 978-3-944669-61-8 (with photography from Heidi Specker and Armin Linke).
  • Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau (Hrsg.): Welterbestätte Bauhaus (= Bauhaus Taschenbuch. 21). Spector Books, Leipzig 2017, ISBN 978-3-95905-153-8.
  • Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau (Hrsg.): Das Bauhausgebäude in Dessau (= Bauhaus Taschenbuch. 5). 2., durchgesehen Auflage, Spector Books, Leipzig 2016, ISBN 978-3-95905-126-2.
  • Philipp Oswalt (Hrsg.): Bauhaus Streit. 1919–2009. Kontroversen und Kontrahenten. Hatje Cantz, Ostfildern 2009, ISBN 978-3-7757-2454-8.
  • P. Meyer: Vom Bauhaus Dessau, Schweizerische Bauzeitung, Bd. 89, 18 June 1927

Films edit

  • Design-Legende und Zuhause. Die Meisterhäuser von Dessau. Documentary film, Germany, 2016, 29:34 Min., book and direction: Anna Schmidt, Production: MDR, Series: Der Osten – Entdecke wo du lebst, first broadcast: 22 November 2016 on MDR, summary from MDR with online-Video available until November 22, 2017.

External links edit

  • Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau - Official Website
  • Bauhaus Verein – Friends of the Bauhaus and Contemporary Dessau
  • Bauhaus Museum Dessau
  • Ein Streifzug durch die Dessauer Bauhausbauten 31 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine In: Bauhausstadt.de
  • Bauhaus Dessau as a 3D-Model on 3D Warehouse from SketchUp

Articles

  • Fotobericht Bauhaus und Meisterhäuser in Dessau, May 2006
  • Ute Maasberg: Feininger-Meisterhaus.Der Schrei nach Farbe. In: Goethe-Institut, April 2012
  • Bericht zur Ausstellung "Bauhaus: Dessau, Chicago, New York" and 2. Teil, 19 October 2000

References edit

  1. ^ Pottgiesser, Uta; Ayón, Angel; Richards, Nathaniel (2019). Reglazing Modernism: Intervention Strategies for 20th-Century Icons. Basel: Birkhäuser. p. 196. ISBN 978-3-0356-1934-8.
  2. ^ Kleiner, Fred S. (2020). Gardner's Art through the Ages: The Western Perspective, Volume II. Boston, MA: Cengage Learning. p. 928. ISBN 978-0-357-37046-9.
  3. ^ Heuvel, Dirk van den; Mesman, Maarten; Quist, Wido; Lemmens, Bert (2008). The Challenge of Change: Dealing with the Legacy of the Modern Movement. Amsterdam: IOS Press. p. 475. ISBN 978-1-58603-917-2.
  4. ^ Strüber, Reinhard (2017). DuMont BILDATLAS Sachsen-Anhalt: Im Land der Reformer. Dumont Reiseverlag. p. 18. ISBN 978-3-616-45096-4.
  5. ^ Lewis, Richard L.; Lewis, Susan Ingalls (2018). The Power of Art, Revised. Boston, MA: Cengage Learning. p. 428. ISBN 978-1-337-55556-2.
  6. ^ Moffett, Marian; Fazio, Michael W.; Wodehouse, Lawrence (2003). A World History of Architecture. London: Laurence King Publishing. p. 2010. ISBN 1-85669-353-8.
  7. ^ Bergdoll, Barry; Beyer, John H. (2016). "Marcel Breuer: Bauhaus Tradition, Brutalist Invention": The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, v. 74, no. 1 (Summer, 2015). New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 30. ISBN 978-1-58839-611-2.
  8. ^ Das Bauhausgebäude in Dessau. Die ästhetischen Kategorien Zweck – Form – Inhalt. Gebr.-Mann-Verlag. 2005. pp. 77f.
  9. ^ Manfred Sack: Das restaurierte Bauhaus in Dessau und das neue Bauhaus-Archiv in Berlin. In: ERCO Lichtbericht, 12, 1981, (PDF; 7 S., 3,2 MB).
  10. ^ Flugblatt, abgebildet in: Philipp Oswalt (Hrsg.): Dessau 1945. Moderne zerstört. 2014, ISBN 978-3-944669-57-1.
  11. ^ "AK Dessau, Schlageterplatz mit der Gauschule, Bauhaus | 6985121 | Alte Ansichtskarten / Postkarten". Archived from the original on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). In: ak-ansichtskarten.de und Postkarte mit der "Gauführerschule der N.S.D.A.P.". In: picclick.de, retrieved 27 December 2016.
  12. ^ https://bauhauskooperation.com/knowledge/the-bauhaus/works/architecture/masters-houses-dessau/
  13. ^ "Bauhaus Dessau". www.bauhaus-dessau.de. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 December 2006. Retrieved 6 February 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) In: MDR Figaro, 4 December 2006.
  15. ^ Pohl, ECHO-Marko. "Umfeld Bauhaus Dessau / Projekte / Mann Landschaftsarchitektur". mann-la.de (in German). Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  16. ^ "Bauhaus | Kronimus". www.kronimus.de. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  17. ^ "Eröffnung Bauhaus Museum Dessau". Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  18. ^ Harald, Martenstein. "Ein ungemütliches Angeberhaus". www.zeit.de. from the original on 19 July 2009. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 March 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). In: Deutschlandradio Kultur, 16 May 2014, Olaf Nicolai im Gespräch mit Britta Bürger.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 May 2014. Retrieved 6 February 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). In: Goethe-Institut, 16 May 2014.
  21. ^ Mrass, Marcus. . Archived from the original on 28 December 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) In: DenkmalDebatten, November 2009.
  22. ^ "Bauhaussiedlung Dessau-Törten". Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  23. ^ "Haus Anton - Leben in der Siedlung Dessau-Törten". www.bauhaus-dessau.de (in German). Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  24. ^ "Haus Anton in der Siedlung Törten - Neueröffnung des nahezu komplett erhaltenen Musterhauses 2012". www.bauhaus-dessau.de (in German). Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  25. ^ Bericht zur Rekonstruktion und Sanierung des Reihenhauses Mittelring 38, Amt für Denkmalpflege der Stadt Dessau. 6 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine In: bauhausverein.de, retrieved 14 April 2019.
  26. ^ "Laubenganghäuser". Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  27. ^ "Neues Bauhaus-Gebäude in Dessau errichtet". Uni Kassel. 8 August 2019. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
  28. ^ "Relation: Bauhaustour (1606376)". OpenStreetMap. Retrieved 6 February 2021.


51°50′21″N 12°13′38″E / 51.8392°N 12.2272°E / 51.8392; 12.2272

bauhaus, dessau, broader, subject, bauhaus, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books,. For the broader subject see Bauhaus This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bauhaus Dessau news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Bauhaus Dessau also Bauhaus Building Dessau is a building complex in Dessau Rosslau It is considered the pinnacle of pre war modern design in Europe and originated out of the dissolution of the Weimar School and the move by local politicians to reconcile the city s industrial character with its cultural past 1 The reconstructed Bauhaus Building Atelier Building Prellerhaus Bauhaus Dessau Bauhaus Dessau Entrance Area and Bridge Section The building was constructed between 1925 and 1926 according to plans by Walter Gropius as a school building for the Bauhaus School of Art Design and Architecture 2 The building itself and the Masters Houses that were built in the immediate vicinity established the reputation of the Bauhaus as an icon of modernism citation needed War damaged and structurally altered sections were largely reconstructed from 1965 onwards in the spirit of the original The building was restored and partially modernized in 1976 Between 1996 and 2006 the building was restored and repaired in accordance with the principles of historical preservation Since 1996 the building complex has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Bauhaus and its Sites in Weimar Dessau and Bernau which also includes the Haus am Horn the art school building and the main building of the Bauhaus University in Weimar the Masters Houses in Dessau and since 2017 the Laubenganghauser there as well as the ADGB Trade Union School in Bernau 3 Between 1925 and 1932 various other buildings by Bauhaus architects were also constructed in Dessau including the Torten housing estate the employment office and the Kornhaus restaurant 4 Contents 1 Bauhaus Building 1 1 Description 1 2 Characteristics 1 3 History 1 3 1 Background 1 3 2 Formation 1 3 3 Period of National Socialism 1 3 4 War and Post war Era 1 3 5 1994 1996 1 3 6 Restoration 1996 2006 1 3 7 Current Usage 2 Masters Houses Meisterhauser 3 Torten Housing Estate Siedlung Dessau Torten 4 Arcade Houses Laubenganghauser 5 Building reconstruction 6 Additional buildings 7 Bauhaus tour 8 Literature 9 Films 10 External links 11 ReferencesBauhaus Building editDescription edit The building constructed in the international style 5 consists of five functionally structured parts arranged additively in several wings The reinforced concrete frame structures were arranged on a flat site in such a way that there is no front in the customary sense 6 In one of these wings was the School of Arts and Crafts later to become a technical school the workshop wing with its distinctive glass curtain wall and Atelierhaus The wall s design evoked industrial innovation of a factory building rather than the tradition and civic elevation of an academic institution 7 The Atelierhaus contained the dormitory studios for the students The north wing of the crafts school and the workshop wing are connected by a two story bridge This was intended for administrative rooms and the building office of Gropius later the Bauhaus architecture department In a flat building between the workshop section and the Atelierhaus are the auditorium and stage as well as the Bauhaus cafeteria Apart from the then novel functional division of buildings the most extraordinary feature of the complex which caused quite a stir in those days is the glass curtain of the workshop wing The support columns were set inward to allow for an uninterrupted glass facade to stretch over all three floors as well as the entire length of the building The impression is one of transparency lightness and flatness This novel transparent monumental design overcame all prevailing ideas of aesthetics The absence of ornamentation consistently defines the entire complex The open facade creates a new also from an educational perspective effective relationship between the inside and outside giving the impression of freedom and clarity However the delicate glass facade with its steel frame caused major problems in terms of sun protection and building climate control In summer the building heated up considerably due to direct sunlight A necessary sun protection system consisting of curtains destroyed the intended transparency In winter the building cooled down very quickly due to the single pane glass and required extensive heating Ventilation is provided by mechanically controlled slatted windows which are very elaborate in detail Particularly striking is the protruding five story building section which is known as the Prellerhaus After its completion in 1926 the 28 studios were used by young masters and students as living and working space Ludwig Mies van der Rohe had studios converted into large classrooms in 1930 Since 2006 it has been available for overnight stays After the Bauhaus moved from Weimar to Dessau the name of this part of the building was taken from the studio building of the same name in Weimar which is named after its builder Louis Preller Characteristics edit nbsp Corner of the workshop wing As early as 1911 Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyer jointly designed the Fagus Factory in Alfeld Leine They used elements that would later become characteristic and determine the style The entire building was organized according to function The purpose of the building determined its form its aesthetics resulted from its functionality The facade design also foreshadowed its later usage The revolutionary steel skeleton construction load bearing steel elements with brick infill covered by a flat roof made it possible to forego structural reinforcement of the building corners These open corners were supplemented with windows and balconies that wrapped around the edges thereby conveying an impression of lightness The curtain wall itself did not carry any load but showed the load bearing elements that had become integral parts of the design New approaches were also taken in the color scheme The outer walls were kept in a neutral plain white while the interior was painted in various colors between load bearing and exterior elements Each of the thirteen workshops made its own special contribution the metal workshop carpentry stained glass weaving mural painting and harmonization studies among others acted equally as both art and craft all of which were united by the architecture workshop led by Walter Gropius Hannes Meyer and later Mies van der Rohe History edit Background edit The Bauhaus was renamed and reorganized in 1919 under the new management of Walter Gropius who succeeded Henry van de Velde as the successor institution to the Grand Ducal Saxon Art School founded in 1906 by the Grand Duke of Saxony Weimar Walter Gropius the architect acted as director from 1919 to 1928 After the relationship with the increasingly right wing dominated Thuringian state had become progressively more and more strained the Bauhaus was forced to close down in 1925 due to political pressure The declaration of closure had already been published in numerous daily newspapers on December 29 1924 However it only became legally binding after the expiration of the contracts which were valid until March 31 1925 The mayor of Dessau Fritz Hesse and his cultural advisor Ludwig Grote made it possible for Gropius to move the school to Dessau where the Bauhaus was rebuilt between 1925 and 1926 according to Gropius designs and recognized as the State University of Anhalt in 1926 Formation edit nbsp Rowac advertisement in a Bauhaus Dessau brochure around 1927 In March 1925 Gropius office was commissioned by the city of Dessau to design the community building for the Dessau School of Arts and Crafts from 1926 onwards technical schools and the Bauhaus In September 1925 construction of the joint school building began The topping out ceremony was held on March 21 1926 and the inauguration took place on December 4 1926 The school had planned and carried out large parts of the furnishings themselves Furniture and fixtures came from the carpentry workshop seating in the assembly hall by Marcel Breuer For the classrooms in the bridge wing as well as the workshops Walter Gropius decided to use stools exclusively from the Chemnitz based company Rowac 8 The lamps were designed in the metal workshop mainly by Marianne Brandt lamps in the assembly hall by Max Krajewsky 9 Furniture fabrics and curtain fabrics were made in the in house weaving mill under Gunta Stolzl The lettering came from the advertising workshop and the color scheme from the mural painting workshop With its foundation in 1926 an architecture department was also started up for the first time which was headed by the Swiss born Hannes Meyer in 1927 In 1928 Gropius resigned from management Meyer who was highly politically involved succeeded him on April 1 1928 and expanded the architecture department but was also dismissed for political reasons on August 1 1930 and emigrated with his family and a group of his students to Moscow He was succeeded by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe who was unable to keep the Bauhaus out of the political turmoil despite the school s professional and academic success Period of National Socialism edit In 1931 a little over a year before Hitler s seizure of power the NSDAP won 15 of the 36 seats in the municipal elections in Dessau making it the strongest party In their leaflet for the elections on October 25 1931 the National Socialists support eight points the first as follows Immediate cancellation of all expenditures for the Bauhaus Foreign teachers are to be dismissed without notice since it is not in accordance with the responsibility which good community leadership must bear toward its people that German comrades starve while foreigners are paid in abundance out of the tax pennies of the suffering people With the assistance of the municipality German teachers are to be reassigned in Dessau or elsewhere Accommodation must be provided elsewhere for the craftsmen schools in the Bauhaus The demolition of the Bauhaus is to be initiated immediately 10 In the municipal council meeting on January 21 1932 the NSDAP demanded that the building be demolished This and the decision to cancel funding were narrowly avoided On July 8 1932 the National Socialist Alfred Freyberg who was elected Prime Minister of the Free State of Anhalt and the National Socialist art theorist and architect Paul Schultze Naumburg visited Bauhaus Dessau In the meantime the voting conditions in the municipal council had changed so on August 22 1932 at the request of the NSDAP party the decision was made to close the building Mies van der Rohe still attempted to continue with the Bauhaus in Berlin as a private institute in Berlin Lankwitz but only a short time later 1933 the National Socialists finally forced the institution to close its doors The Bauhaus building in Dessau served as the Gaufuhrerschule in the Gau Magdeburg Anhalt region 11 A Gaufuhrerschule or district leader school was a training institution of the NSDAP or one of its affiliated associations and was subordinate to the respective district authorities Its goal was to develop the ideological political orientation of the participants War and Post war Era edit nbsp Reconstructed exterior of the building in 1983 In 1945 the building partially burned down after the heavy air raid on Dessau and the glass facade of the workshop wing was also damaged It was rebuilt in a simplified manner the glass curtain wall was not reconstructed and used as a vocational school among other things In 1976 there was a first attempt to restore the original appearance in which the destroyed glass curtain wall was reconstructed using a preserved remnant For ease of maintenance aluminum was used instead of steel The Bauhaus was used as an educational center by the Office for Industrial Design whose director Martin Kelm had been strongly committed to its preservation and reconstruction The Bauhaus director s house Burgkuhnauer Allee 1 6 now Ebertallee along with half of one of the three Masters Houses were also destroyed by air raids 12 1994 1996 edit Since 1994 the building in Dessau has been the headquarters of the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation which is committed to preserving the legacy of the historic Bauhaus and communicating it to the public and in light of this legacy to making contributions to shape today s living environment 13 Since 1996 the building complex has been on the UNESCO World Heritage List Restoration 1996 2006 edit Between 1996 and 2006 Bauhaus Dessau was repaired and restored based on the plans of the 1920s and other findings for 17 million euros 14 The Bauhaus Dessau was included in the Blaubuch in 2001 This is a list of nationally significant cultural institutions in East Germany and currently includes 20 so called cultural lighthouses After the last restoration work was completed in 2009 the building could once again be viewed almost as it was originally planned and built Nevertheless there are differences to the original building structure which cannot be resolved due to the building s eventful history modern necessities and considerations of monument preservation These include among others The glass facade of the workshop building was originally crystal glazed and therefore reflected much more strongly than today s conventional glass On old photos by Lucia Moholy the original impression is still preserved Furniture and door handles were partly substituted with faithfully reproduced replicas This was favored among other things by the fact that some of the old designs are now being mass produced again Other pieces such as the seating in the assembly hall are new one off productions Some of the building materials used at that time were experimental so that they required constant repairs such as the floors made of stone wood screed or triolin The building was newly wired and electrified In the course of a fundamental redesign of the surroundings the outdoor facilities were also redesigned 15 The planner was the landscape architect Tobias Mann from Fulda 16 Current Usage edit nbsp Present day Logo Today most of the building is used by the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation founded in 1994 which has the mission of preserving and communicating the legacy of the Bauhaus and keeping its ideas alive To this end it is active among other things in the preservation of monuments and in curatorial outreach as well as education and research The foundation also maintains an in house collection and research library The former student quarters on the balcony side of the east wing are rented out for short stays Furthermore there is a lease agreement with the Anhalt University of Applied Sciences Currently six rooms on the ground floor of the north wing are used for teaching activities To mark the 100th anniversary of the Bauhaus in 2019 a newly built museum opened in Dessau s city centre on 8 September 2019 17 Masters Houses Meisterhauser edit nbsp German commemorative stamp 2004 Near the Bauhaus Ebertallee 65 71 51 50 36 N 12 13 14 E 51 8432 N 12 2205 E 51 8432 12 2205 Walter Gropius built the masters houses as accommodation for the masters of the Bauhaus These also served as model houses for modern living The client was the city of Dessau and the Bauhaus masters lived there as tenants From east to west there was Gropius house and the double houses for Moholy Nagy Feininger Muche Schlemmer 18 and Kandinsky Klee The three double houses had identical floor plans with one half forming nearly a mirror image of the other and rotated by 90 degrees Characteristic for the architecture of these houses is their cubic shape featuring a flat roof their expansive monochrome surfaces and their large windows which create a connection between the inside and outside This connection is also thematised by the expansive terraces and balconies as well as the numerous doors From nearly every room there is a door providing access to the outdoors Elements that are highly visible from the outside are also the radiators of the central heating system with which the contemporary was to be conveyed outwards for everyone to admire For example this even led to the radiators in the bathrooms being placed in thermally unsuitable locations just so that they would be clearly visible from the outside through the windows The large studio windows of the house reflect the trees out in front These reflections mix with the trees behind the house rendering these elements nearly invisible or in a sense transparent It is not possible to say whether this effect of lightness or openness was initially intended by the builders as the tree population at the time is not known in detail The master houses of Gropius and Moholy Nagy were destroyed in a bombing raid in 1945 In the 1950s a residential building with a traditional gable roof was built on the foundations of the destroyed Gropius house Emmer Haus The bombed half of the Moholy Nagy house was demolished leaving an open space which left the Feininger house to stand alone it is currently used by the Kurt Weill Centre In the 1990s the remaining houses were extensively restored partly with private funds In the process attempts were made to restore the original colour schemes of the interiors which were based on the colour theory of the Bauhaus Since each interior s colour scheme corresponded to its occupant the rooms today feature exemplary colour combinations that only attempt to reflect the state of a room at a particular time The few existing historical photographs of the interiors show that the residents of the Masters Houses adapted the interior design very much to the prevailing zeitgeist of the time quite the opposite of the exterior appearance Only Moholy Nagy furnished his house according to the results principles and products of the Bauhaus In the Kandinsky house one wall has been reconstructed true to the original with gold leaf Today the Gropius and Moholy Nagy Masters Houses which were destroyed during the war have been rebuilt as abstract reinterpretations of the original architecture at the suggestion of the British architect David Chipperfield under the direction of the Berlin office Bruno Fioretti Marquez The interior walls were designed by conceptual artist Olaf Nicolai with different types of plaster and shades of white creating a changing impression depending on the incidence of light 19 The official reopening of the Masters Houses was carried out by the Federal President of Germany Gauck on 16 May 2014 20 The earlier debate about whether the houses should be reconstructed true to the original has now become obsolete 21 A kiosk Trinkhalle built in the neighbourhood of the Masters Housing Estate according to plans by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was demolished in the 1970s In 2013 the kiosk was rebuilt as part of the renovation of the Masters Housing Estate nbsp Haus Emmer demolished in 2011 nbsp Haus Gropius reconstructed in 2014 nbsp Haus Moholy Nagy Feininger reconstructed in 2014 nbsp Haus Moholy Nagy Feininger until 2011 nbsp Haus Muche Schlemmer nbsp Haus Kandinsky Klee nbsp Kiosk Trinkhalle Torten Housing Estate Siedlung Dessau Torten editIn addition a settlement with a total of 314 terraced houses Grossring Mittelring Kleinring was built in Torten in what is now Dessau Sud in 1926 1928 The settlement was also intended to be an example of how the rampant housing shortage of the Weimar Republic could be combated The living spaces of the houses were accordingly quite small at 57 to 75 m2 At the same time each house had a generous garden of 350 to 400 m2 which was intended to facilitate self sufficiency An industrial construction method with mass production of components ensured low costs 22 The units were sold and not rented out in order to protect the owners from rising rents Architecturally the settlement also offered some novelties In accordance with Gropius maxim that building is also the design of life processes the buildings took into account considerations of sun exposure at different times of the day and year and the processes in a residential building Because of the flat roof construction the houses were strongly criticised by conservatives The settlement has undergone numerous subsequent changes The window facades in particular have been changed almost throughout Numerous individual facade designs have softened the original uniform impression of the development which is still well preserved despite these alterations The Anton House in Doppelreihe 35 is largely preserved in its original condition and can be visited as part of a guided tour 23 24 The house at Mittelring 38 was faithfully restored beginning in 1992 and is now used by the Moses Mendelssohn Society 25 The Konsum building a kind of enclosed department store designed by Walter Gropius in 1928 became a centre of the Torten housing estate It consists of two interlocking cubes a horizontal shop section and a vertical three storey residential section This is how it is still used today These days the former shop section houses an information centre on the Torten settlement which offers daily guided tours Arcade Houses Laubenganghauser editAs part of the planned expansion of the Torten estate the arcade houses Mittelbreite Peterholzstr located to the south and built from 1929 to 1930 were conceived They were built under the direction of Hannes Mayer who was Gropius successor as director of the Bauhaus In contrast to the buildings of the original Torten estate the arcade houses Laubenganghauser are multi storey apartment buildings with the namesake external arcade passage Laubengang which connects the flat entrances with the stairwell In accordance with Meyer s slogan people s needs instead of luxury needs the living spaces here were also kept extremely compact 48 m2 were supposed to be enough for a family of up to four The units were rented out for a small fee 26 Today a model residence that has been faithfully restored to its original state can be visited Since 2017 the arcade houses are part of the Bauhaus UNESCO World Heritage Site Building reconstruction editIn August 2019 researchers and students from the University of Kassel under the direction of professor Philipp Oswalt built a residential building in the Laubengang estate according to the plans of the architect and Bauhaus teacher Ludwig Hilberseimer 27 nbsp Torten Housing Estate row houses nbsp Torten Housing Estate row house in original condition Doppelreihe 35 nbsp Torten Housing Estate Konsum Building nbsp Torten Housing Estate Stylistically adapted new housing on the Grossring nbsp Arcade House middle width Laubenganghaus Mittelbreite Additional buildings editThe Fieger House is located near the settlement in Sudstrasse The house built in the summer of 1927 is the only realised design by Carl Fieger from a series of plans for small houses that were to be built using a rational construction method with versatile rooms As a privately used residential building it is not open to the public nbsp Stahlhaus from Georg Muche and Richard Paulick The so called Steel House Stahlhaus was built in 1926 1927 and was a joint work by Richard Paulick and the Bauhaus master Georg Muche They wanted to continue the rationalisation efforts of Walter Gropius prefabrication of concrete parts by using prefabricated steel plates in a dry assembly process The Steel House remained an experiment however because it struggled greatly with the hot cold problem due to the properties of the material After restoration it housed an information centre on the Torten Housing Estate until June 2011 Today it can be visited during daily guided tours nbsp The former employment office The first city employment office Arbeitsamt today the Office for Regulation and Transportation of the City of Dessau Rosslau was built in 1928 1929 according to designs by Walter Gropius Gropius private architectural office also carried out the construction Richard Paulick was heavily involved in the construction of the employment office The external impression was however massively altered by retrofitted wooden windows The Kornhaus sightseeing restaurant was built in 1929 1930 on behalf of the city of Dessau and the Schultheiss Patzenhofer brewery directly on the Elbe dyke according to plans by Carl Fieger The name recalls an old granary that stood here directly on the Elbe from the mid 18th century until the 1870s The building is still used as a restaurant today 28 Bauhaus tour edit nbsp Bauhaus tour signpost The Bauhaus Tour is a 17 km long bicycle route The signposted circular route connects all the monuments of Bauhaus architecture in Dessau Literature editKirsten Baumann Bauhaus Dessau Architektur Gestaltung Idee Jovis Berlin 2007 ISBN 978 3 939633 11 2 Wolfgang Thoner Das Bauhaus Fuhrer durch seine Bauten in Dessau Edition RK Dessau 2006 ISBN 978 3 934388 19 2 Neue Meisterhauser fur Dessau Die reparierte Siedlung Sonderpublikation der Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau 2013 52 S no ISBN Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau Hrsg Neue Meisterhauser in Dessau 1925 2014 Debatten Positionen Kontexte Edition Bauhaus 46 Spector Books Leipzig 2017 ISBN 978 3 944669 61 8 with photography from Heidi Specker and Armin Linke Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau Hrsg Welterbestatte Bauhaus Bauhaus Taschenbuch 21 Spector Books Leipzig 2017 ISBN 978 3 95905 153 8 Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau Hrsg Das Bauhausgebaude in Dessau Bauhaus Taschenbuch 5 2 durchgesehen Auflage Spector Books Leipzig 2016 ISBN 978 3 95905 126 2 Philipp Oswalt Hrsg Bauhaus Streit 1919 2009 Kontroversen und Kontrahenten Hatje Cantz Ostfildern 2009 ISBN 978 3 7757 2454 8 P Meyer Vom Bauhaus Dessau Schweizerische Bauzeitung Bd 89 18 June 1927Films editDesign Legende und Zuhause Die Meisterhauser von Dessau Documentary film Germany 2016 29 34 Min book and direction Anna Schmidt Production MDR Series Der Osten Entdecke wo du lebst first broadcast 22 November 2016 on MDR summary from MDR with online Video available until November 22 2017 External links editStiftung Bauhaus Dessau Official Website Bauhaus Verein Friends of the Bauhaus and Contemporary Dessau Bauhaus Museum Dessau Ein Streifzug durch die Dessauer Bauhausbauten Archived 31 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine In Bauhausstadt de Bauhaus Dessau as a 3D Model on 3D Warehouse from SketchUp Articles Fotobericht Bauhaus und Meisterhauser in Dessau May 2006 Ute Maasberg Feininger Meisterhaus Der Schrei nach Farbe In Goethe Institut April 2012 Bericht zur Ausstellung Bauhaus Dessau Chicago New York and 2 Teil 19 October 2000References edit Pottgiesser Uta Ayon Angel Richards Nathaniel 2019 Reglazing Modernism Intervention Strategies for 20th Century Icons Basel Birkhauser p 196 ISBN 978 3 0356 1934 8 Kleiner Fred S 2020 Gardner s Art through the Ages The Western Perspective Volume II Boston MA Cengage Learning p 928 ISBN 978 0 357 37046 9 Heuvel Dirk van den Mesman Maarten Quist Wido Lemmens Bert 2008 The Challenge of Change Dealing with the Legacy of the Modern Movement Amsterdam IOS Press p 475 ISBN 978 1 58603 917 2 Struber Reinhard 2017 DuMont BILDATLAS Sachsen Anhalt Im Land der Reformer Dumont Reiseverlag p 18 ISBN 978 3 616 45096 4 Lewis Richard L Lewis Susan Ingalls 2018 The Power of Art Revised Boston MA Cengage Learning p 428 ISBN 978 1 337 55556 2 Moffett Marian Fazio Michael W Wodehouse Lawrence 2003 A World History of Architecture London Laurence King Publishing p 2010 ISBN 1 85669 353 8 Bergdoll Barry Beyer John H 2016 Marcel Breuer Bauhaus Tradition Brutalist Invention The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin v 74 no 1 Summer 2015 New York Metropolitan Museum of Art p 30 ISBN 978 1 58839 611 2 Das Bauhausgebaude in Dessau Die asthetischen Kategorien Zweck Form Inhalt Gebr Mann Verlag 2005 pp 77f Manfred Sack Das restaurierte Bauhaus in Dessau und das neue Bauhaus Archiv in Berlin In ERCO Lichtbericht 12 1981 PDF 7 S 3 2 MB Flugblatt abgebildet in Philipp Oswalt Hrsg Dessau 1945 Moderne zerstort 2014 ISBN 978 3 944669 57 1 AK Dessau Schlageterplatz mit der Gauschule Bauhaus 6985121 Alte Ansichtskarten Postkarten Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link In ak ansichtskarten de und Postkarte mit der Gaufuhrerschule der N S D A P In picclick de retrieved 27 December 2016 https bauhauskooperation com knowledge the bauhaus works architecture masters houses dessau Bauhaus Dessau www bauhaus dessau de Retrieved 6 February 2021 Bauhaus Dessau Die Ikone der Moderne ist 80 MDR DE Archived from the original on 5 December 2006 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link In MDR Figaro 4 December 2006 Pohl ECHO Marko Umfeld Bauhaus Dessau Projekte Mann Landschaftsarchitektur mann la de in German Retrieved 6 February 2021 Bauhaus Kronimus www kronimus de Retrieved 6 February 2021 Eroffnung Bauhaus Museum Dessau Retrieved 9 September 2019 Harald Martenstein Ein ungemutliches Angeberhaus www zeit de Archived from the original on 19 July 2009 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Architektur Ikonen der Moderne revisited Archived from the original on 25 March 2013 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link In Deutschlandradio Kultur 16 May 2014 Olaf Nicolai im Gesprach mit Britta Burger Architektur Nachrichten Goethe Institut Archived from the original on 17 May 2014 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link In Goethe Institut 16 May 2014 Mrass Marcus Meisterhauser Dessau DenkmalDebatten Archived from the original on 28 December 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link In DenkmalDebatten November 2009 Bauhaussiedlung Dessau Torten Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau Retrieved 26 June 2018 Haus Anton Leben in der Siedlung Dessau Torten www bauhaus dessau de in German Retrieved 6 February 2021 Haus Anton in der Siedlung Torten Neueroffnung des nahezu komplett erhaltenen Musterhauses 2012 www bauhaus dessau de in German Retrieved 6 February 2021 Bericht zur Rekonstruktion und Sanierung des Reihenhauses Mittelring 38 Amt fur Denkmalpflege der Stadt Dessau Archived 6 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine In bauhausverein de retrieved 14 April 2019 Laubenganghauser Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau Retrieved 26 June 2018 Neues Bauhaus Gebaude in Dessau errichtet Uni Kassel 8 August 2019 Retrieved 21 October 2019 Relation Bauhaustour 1606376 OpenStreetMap Retrieved 6 February 2021 51 50 21 N 12 13 38 E 51 8392 N 12 2272 E 51 8392 12 2272 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bauhaus Dessau amp oldid 1212106915, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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