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Federal Palace of Switzerland

The Federal Palace is a building in Bern housing the Swiss Federal Assembly (legislature) and the Federal Council (executive). It is the seat of the government of Switzerland and parliament of the country. The building is a listed symmetrical complex just over 300 metres (980 ft) long. It is considered one of the most important historic buildings in the country and listed in the Swiss Inventory of Cultural Assets of National Importance. It consists of three interconnected buildings in the southwest of Bern's old city. The two chambers of the Federal Assembly, the National Council and Council of States, meet in the parliament building on Bundesplatz.

Federal Palace
Bundeshaus (German)
Palais fédéral (French)
Palazzo federale (Italian)
Chasa federala (Romansh)
Curia Confœderationis Helveticæ (Latin)
View from the Bundesplatz
Federal Palace
Location within Bern
Federal Palace
Federal Palace (Canton of Bern)
Federal Palace
Federal Palace (Switzerland)
General information
AddressBundesplatz 3
CH-3005 Bern
Town or cityBern
CountrySwitzerland
Completed1 April 1902; 121 years ago (1902-04-01)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Hans Wilhelm Auer

The oldest part of the Federal Palace is the west wing (then called "Bundes-Rathaus", now "Bundeshaus West"), built from 1852 to 1857 under Jakob Friedrich Studer. The building united the federal administration, government and parliament under one roof. To solve pressing space problems, the east wing ("Bundeshaus Ost") was built from 1884 to 1892 under Hans Wilhelm Auer. Under Auer's direction, the parliament building in the center was erected between 1894 and 1902 to conclude the project. At the beginning of the 21st century, the first comprehensive renovation of the Federal Palace took place.

The west wing on Bundesgasse is the headquarters of two departments of the Federal Administration, and houses the Federal Chancellery and the Parliamentary Library; the Federal Council also holds its meetings here. Two other departments have their headquarters in the east wing on Kochergasse. The sobriety of the two wings corresponds to their main purpose as administrative buildings, contrasting with the more monumental parliament building constructed in neo-Renaissance style with a portico and a striking dome. The rich artistic decoration whose symbolism is based on the history, constitutional foundations and cultural diversity of Switzerland, as well as stone used from all parts of the country, underline the character of the parliament building as a national monument.

Location and urban classification

 
Old University Hospital of Bern (1742), today the location of the Bundeshaus Ost

The Federal Palace is located on the south-western edge of the Old City, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, on a fortification of the slope to the Marzili district [de] known as the Federal Terrace. The building complex extends over a length of just over 300 meters and consists of three parts: the Federal Palace West on Bundesgasse [de], the Parliament Building on Bundesplatz and the Federal Palace East on Kochergasse. While the Federal Palace East is aligned from east to west, the other two parts of the building are each angled slightly to the south-west.

Despite its size and dominant position, the Federal Palace blends into the cityscape due to the use of Bernese sandstone [de] for the facades. The other buildings in the old town are also made of this building material, which has a greenish-grey colour.[1] The Federal Palace is flanked by the former Hotel Bernerhof [de] in the west and the Hotel Bellevue Palace in the east, which is also the official residence for state guests. In addition to the Federal Palace, the cantonal bank building [de] and the building of the Swiss National Bank border the federal square. The mountain station of the Marzili Funicular, which leads down to the Marzili district, is located on the Bundesterrasse between Federal Palace West and the Bernerhof .

The old University Hospital of Bern, built between 1718 and 1724 according to plans by the baroque master Franz Beer, stood on the site of today's Federal Palace East. When the hospital was demolished in 1888, the remains of the walls of the medieval monastery St. Michael zur Insel also revealed a Jewish tombstone, and another in 1901 when the Bundesplatz was created. These tombstones belonged to a cemetery (Judenkilchhof) that had been expropriated and sold in 1294 after the Jews had been expelled.[2] An information board was installed at this location in September 2009 to commemorate Jewish prehistory.[3]

Planning and construction history

Initial position

 
The Erlacherhof was the first seat of the Federal Council
 
The old casino was the first meeting place of the National Council (colored lithograph by Franz Niklaus König)

The modern Swiss federal state came into being when the federal constitution became effective on September 12, 1848, but the location of the nation's capital remained unresolved. On 28 November, the Federal Assembly voted in favor of Bern as the federal city and the seat of the federal authorities (however, to this day, Switzerland has no de jure capital).[4] Provisional solutions were necessary as there was no suitable central building to accommodate the government, parliament and federal administration. The Federal Council convened in the Erlacherhof; the National Council operated at a 1821-built music hall known as the "casino" and if necessary the Bern town hall; while the Council of States met in the Äusseren Stand town hall [de]. The federal court and administration moved into various buildings in the Old City.

The Burgergemeinde Bern [de] was a public corporation representing the city's citizens and the powerful patriciates [de], and thus the superior municipality during the period. With a narrow majority, their assembly accepted the election of Bern as the federal city. However, it also transferred responsibility for the construction of the parliament and government building to the municipality, which had been formed only 15 years previously. The federal government lacked the authority to construct its own buildings, but this decision accelerated the political disempowerment of the civic community by liberal forces. This process was completed in 1852 with the transfer of autonomy to the Einwohnergemeinde Bern [de] and the separation of property (division of assets).

In February 1849, the Federal Council commissioned the city authorities to survey suitable locations for a central building. The building was to accommodate the halls of both chambers of parliament, rooms for the Federal Council, 96 offices and the chancellor's apartment. Based on several suggestions, the Federal Council decided in favor of the area of the municipal timber yard next to the "casino", on the southern edge of the Old City and on the upper edge of the slope down to the Aare river.[5] An architectural competition hosted by the municipal council began on 8 April 1850 for the Federal Town Hall. In a desire to avoid burdening Bern's citizens with extra loans and special taxes, the tender was deliberately thrifty and focused on cost savings. The proposed building was to be dignified but still as functional and simple as possible. Competitors were asked to avoid "useless splendor and exaggerated dimensions" and to use Bernese sandstone since the "surroundings of Bern have a wealth of the best and most beautiful sandstone".[6][7]

Modest beginnings: West wing

 
Jakob Friedrich Studer

The official jury consisted of the architects Melchior Berri, Ludwig Friedrich Osterrieth, Robert Roller and Gustav Albert Wegmann [de], as well as the building inspector Bernhard Wyss.[8] Out of 37 submitted designs, that of Ferdinand Stadler emerged victorious. The jury awarded three further prizes: second place went to Felix Wilhelm Kubly [de], third to Johann Carl Dähler, and fourth to Jean Franel. A special jury appointed by the Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects [de] (SIA), but which had no influence on the project, judged the three first-place designs in reverse order of precedence.[9]

The losing competitors were assigned the central wing to the council chambers and the side wings to the administration. Dähler and Franel designed the larger National Council chamber in the form of an amphitheater. While Dähler had it protrude from the building as a roof crown, Franel planned a semicircular bulge in the facade. Kubly recognized that, unlike previous new European parliament buildings, two equal councils had to be considered and therefore abandoned the overly dominant semicircle in favor of two rectangular halls. A common theme in all three projects was the placement of both halls on the central axis, which led to unfavorable proportions of the central tract. Stadler, on the other hand, was able to convince a horseshoe-shaped layout. He allocated the central wing to the Federal Council and the administration and relegated the parliamentary chambers to the projecting side wings. In addition, he oriented himself stylistically not to classicism, but to the novel round-arched style of neo-Romanesque architecture.[9][10] He used the buildings on Ludwigstrasse in Munich, in particular the Bavarian State Library, as a model.[7]

Some critics disliked the staggering of the building and the continuous round arches. Stadler was put off by the objections and revised his design, adding classical elements. The revised design, however, met with even less approval. On 23 June 1851, the Bern City Council decided to commission the master builder Jakob Friedrich Studer [de] to prepare a new design. Studer, who had not participated in the competition, adopted Stadler's original design and reintroduced the staggering while strengthening the round-arched style instead of toning it down.[11] The revision found favor and Studer was awarded the building contract. After the terrace had been filled in, the foundation stone was laid on 21 September 1852. The ceremonial handover took place on 5 June 1857 following five years of construction.[12]

In 1858, the Berna fountain [de] was erected in the cour d'honneur of the Federal Town Hall, and a statue added five years later. The decorations in the council chambers were very sparse due to cost constraints. August Hövemeyer [de] and his brother Ludwig painted four allegorical murals in the National Council Chamber and added ornamental designs. In 1861, the cantons donated coat-of-arms panels for the Council of States Hall, but these were removed just ten years later due to unfavorable lighting conditions. A commission headed by Federal Councillor Jakob Dubs proposed transforming the Federal Council Chamber into a national museum which would exhibit historical paintings and busts of famous Swiss personalities. The Council of States approved this proposal in 1865, but the National Council rejected it twice in 1866.[13]

The building owner, the city of Bern, placed far greater value on properly functioning building services than on ostentation. Steam heating from Sulzer guaranteed warmth in all rooms even in winter. Of particular note in the otherwise sober building were the candelabras lit by gas lighting.[14][15] The municipal gasworks was located below the Bundesterrasse from 1841 to 1876 and thus in the immediate vicinity.[16]

A project by Frank Buchser did not come to fruition: the victory of the Northern states in the American Civil War had triggered a wave of sympathy rallies in Switzerland. At the end of 1865, Buchser planned a mural in the National Council Chamber depicting the most important American personalities of the time, which was intended to express Switzerland's solidarity with the United States. Although he was able to produce portraits of numerous prominent people during his four-year stay in America, General Ulysses S. Grant refused to appear in the group portrait because his opponent Robert E. Lee was also to be depicted, and it was not done.[17]

Lack of space: East wing

 
Bundeshaus draft by Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli
 
Federal buildings west and east, in between the old casino (1896)

The 1874 Swiss constitutional referendum approved a new constitution which came into effect on 29 May 1874, resulting in a marked devolution of power from the cantons to the Confederation. The rapidly-growing federal administration soon complained of an acute shortage of space. The Federal Council asked the city to provide sufficient working space for the numerous new federal offices but Bern was unable meet this demand. In 1876, the city therefore ceded the Federal Town Hall and the responsibility for extensions and new buildings to the Confederation.[18] In 1861, the third floor of the central wing was opened to the Bernese Art Society. The transfer of its collection to the new Museum of Fine Arts in 1879 only temporarily alleviated the lack of space.[8]

The federal government acquired Kleine Schanze [de] west of the Hotel Bernerhof for a building site in 1876. It announced a competition for an administrative building to be used by the military, railroad and trade departments. Only a year later however, the project was abandoned; the Universal Postal Monument [de] stands on the site today. In 1880, the federal government purchased the Inselspital building, which was separated from the Federal Town Hall by the casino. The initial plan was to rebuild the it, but the National Council demanded a new building. The Federal Superintendent of Buildings decided instead to erect a parliament building between the new building and the existing Federal Town Hall (i.e. instead of the casino) in a second stage.[19][8] In accordance with this intention, the Confederation announced an architectural competition on 23 February 1885, with Louis Bezencenet, James Édouard Collin, Johann Christoph Kunkler [de], Heinrich Viktor von Segesser, and Arnold Geiser, as well as Arnold Flückiger, adjunct of the Superintendent of Buildings, serving as judges.[20]

Of 36 designs submitted, the one by Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli won first prize and Hans Wilhelm Auer second.[21] Bluntschli weighted the architecture according to the task of the buildings. In this respect, the new Federal Palace East was to be a compact, modest administrative wing and the parliament building was to have the form of a strictly classical Greek round temple. Auer, on the other hand, did not adopt a hierarchical structure. He designed a symmetrical building complex that included the Federal Town Hall as the west wing. For the east wing he adopted its round-arched style, while for the main building he envisaged the neo-Renaissance style. In accordance with the prevailing architectural theory of the time, which was largely influenced by Gottfried Semper, the jury criticized Auer's symmetry as functionally incomprehensible. The dome was the subject of particular criticism as it was not situated above a dignified council chamber but above a 'profane' staircase. Auer had taken his cue from the United States Capitol, arguing that the dome crowns Parliament as a whole and does not favor either council.[10][22]

The federal administration and parliamentarians liked Auer's dome motif. In 1887, the Federal Assembly overrode the decision of the jury and awarded the building contract for Federal Palace East to Auer. It passed over Bluntschli on the grounds that the competition was primarily concerned with the basic disposition; the design of the parliament building would be decided on at a later date.[19] The Inselspital, which had stood empty since 1884, was demolished in 1887. Construction on Federal Palace East began in late 1888 and was completed in May 1892.[23] While marble had been used sparingly as a decorative stone in the Bundes-Rathaus (known as the Federal Palace West from 1895), nine different types of stone were used in the interior of Federal Palace East.[1] The extensive construction project offered the opportunity to upgrade the Federal Superstructure Inspectorate to the Directorate for Federal Buildings, from which the modern-day Federal Office for Buildings and Logistics [de] is established.[20]

National monument: Parliament building

 
Plaster model by Anselmo Laurenti
 
The Houses of Parliament during construction (1899)

In 1891, the architects Auer and Bluntschli received an invitation to another architectural competition. At the express wish of the Federal Council, the jury was international, comprising Léo Châtelain, Ernst Jung, Hans Konrad Pestalozzi [de] (National Councillor and Mayor of Zurich), Heinrich Reese (Building Inspector of the Canton of Basel-Stadt), Friedrich Wüest (National Councillor and Mayor of Lucerne), and Arnold Flückiger (Director of Federal Buildings). Frenchman Gaspard André and German Paul Wallot (architect of the Reichstag building in Berlin) also participated in the jury.[24]

Bluntschli was aware that the Federal Palace East had created a fait accompli and that without a dome, the parliament building would hardly stand out among the symmetrical buildings. He abandoned his architectural restraint and tried to outdo his competitor with a pompous domed building reminiscent of the Palais du Trocadéro in Paris. In comparison, Auer's design appeared moderate and restrained. Nevertheless, the jury could not reach a decision as it still considered a dome over a vestibule room to be "monstrous". On 30 June 1891, the Federal Council acted on its own authority and decided in favor of Auer.[10][25] The National Council approved the decision on 24 March 1893 and the Council of States followed suit on 30 March 1894.[26]

Auer drew up the plans and took into account the criticism of his professional colleagues. By extending the dome space to form a Greek cross, he removed the character of a vestibule. He designed the staircase as a bridge-like structure standing freely in space, following the example of the Opéra Garnier in Paris.[25] He also took up the suggestion of the Schweizerische Bauzeitung [de] to give the domed hall a higher consecration by installing statues. The sculptor Anselmo Laurenti made a plaster model, which was presented to the Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects in 1895 and exhibited at the National Exhibition in Geneva the following year.[26]

Auer intended to represent Switzerland symbolically in the parliament building through the use of stone deposits all over the country. In order to realize this goal, he assigned a central role to this ideal in his planning. This goal was not fully achieved but nevertheless, all significant stones of Switzerland were used. They embody the diversity of the country according to petrographic, geological and federal aspects. Particularly noteworthy is the almost complete use of stones that had been used for exclusive purposes since the 18th century by the Funk workshop in Bern and the Doret workshop in Vevey. Swiss limestones dominate the architecture of the Federal Palace. Other materiel from Swiss quarries include marble, sandstone, gneiss, granite, and serpentinite. Carrara marble and Savonnières limestone [fr] from Belgium, France and Italy were used for sculptures.[27][28]

No fewer than 30 types of stone from 13 different cantons and half-cantons were used in the construction of the building. Almost all of Switzerland's tectonic structural units are represented, dating back in geological history between five and a thousand million years: the crystalline basement of the Aarmassif and Gotthard Massif mountain ranges, the Helvetic and Penninic nappes, the Southern Alps, the limestone of the Jura Mountains, and the molasses of the Swiss Plateau.[29] The elaborate handling of these rocks is unique in the history of Swiss architecture.[30]

Auer also planned the rest of the design of the Federal Palace, personally selecting most the 38[a] Swiss artists who carried out the work and obliging them to work according to his detailed specifications. His approach corresponded to that of his teacher Theophil Hansen, who had also drawn up and rigorously enforced an iconographic program for the parliament building in Vienna.[32] Auer did not have a free hand in selecting the all the artists. Federal Councillor Adrien Lachenal, whose Federal Department of Home Affairs was responsible also for construction and art, awarded some commissions because he felt too little consideration had been given to French-speaking Switzerland.[33] 173 Swiss companies were involved in the construction work.[31] Auer created a Swiss national monument with a rich and symbolic iconography depicting the history, constitutional foundations, and activities of the country's inhabitants.[10]

The Swiss Confederation bought the casino property from the city, after which construction began on the parliament building on 5 September 1894. The Federal Terrace on the south side was extended, but not all the way to the Kirchenfeld Bridge [de] as originally planned. On 11 April 1900, the erection of the large dome was celebrated.[24] The handover of the parliament building took place on the morning of 1 April 1902 in an official ceremony. The construction costs for the parliament building amounted to 7.2 million francs (about 700 million in today's terms). Of this, 16.2% was spent on artistic decoration.[34]

Structural changes

 
The parliamentary library in the former chamber of the National Council

After the opening of the parliament building, the two council chambers in Federal Palace West were abolished; their original use can only be guessed at. Instead of the Council of States hall, offices and a post office counter were built (in operation until 2005). The former National Council Chamber was reduced in size and further subdivided by an iron construction with stairs and walkways. It has since housed a library for use by employees of the federal administration and members of parliament, which is not open to the public except for special occasions, for security reasons.[35]

Over the course of time, the use of space in the parliament building was repeatedly adapted to changing, often short-term needs. In addition to necessary technical improvements, however, remodeling works were carried out in the 1960s. In numerous rooms, vaults, ceilings and wall partitions were covered up or demolished. Coloured wallpaper was painted over with white paint and stucco replaced with plasterboard. In 1965, the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation began operating radio and television transmissions on the third floor above the Council of States hall, which required the installation of a massive, wide-span concrete ceiling. Since the attic spaces were also being used increasingly intensively, it seemed appropriate to wall up the lunette windows facing the domed hall. As a result, natural light no longer entered, giving the hall a gloomy appearance.[36]

Restorations and renovations

 
Renovation works in August 2006
 
One of the newly created parliamentary group meeting rooms on the third floor of the parliament building

In 1991, the National Council commission charged with drafting parliamentary reform decided to examine a far-reaching expansion of the parliament's premises.[37] In a project competition, Mario Botta's proposal for an extension in the form of a citadel-like structure on the slope below the parliament building prevailed. Massive historic preservation and urban planning concerns were however raised against the project,[38] and it was abandoned by the National Council on 17 March 1993 at the request of the Parliamentary Reform Commission, on the grounds of the federal government's poor financial situation.[39] Later that year, the National Council Chamber underwent extensive restoration for the first time since its inauguration.[40] For this reason, the Councillors held a session outside Bern for the first time ever in Geneva. In 1999, at the suggestion of Council of States member Dick Marty, the Federal Assembly decided to hold the 2001 spring session in Lugano.[41] This made it possible to restore the Hall of the Council of States as well.[42]

The differing demands of parliamentarians, media and the administration using the Federal Palace led to ever greater organizational problems. Parliamentarians complained about the lack of rooms for meetings and secretariats, and that their individual workplaces were located too far away from the council chambers on the top floor of the Federal Palace East. A complete renovation of the building services was put on the agenda.[38] The renovation was aimed should satisfy the needs of the members of the council, and reinforce the architectural and artistic concepts of Hans Wilhelm Auer. The first stage was the relocation of the workplaces of the media representatives. To this end, a new media center was built between October 2003 and May 2006 in the buildings at Bundesgasse 8-12 (located opposite the Federal Palace West); the construction and equipping costs amounted to 42.5 million francs.[43] Work on Federal Palace West began in February 2005 and lasted just over three years. The main focus was on renovating the facade and the roof. New workspaces were also added, the attic converted, and various security and fire protection measures improved.[44]

The National Council and the Council of States approved 83 million Swiss francs for this as part of the 2004 and 2006 civil construction programs. In June 2006, the first comprehensive renovation and restoration of the parliament building began under the direction of the architectural firm Aebi & Vincent. Taking inflation and various additional costs, the final cost was 103 million Swiss francs.[45] On the third floor, workrooms for parliamentarians, meeting rooms for parliamentary groups and a multifunctional conference hall were created. The lunette windows (lit in the back by skylights) were also opened, interior walls cleaned, cracks repaired, and recent furnishings removed, transforming the domed hall once again into a bright daylight space . Extended spiral staircases and new elevators improved vertical access. A new visitors' entrance was built under the National Council Chamber, and a new technical floor with an IT room was constructed below. In general, the principle was to remove modern fixtures and emphasise the original furnishings. The building exterior was extensively renovated, including the sandstone facades, the cornices and figures, the roof and domes, the skylights, and the lighting. In the National Council Chamber, the building services, the voting system, the translation system and the surfaces were renewed.[46][47] During the most intensive renovation phase, the National Council and the Council of States held their 2006 autumn session in Flims. The official inauguration of the renovated parliament building took place on 21 November 2008 with a ceremony.[45]

In the summer and fall of 2011, the Council of States hall was renovated, and from September 2012 to March 2016, the renovation of the Federal House East took place to conclude the project. In addition to a selective renovation of the building exterior, this included a comprehensive renovation of the interiors with a clean-up of the room structures, and renewal of the building and security technology.[48] During the renovations, construction workers uncovered the vaulted cellars of the former Inselspital in the fall of 2012. These massive rooms, made of large sandstone blocks, once stored the natural resources used to finance the hospital and care for its patients.[49] In the summer of 2019, the visitor entrance at the Bundesterrasse side was rebuilt due to security considerations.[50]

Parliament building

Dome and facade

The central assembly building is dominated by a domed hall in the layout of a Swiss cross.[31] It separates the two chambers of the National Council (south) and the Council of States (north). The dome itself has an external height of 64 metres (210 ft) that was exceptional at the time, but chosen to balance the total length of the three buildings.[51] The mosaic in the center represents the federal coat of arms along with the Latin motto Unus pro omnibus, omnes pro uno (One for all, and all for one), surrounded by the coat of arms of the 22 cantons that existed in 1902. The coat of arms of the Canton of Jura, created in 1979, was later placed outside of the mosaic. The hall is dominated by the sculpture The Three Confederates (Die drei Eidgenossen) created by James André Vibert and referring to the legendary oath to fight for Switzerland (Rütlischwur).

 
North Façade

The central entry facing the Federal Square (Bundesplatz) and opening up to a domed hall carries the inscription Curia Confœderationis Helveticæ (Swiss Federal Assembly) underneath a pediment. The roof edge is topped by Auguste de Niederhäusern-Rodo's allegorical sculpture of Helvetia representing independence (center), with the executive on her left, and the legislature on her right. This arrangement was inspired by the Pallas Athena Fountain of the Austrian Parliament.[51] The pediment is flanked by two griffins by Anselmo Laurenti symbolizing courage, wisdom, and strength. The female allegories in the second floor niches by James André Vibert represent freedom (left) and peace (right).[31] Two commemorative plaques above refer to the years 1291 (Federal Charter and the legendary Rütlischwur) and 1848 (first Federal Constitution transforms Switzerland into a federal state). Finally, the male allegories in the first floor niches by Maurice Reymond represent the chronicler of the past (left) and the chronicler of the present (right).[51]

Organisation

West wing
East wing

Trivia

As reported in a study by the Federal parliamentary services (Parlamentsdienste), the noise caused by human activities in the chamber of the National Council is clearly too loud. The previously undisclosed study was published by 10vor10 on 12 December 2014, pointing that the noise level is usually at a level of about 70 decibels, comparable to a used roadway, so concentration of work for politicians is not possible.[55]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A 2017 report by the Federal Chancellery of Switzerland states 33.[31]

References

  1. ^ a b Labhart 2002, p. 4.
  2. ^ [Jewish presence in medieval Bern] (in German). Kanton Bern. 29 September 2009. Archived from the original on 11 November 2016.
  3. ^ [Information board on Jewish history in the city of Bern] (in German). Kanton Bern. 29 September 2009. Archived from the original on 11 November 2016.
  4. ^ Kreis, Georg (20 March 2015). "Bundesstadt" [Federal City]. Historische Lexikon der Schweiz HLS (in German). Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  5. ^ Bilfinger 2009, p. 2.
  6. ^ Bilfinger 2009, p. 5–6.
  7. ^ a b Labhart 2002, p. 6.
  8. ^ a b c Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 467.
  9. ^ a b Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 384.
  10. ^ a b c d "Das schweizerische Capitol" [The Swiss Capitol]. Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). 23 March 2002. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  11. ^ Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 385.
  12. ^ Bilfinger 2009, p. 6–7.
  13. ^ Stückelberger 1985, p. 187–188.
  14. ^ Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 387.
  15. ^ Bilfinger 2009, p. 14.
  16. ^ Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 532.
  17. ^ Stückelberger 1985, p. 188–189.
  18. ^ Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 389.
  19. ^ a b Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 390.
  20. ^ a b Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 468.
  21. ^ Labhart 2002, p. 7.
  22. ^ Bilfinger 2009, p. 16–17.
  23. ^ Bilfinger 2009, p. 18.
  24. ^ a b Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 469.
  25. ^ a b Hauser & Röllin 1986, p. 393.
  26. ^ a b Stückelberger 1985, p. 190.
  27. ^ Labhart 2002, p. 11–16.
  28. ^ Labhart 2002, p. 45–46.
  29. ^ Labhart 2002, p. 12–13.
  30. ^ Bilfinger 2009, p. 26.
  31. ^ a b c d Federal Chancellery of Switzerland (2017). The Parliament Building in Bern, Switzerland (PDF) (12/2017 ed.). Federal Chancellery of Switzerland. pp. 5–18.
  32. ^ Stückelberger 1985, p. 200.
  33. ^ Müller 2002, p. 155–156.
  34. ^ Stückelberger 1985, p. 199.
  35. ^ Parlamentsdienste (20 August 2018). "Wie aus dem Nationalratssaal eine Bibliothek wurde" [How the National Council Hall became a library]. The Federal Assembly — The Swiss Parliament (in German). Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  36. ^ Furrer 2009, p. 18.
  37. ^ "Kommission des Nationalrates: Parlamentsreform" [Commission of the National Council: Parliamentary Reform] (PDF). Archives fédérales suisses (AFS) (in German). Bundesblatt. 16 May 1991. pp. 696–698. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  38. ^ a b Furrer 2009, p. 20.
  39. ^ "Parlamentsgebäude. Erweiterungsbau" [Parliament building. Extension building] (PDF). Archives fédérales suisses (AFS) (in German). Amtliches Bulletin der Bundesversammlung, Nationalrat. 17 March 1993. pp. 466–467. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  40. ^ "Das Parlamentsgebäude" [Parliament Building]. The Federal Assembly — The Swiss Parliament (in German). Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  41. ^ "Organisation au Tessin de la session parlementaire de printemps 2001: la Délégation administrative et les Bureaux des conseils ont approuvé les propositions "budget" et "locaux" des Services du Parlement" [Organization in Ticino of the 2001 spring parliamentary session: the Administrative Delegation and the Council Offices approved the "budget" and "premises" proposals of the Parliamentary Services.]. The Federal Assembly — The Swiss Parliament (in German). 23 May 2000. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  42. ^ Monica, Bilfinger (2007). "Umbau und Renovation des Parlamentsgebäudes" [Conversion and renovation of the Parliament building]. Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich (in German): 13. doi:10.5169/seals-727065.
  43. ^ "Medienzentrum Bundeshaus Bern" [Media center Bundeshaus Bern] (PDF). Marti Gesamtleistungen AG. p. de. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  44. ^ "Umbau und Fassadensanierung Bundeshaus West" [Reconstruction and renovation of the facade of the West Federal Building]. Bundesamt für Bauten und Logistik (in German). 24 January 2005. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  45. ^ a b Thema, Zum (21 November 2008). "Feierliche Eröffnung des renovierten Bundeshauses" [Official opening of the renovated Federal Palace]. Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  46. ^ Furrer 2009, p. 23–24.
  47. ^ "Umbau und Sanierung Parlamentsgebäude 2006–2008" [Conversion and renovation of the Parliament building 2006-2008] (PDF). Bundesamt für Bauten und Logistik (in German). Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  48. ^ . Bundesamt für Bauten und Logistik BBL Bundesamt für Bauten und Logistik BBL (in German). 29 January 2014. Archived from the original on 1 May 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  49. ^ "Bundeshaus Ost steht auf Kellern des früheren Inselspitals" [Bundeshaus Ost stands on the basement of the former Inselspital]. Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). 30 September 2012. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  50. ^ "Das Parlamentsgebäude ist im Sommer wegen Bauarbeiten für Besucher geschlossen" [The Parliament building is closed to visitors during the summer for construction work]. Die Bundesversammlung — Das Schweizer Parlament (in German). 8 June 2019. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  51. ^ a b c Stückelberger 1985, p. 185–234.
  52. ^ Visiting the Parliament Building, Federal Assembly (page visited on 11 September 2016).
  53. ^ (in French) "Dans les appartements des sept sages", Le temps, Sunday 12 May 2013 (page visited on 11 September 2016).
  54. ^ "'Swiss Schindler' honoured with room in Federal Palace". The Local. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  55. ^ "Lärmbelastung im Nationalrat deutlich zu hoch" (in German). 10vor10. 12 December 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2014.

Works cited

  • Stückelberger, Johannes (1985). Die künstlerische Ausstattung des Bundeshauses in Bern [The artistic furnishings of the Federal Palace in Bern] (in German). Vol. 42. Zürich: Zeitschrift für Schweizerische Archäologie und Kunstgeschichte. doi:10.5169/seals-168629.
  • Hauser, Andreas; Röllin, Peter (1986). INSA: Inventar der neueren Schweizer Architektur, 1850-1920 - Städte. INSA : 2: Basel, Bellinzona, Bern, Volume 0 [INSA: Inventory of Recent Swiss Architecture, 1850-1920 - Cities. INSA : 2: Basel, Bellinzona, Berne, Volume 0] (in German). Zürich: Gesellschaft für Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte. ISBN 9783280017166.
  • Labhart, Toni P. (2002). Steinführer Bundeshaus Bern [Steinführer federal building Bern] (in German). Bern: Gesellschaft für Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte. ISBN 9783857827198.
  • Müller, Andreas (2002). Der verbitterte Bundeshausarchitekt: die vertrackte Geschichte des Parlamentsgebäudes und seines Erbauers Hans Wilhelm Auer (1847-1906) [The embittered Bundeshaus architect: the complicated history of the parliament building and its builder Hans Wilhelm Auer (1847-1906)] (in German). Bern: Orell Füssli. ISBN 9783280028223.
  • Bilfinger, Monica (2009). Das Bundeshaus in Bern [The Federal Palace in Bern] (in German). Vol. Schweizerische Kunstführer, Band 859/860, Serie 86. Bern: Gesellschaft für Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte. ISBN 9783857828591.
  • Weissberg, Bernhard; Rieben, Edouard (2012). Das Bundeshaus [The Bundeshaus] (in German). Faro. ISBN 9783037810385.
  • Minta, Anna; Bernd, Nicolai (2014). Parlamentarische Repräsentationen: das Bundeshaus in Bern im Kontext internationaler Parlamentsbauten und nationaler Strategien [Parliamentary representations: the Federal Palace in Bern in the context of international parliament buildings and national strategies] (in German). Peter Lang. ISBN 9783034315029.
  • Rüedi, Martin (2018). Das Parlamentsgebäude von Bern (1894-1902): Genese eines Nationaldenkmals [The parliament building in Bern (1894-1902): Genesis of a National Monument] (in German). Freie Universität Berlin.
  • Furrer, Bernhard (15 May 2009). "Ein Ganzes aus Alt und Neu" [A whole of old and new]. Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich (in German). TEC21 - Fachzeitschrift für Architektur, Ingenieurwesen und Umwelt.
  • Tschachtli, Angelica (2014). "Ein Parlamentsbau muss auch Widersprüchlichkeiten vereinen". Gesellschaft für Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte GSK. pp. 36–40.
  • Bilfinger, Monica (2017). "Das schweizerische Parlaments gebäude - von Kunsthandwerk und zeitgenössischem Design" [The Swiss Parliament building - of craftsmanship and contemporary design] (PDF). Péristyle (in German). Société d’histoire de l’art en Suisse GSK-SHAS-SSAS.

External links

Coordinates: 46°56′48″N 7°26′39″E / 46.94667°N 7.44417°E / 46.94667; 7.44417

federal, palace, switzerland, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, german, article, machine, translation, like, deepl. This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in German May 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 470 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Bundeshaus Bern see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Bundeshaus Bern to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Federal Palace is a building in Bern housing the Swiss Federal Assembly legislature and the Federal Council executive It is the seat of the government of Switzerland and parliament of the country The building is a listed symmetrical complex just over 300 metres 980 ft long It is considered one of the most important historic buildings in the country and listed in the Swiss Inventory of Cultural Assets of National Importance It consists of three interconnected buildings in the southwest of Bern s old city The two chambers of the Federal Assembly the National Council and Council of States meet in the parliament building on Bundesplatz Federal PalaceBundeshaus German Palais federal French Palazzo federale Italian Chasa federala Romansh Curia Confœderationis Helveticae Latin View from the BundesplatzFederal PalaceLocation within BernShow map of BernFederal PalaceFederal Palace Canton of Bern Show map of Canton of BernFederal PalaceFederal Palace Switzerland Show map of SwitzerlandGeneral informationAddressBundesplatz 3CH 3005 BernTown or cityBernCountrySwitzerlandCompleted1 April 1902 121 years ago 1902 04 01 Design and constructionArchitect s Hans Wilhelm AuerThe oldest part of the Federal Palace is the west wing then called Bundes Rathaus now Bundeshaus West built from 1852 to 1857 under Jakob Friedrich Studer The building united the federal administration government and parliament under one roof To solve pressing space problems the east wing Bundeshaus Ost was built from 1884 to 1892 under Hans Wilhelm Auer Under Auer s direction the parliament building in the center was erected between 1894 and 1902 to conclude the project At the beginning of the 21st century the first comprehensive renovation of the Federal Palace took place The west wing on Bundesgasse is the headquarters of two departments of the Federal Administration and houses the Federal Chancellery and the Parliamentary Library the Federal Council also holds its meetings here Two other departments have their headquarters in the east wing on Kochergasse The sobriety of the two wings corresponds to their main purpose as administrative buildings contrasting with the more monumental parliament building constructed in neo Renaissance style with a portico and a striking dome The rich artistic decoration whose symbolism is based on the history constitutional foundations and cultural diversity of Switzerland as well as stone used from all parts of the country underline the character of the parliament building as a national monument Contents 1 Location and urban classification 2 Planning and construction history 2 1 Initial position 2 2 Modest beginnings West wing 2 3 Lack of space East wing 2 4 National monument Parliament building 2 5 Structural changes 2 6 Restorations and renovations 3 Parliament building 3 1 Dome and facade 4 Organisation 5 Trivia 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Works cited 10 External linksLocation and urban classification Edit Old University Hospital of Bern 1742 today the location of the Bundeshaus Ost The Federal Palace is located on the south western edge of the Old City a UNESCO World Heritage Site on a fortification of the slope to the Marzili district de known as the Federal Terrace The building complex extends over a length of just over 300 meters and consists of three parts the Federal Palace West on Bundesgasse de the Parliament Building on Bundesplatz and the Federal Palace East on Kochergasse While the Federal Palace East is aligned from east to west the other two parts of the building are each angled slightly to the south west Despite its size and dominant position the Federal Palace blends into the cityscape due to the use of Bernese sandstone de for the facades The other buildings in the old town are also made of this building material which has a greenish grey colour 1 The Federal Palace is flanked by the former Hotel Bernerhof de in the west and the Hotel Bellevue Palace in the east which is also the official residence for state guests In addition to the Federal Palace the cantonal bank building de and the building of the Swiss National Bank border the federal square The mountain station of the Marzili Funicular which leads down to the Marzili district is located on the Bundesterrasse between Federal Palace West and the Bernerhof The old University Hospital of Bern built between 1718 and 1724 according to plans by the baroque master Franz Beer stood on the site of today s Federal Palace East When the hospital was demolished in 1888 the remains of the walls of the medieval monastery St Michael zur Insel also revealed a Jewish tombstone and another in 1901 when the Bundesplatz was created These tombstones belonged to a cemetery Judenkilchhof that had been expropriated and sold in 1294 after the Jews had been expelled 2 An information board was installed at this location in September 2009 to commemorate Jewish prehistory 3 Planning and construction history EditInitial position Edit The Erlacherhof was the first seat of the Federal Council The old casino was the first meeting place of the National Council colored lithograph by Franz Niklaus Konig The modern Swiss federal state came into being when the federal constitution became effective on September 12 1848 but the location of the nation s capital remained unresolved On 28 November the Federal Assembly voted in favor of Bern as the federal city and the seat of the federal authorities however to this day Switzerland has no de jure capital 4 Provisional solutions were necessary as there was no suitable central building to accommodate the government parliament and federal administration The Federal Council convened in the Erlacherhof the National Council operated at a 1821 built music hall known as the casino and if necessary the Bern town hall while the Council of States met in the Ausseren Stand town hall de The federal court and administration moved into various buildings in the Old City The Burgergemeinde Bern de was a public corporation representing the city s citizens and the powerful patriciates de and thus the superior municipality during the period With a narrow majority their assembly accepted the election of Bern as the federal city However it also transferred responsibility for the construction of the parliament and government building to the municipality which had been formed only 15 years previously The federal government lacked the authority to construct its own buildings but this decision accelerated the political disempowerment of the civic community by liberal forces This process was completed in 1852 with the transfer of autonomy to the Einwohnergemeinde Bern de and the separation of property division of assets In February 1849 the Federal Council commissioned the city authorities to survey suitable locations for a central building The building was to accommodate the halls of both chambers of parliament rooms for the Federal Council 96 offices and the chancellor s apartment Based on several suggestions the Federal Council decided in favor of the area of the municipal timber yard next to the casino on the southern edge of the Old City and on the upper edge of the slope down to the Aare river 5 An architectural competition hosted by the municipal council began on 8 April 1850 for the Federal Town Hall In a desire to avoid burdening Bern s citizens with extra loans and special taxes the tender was deliberately thrifty and focused on cost savings The proposed building was to be dignified but still as functional and simple as possible Competitors were asked to avoid useless splendor and exaggerated dimensions and to use Bernese sandstone since the surroundings of Bern have a wealth of the best and most beautiful sandstone 6 7 Modest beginnings West wing Edit Jakob Friedrich Studer The official jury consisted of the architects Melchior Berri Ludwig Friedrich Osterrieth Robert Roller and Gustav Albert Wegmann de as well as the building inspector Bernhard Wyss 8 Out of 37 submitted designs that of Ferdinand Stadler emerged victorious The jury awarded three further prizes second place went to Felix Wilhelm Kubly de third to Johann Carl Dahler and fourth to Jean Franel A special jury appointed by the Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects de SIA but which had no influence on the project judged the three first place designs in reverse order of precedence 9 The losing competitors were assigned the central wing to the council chambers and the side wings to the administration Dahler and Franel designed the larger National Council chamber in the form of an amphitheater While Dahler had it protrude from the building as a roof crown Franel planned a semicircular bulge in the facade Kubly recognized that unlike previous new European parliament buildings two equal councils had to be considered and therefore abandoned the overly dominant semicircle in favor of two rectangular halls A common theme in all three projects was the placement of both halls on the central axis which led to unfavorable proportions of the central tract Stadler on the other hand was able to convince a horseshoe shaped layout He allocated the central wing to the Federal Council and the administration and relegated the parliamentary chambers to the projecting side wings In addition he oriented himself stylistically not to classicism but to the novel round arched style of neo Romanesque architecture 9 10 He used the buildings on Ludwigstrasse in Munich in particular the Bavarian State Library as a model 7 Some critics disliked the staggering of the building and the continuous round arches Stadler was put off by the objections and revised his design adding classical elements The revised design however met with even less approval On 23 June 1851 the Bern City Council decided to commission the master builder Jakob Friedrich Studer de to prepare a new design Studer who had not participated in the competition adopted Stadler s original design and reintroduced the staggering while strengthening the round arched style instead of toning it down 11 The revision found favor and Studer was awarded the building contract After the terrace had been filled in the foundation stone was laid on 21 September 1852 The ceremonial handover took place on 5 June 1857 following five years of construction 12 In 1858 the Berna fountain de was erected in the cour d honneur of the Federal Town Hall and a statue added five years later The decorations in the council chambers were very sparse due to cost constraints August Hovemeyer de and his brother Ludwig painted four allegorical murals in the National Council Chamber and added ornamental designs In 1861 the cantons donated coat of arms panels for the Council of States Hall but these were removed just ten years later due to unfavorable lighting conditions A commission headed by Federal Councillor Jakob Dubs proposed transforming the Federal Council Chamber into a national museum which would exhibit historical paintings and busts of famous Swiss personalities The Council of States approved this proposal in 1865 but the National Council rejected it twice in 1866 13 The building owner the city of Bern placed far greater value on properly functioning building services than on ostentation Steam heating from Sulzer guaranteed warmth in all rooms even in winter Of particular note in the otherwise sober building were the candelabras lit by gas lighting 14 15 The municipal gasworks was located below the Bundesterrasse from 1841 to 1876 and thus in the immediate vicinity 16 A project by Frank Buchser did not come to fruition the victory of the Northern states in the American Civil War had triggered a wave of sympathy rallies in Switzerland At the end of 1865 Buchser planned a mural in the National Council Chamber depicting the most important American personalities of the time which was intended to express Switzerland s solidarity with the United States Although he was able to produce portraits of numerous prominent people during his four year stay in America General Ulysses S Grant refused to appear in the group portrait because his opponent Robert E Lee was also to be depicted and it was not done 17 Lack of space East wing Edit Bundeshaus draft by Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli Federal buildings west and east in between the old casino 1896 The 1874 Swiss constitutional referendum approved a new constitution which came into effect on 29 May 1874 resulting in a marked devolution of power from the cantons to the Confederation The rapidly growing federal administration soon complained of an acute shortage of space The Federal Council asked the city to provide sufficient working space for the numerous new federal offices but Bern was unable meet this demand In 1876 the city therefore ceded the Federal Town Hall and the responsibility for extensions and new buildings to the Confederation 18 In 1861 the third floor of the central wing was opened to the Bernese Art Society The transfer of its collection to the new Museum of Fine Arts in 1879 only temporarily alleviated the lack of space 8 The federal government acquired Kleine Schanze de west of the Hotel Bernerhof for a building site in 1876 It announced a competition for an administrative building to be used by the military railroad and trade departments Only a year later however the project was abandoned the Universal Postal Monument de stands on the site today In 1880 the federal government purchased the Inselspital building which was separated from the Federal Town Hall by the casino The initial plan was to rebuild the it but the National Council demanded a new building The Federal Superintendent of Buildings decided instead to erect a parliament building between the new building and the existing Federal Town Hall i e instead of the casino in a second stage 19 8 In accordance with this intention the Confederation announced an architectural competition on 23 February 1885 with Louis Bezencenet James Edouard Collin Johann Christoph Kunkler de Heinrich Viktor von Segesser and Arnold Geiser as well as Arnold Fluckiger adjunct of the Superintendent of Buildings serving as judges 20 Of 36 designs submitted the one by Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli won first prize and Hans Wilhelm Auer second 21 Bluntschli weighted the architecture according to the task of the buildings In this respect the new Federal Palace East was to be a compact modest administrative wing and the parliament building was to have the form of a strictly classical Greek round temple Auer on the other hand did not adopt a hierarchical structure He designed a symmetrical building complex that included the Federal Town Hall as the west wing For the east wing he adopted its round arched style while for the main building he envisaged the neo Renaissance style In accordance with the prevailing architectural theory of the time which was largely influenced by Gottfried Semper the jury criticized Auer s symmetry as functionally incomprehensible The dome was the subject of particular criticism as it was not situated above a dignified council chamber but above a profane staircase Auer had taken his cue from the United States Capitol arguing that the dome crowns Parliament as a whole and does not favor either council 10 22 The federal administration and parliamentarians liked Auer s dome motif In 1887 the Federal Assembly overrode the decision of the jury and awarded the building contract for Federal Palace East to Auer It passed over Bluntschli on the grounds that the competition was primarily concerned with the basic disposition the design of the parliament building would be decided on at a later date 19 The Inselspital which had stood empty since 1884 was demolished in 1887 Construction on Federal Palace East began in late 1888 and was completed in May 1892 23 While marble had been used sparingly as a decorative stone in the Bundes Rathaus known as the Federal Palace West from 1895 nine different types of stone were used in the interior of Federal Palace East 1 The extensive construction project offered the opportunity to upgrade the Federal Superstructure Inspectorate to the Directorate for Federal Buildings from which the modern day Federal Office for Buildings and Logistics de is established 20 National monument Parliament building Edit Hans Wilhelm Auer Plaster model by Anselmo Laurenti The Houses of Parliament during construction 1899 In 1891 the architects Auer and Bluntschli received an invitation to another architectural competition At the express wish of the Federal Council the jury was international comprising Leo Chatelain Ernst Jung Hans Konrad Pestalozzi de National Councillor and Mayor of Zurich Heinrich Reese Building Inspector of the Canton of Basel Stadt Friedrich Wuest National Councillor and Mayor of Lucerne and Arnold Fluckiger Director of Federal Buildings Frenchman Gaspard Andre and German Paul Wallot architect of the Reichstag building in Berlin also participated in the jury 24 Bluntschli was aware that the Federal Palace East had created a fait accompli and that without a dome the parliament building would hardly stand out among the symmetrical buildings He abandoned his architectural restraint and tried to outdo his competitor with a pompous domed building reminiscent of the Palais du Trocadero in Paris In comparison Auer s design appeared moderate and restrained Nevertheless the jury could not reach a decision as it still considered a dome over a vestibule room to be monstrous On 30 June 1891 the Federal Council acted on its own authority and decided in favor of Auer 10 25 The National Council approved the decision on 24 March 1893 and the Council of States followed suit on 30 March 1894 26 Auer drew up the plans and took into account the criticism of his professional colleagues By extending the dome space to form a Greek cross he removed the character of a vestibule He designed the staircase as a bridge like structure standing freely in space following the example of the Opera Garnier in Paris 25 He also took up the suggestion of the Schweizerische Bauzeitung de to give the domed hall a higher consecration by installing statues The sculptor Anselmo Laurenti made a plaster model which was presented to the Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects in 1895 and exhibited at the National Exhibition in Geneva the following year 26 Auer intended to represent Switzerland symbolically in the parliament building through the use of stone deposits all over the country In order to realize this goal he assigned a central role to this ideal in his planning This goal was not fully achieved but nevertheless all significant stones of Switzerland were used They embody the diversity of the country according to petrographic geological and federal aspects Particularly noteworthy is the almost complete use of stones that had been used for exclusive purposes since the 18th century by the Funk workshop in Bern and the Doret workshop in Vevey Swiss limestones dominate the architecture of the Federal Palace Other materiel from Swiss quarries include marble sandstone gneiss granite and serpentinite Carrara marble and Savonnieres limestone fr from Belgium France and Italy were used for sculptures 27 28 No fewer than 30 types of stone from 13 different cantons and half cantons were used in the construction of the building Almost all of Switzerland s tectonic structural units are represented dating back in geological history between five and a thousand million years the crystalline basement of the Aarmassif and Gotthard Massif mountain ranges the Helvetic and Penninic nappes the Southern Alps the limestone of the Jura Mountains and the molasses of the Swiss Plateau 29 The elaborate handling of these rocks is unique in the history of Swiss architecture 30 Auer also planned the rest of the design of the Federal Palace personally selecting most the 38 a Swiss artists who carried out the work and obliging them to work according to his detailed specifications His approach corresponded to that of his teacher Theophil Hansen who had also drawn up and rigorously enforced an iconographic program for the parliament building in Vienna 32 Auer did not have a free hand in selecting the all the artists Federal Councillor Adrien Lachenal whose Federal Department of Home Affairs was responsible also for construction and art awarded some commissions because he felt too little consideration had been given to French speaking Switzerland 33 173 Swiss companies were involved in the construction work 31 Auer created a Swiss national monument with a rich and symbolic iconography depicting the history constitutional foundations and activities of the country s inhabitants 10 The Swiss Confederation bought the casino property from the city after which construction began on the parliament building on 5 September 1894 The Federal Terrace on the south side was extended but not all the way to the Kirchenfeld Bridge de as originally planned On 11 April 1900 the erection of the large dome was celebrated 24 The handover of the parliament building took place on the morning of 1 April 1902 in an official ceremony The construction costs for the parliament building amounted to 7 2 million francs about 700 million in today s terms Of this 16 2 was spent on artistic decoration 34 Structural changes Edit The parliamentary library in the former chamber of the National Council After the opening of the parliament building the two council chambers in Federal Palace West were abolished their original use can only be guessed at Instead of the Council of States hall offices and a post office counter were built in operation until 2005 The former National Council Chamber was reduced in size and further subdivided by an iron construction with stairs and walkways It has since housed a library for use by employees of the federal administration and members of parliament which is not open to the public except for special occasions for security reasons 35 Over the course of time the use of space in the parliament building was repeatedly adapted to changing often short term needs In addition to necessary technical improvements however remodeling works were carried out in the 1960s In numerous rooms vaults ceilings and wall partitions were covered up or demolished Coloured wallpaper was painted over with white paint and stucco replaced with plasterboard In 1965 the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation began operating radio and television transmissions on the third floor above the Council of States hall which required the installation of a massive wide span concrete ceiling Since the attic spaces were also being used increasingly intensively it seemed appropriate to wall up the lunette windows facing the domed hall As a result natural light no longer entered giving the hall a gloomy appearance 36 Restorations and renovations Edit Renovation works in August 2006 One of the newly created parliamentary group meeting rooms on the third floor of the parliament building In 1991 the National Council commission charged with drafting parliamentary reform decided to examine a far reaching expansion of the parliament s premises 37 In a project competition Mario Botta s proposal for an extension in the form of a citadel like structure on the slope below the parliament building prevailed Massive historic preservation and urban planning concerns were however raised against the project 38 and it was abandoned by the National Council on 17 March 1993 at the request of the Parliamentary Reform Commission on the grounds of the federal government s poor financial situation 39 Later that year the National Council Chamber underwent extensive restoration for the first time since its inauguration 40 For this reason the Councillors held a session outside Bern for the first time ever in Geneva In 1999 at the suggestion of Council of States member Dick Marty the Federal Assembly decided to hold the 2001 spring session in Lugano 41 This made it possible to restore the Hall of the Council of States as well 42 The differing demands of parliamentarians media and the administration using the Federal Palace led to ever greater organizational problems Parliamentarians complained about the lack of rooms for meetings and secretariats and that their individual workplaces were located too far away from the council chambers on the top floor of the Federal Palace East A complete renovation of the building services was put on the agenda 38 The renovation was aimed should satisfy the needs of the members of the council and reinforce the architectural and artistic concepts of Hans Wilhelm Auer The first stage was the relocation of the workplaces of the media representatives To this end a new media center was built between October 2003 and May 2006 in the buildings at Bundesgasse 8 12 located opposite the Federal Palace West the construction and equipping costs amounted to 42 5 million francs 43 Work on Federal Palace West began in February 2005 and lasted just over three years The main focus was on renovating the facade and the roof New workspaces were also added the attic converted and various security and fire protection measures improved 44 The National Council and the Council of States approved 83 million Swiss francs for this as part of the 2004 and 2006 civil construction programs In June 2006 the first comprehensive renovation and restoration of the parliament building began under the direction of the architectural firm Aebi amp Vincent Taking inflation and various additional costs the final cost was 103 million Swiss francs 45 On the third floor workrooms for parliamentarians meeting rooms for parliamentary groups and a multifunctional conference hall were created The lunette windows lit in the back by skylights were also opened interior walls cleaned cracks repaired and recent furnishings removed transforming the domed hall once again into a bright daylight space Extended spiral staircases and new elevators improved vertical access A new visitors entrance was built under the National Council Chamber and a new technical floor with an IT room was constructed below In general the principle was to remove modern fixtures and emphasise the original furnishings The building exterior was extensively renovated including the sandstone facades the cornices and figures the roof and domes the skylights and the lighting In the National Council Chamber the building services the voting system the translation system and the surfaces were renewed 46 47 During the most intensive renovation phase the National Council and the Council of States held their 2006 autumn session in Flims The official inauguration of the renovated parliament building took place on 21 November 2008 with a ceremony 45 In the summer and fall of 2011 the Council of States hall was renovated and from September 2012 to March 2016 the renovation of the Federal House East took place to conclude the project In addition to a selective renovation of the building exterior this included a comprehensive renovation of the interiors with a clean up of the room structures and renewal of the building and security technology 48 During the renovations construction workers uncovered the vaulted cellars of the former Inselspital in the fall of 2012 These massive rooms made of large sandstone blocks once stored the natural resources used to finance the hospital and care for its patients 49 In the summer of 2019 the visitor entrance at the Bundesterrasse side was rebuilt due to security considerations 50 Parliament building EditDome and facade Edit The central assembly building is dominated by a domed hall in the layout of a Swiss cross 31 It separates the two chambers of the National Council south and the Council of States north The dome itself has an external height of 64 metres 210 ft that was exceptional at the time but chosen to balance the total length of the three buildings 51 The mosaic in the center represents the federal coat of arms along with the Latin motto Unus pro omnibus omnes pro uno One for all and all for one surrounded by the coat of arms of the 22 cantons that existed in 1902 The coat of arms of the Canton of Jura created in 1979 was later placed outside of the mosaic The hall is dominated by the sculpture The Three Confederates Die drei Eidgenossen created by James Andre Vibert and referring to the legendary oath to fight for Switzerland Rutlischwur North FacadeThe central entry facing the Federal Square Bundesplatz and opening up to a domed hall carries the inscription Curia Confœderationis Helveticae Swiss Federal Assembly underneath a pediment The roof edge is topped by Auguste de Niederhausern Rodo s allegorical sculpture of Helvetia representing independence center with the executive on her left and the legislature on her right This arrangement was inspired by the Pallas Athena Fountain of the Austrian Parliament 51 The pediment is flanked by two griffins by Anselmo Laurenti symbolizing courage wisdom and strength The female allegories in the second floor niches by James Andre Vibert represent freedom left and peace right 31 Two commemorative plaques above refer to the years 1291 Federal Charter and the legendary Rutlischwur and 1848 first Federal Constitution transforms Switzerland into a federal state Finally the male allegories in the first floor niches by Maurice Reymond represent the chronicler of the past left and the chronicler of the present right 51 Organisation EditFederal Assembly National Council Council of States Hall of the dome Visitor centre 52 West wingFederal Council 53 Federal Chancellery of Switzerland Federal Department of Foreign Affairs Federal Department of Justice and Police Parliamentary Library Carl Lutz Room 54 East wingFederal Department of Economic Affairs Education and Research Federal Department of Defence Civil Protection and SportsTrivia EditAs reported in a study by the Federal parliamentary services Parlamentsdienste the noise caused by human activities in the chamber of the National Council is clearly too loud The previously undisclosed study was published by 10vor10 on 12 December 2014 pointing that the noise level is usually at a level of about 70 decibels comparable to a used roadway so concentration of work for politicians is not possible 55 Gallery Edit Federal Palace from the South with the West and East wings The south side of the Federal Palace with the river Aare in the foreground The central domed hall The Three Confederates Dome of the Federal Palace The name Jura can be read at the bottom of the picture indicating where the coat of arms of the Canton of Jura was placed after the secession from Berne in 1979 The salle des pas perdus The chamber of the National Council and of the United Federal Assembly The Council of States chamber Inside the west wing of the building A meeting room for political parties Full flags during state visit Pediment with inscription and allegorical sculpture Statue of the Stauffacherin in the National Council ChamberSee also EditBundesplatz Hotel Bellevue PalaceNotes Edit A 2017 report by the Federal Chancellery of Switzerland states 33 31 References Edit a b Labhart 2002 p 4 Judische Prasenz im mittelalterlichen Bern Jewish presence in medieval Bern in German Kanton Bern 29 September 2009 Archived from the original on 11 November 2016 Informationstafel zur judischen Geschichte in der Stadt Bern Information board on Jewish history in the city of Bern in German Kanton Bern 29 September 2009 Archived from the original on 11 November 2016 Kreis Georg 20 March 2015 Bundesstadt Federal City Historische Lexikon der Schweiz HLS in German Retrieved 1 May 2022 Bilfinger 2009 p 2 Bilfinger 2009 p 5 6 a b Labhart 2002 p 6 a b c Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 467 a b Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 384 a b c d Das schweizerische Capitol The Swiss Capitol Neue Zurcher Zeitung in German 23 March 2002 Retrieved 2 May 2022 Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 385 Bilfinger 2009 p 6 7 Stuckelberger 1985 p 187 188 Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 387 Bilfinger 2009 p 14 Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 532 Stuckelberger 1985 p 188 189 Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 389 a b Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 390 a b Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 468 Labhart 2002 p 7 Bilfinger 2009 p 16 17 Bilfinger 2009 p 18 a b Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 469 a b Hauser amp Rollin 1986 p 393 a b Stuckelberger 1985 p 190 Labhart 2002 p 11 16 Labhart 2002 p 45 46 Labhart 2002 p 12 13 Bilfinger 2009 p 26 a b c d Federal Chancellery of Switzerland 2017 The Parliament Building in Bern Switzerland PDF 12 2017 ed Federal Chancellery of Switzerland pp 5 18 Stuckelberger 1985 p 200 Muller 2002 p 155 156 Stuckelberger 1985 p 199 Parlamentsdienste 20 August 2018 Wie aus dem Nationalratssaal eine Bibliothek wurde How the National Council Hall became a library The Federal Assembly The Swiss Parliament in German Retrieved 2 May 2022 Furrer 2009 p 18 Kommission des Nationalrates Parlamentsreform Commission of the National Council Parliamentary Reform PDF Archives federales suisses AFS in German Bundesblatt 16 May 1991 pp 696 698 Retrieved 2 May 2022 a b Furrer 2009 p 20 Parlamentsgebaude Erweiterungsbau Parliament building Extension building PDF Archives federales suisses AFS in German Amtliches Bulletin der Bundesversammlung Nationalrat 17 March 1993 pp 466 467 Retrieved 2 May 2022 Das Parlamentsgebaude Parliament Building The Federal Assembly The Swiss Parliament in German Retrieved 3 May 2022 Organisation au Tessin de la session parlementaire de printemps 2001 la Delegation administrative et les Bureaux des conseils ont approuve les propositions budget et locaux des Services du Parlement Organization in Ticino of the 2001 spring parliamentary session the Administrative Delegation and the Council Offices approved the budget and premises proposals of the Parliamentary Services The Federal Assembly The Swiss Parliament in German 23 May 2000 Retrieved 3 May 2022 Monica Bilfinger 2007 Umbau und Renovation des Parlamentsgebaudes Conversion and renovation of the Parliament building Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule Zurich in German 13 doi 10 5169 seals 727065 Medienzentrum Bundeshaus Bern Media center Bundeshaus Bern PDF Marti Gesamtleistungen AG p de Retrieved 3 May 2022 Umbau und Fassadensanierung Bundeshaus West Reconstruction and renovation of the facade of the West Federal Building Bundesamt fur Bauten und Logistik in German 24 January 2005 Retrieved 3 May 2022 a b Thema Zum 21 November 2008 Feierliche Eroffnung des renovierten Bundeshauses Official opening of the renovated Federal Palace Neue Zurcher Zeitung in German Retrieved 3 May 2022 Furrer 2009 p 23 24 Umbau und Sanierung Parlamentsgebaude 2006 2008 Conversion and renovation of the Parliament building 2006 2008 PDF Bundesamt fur Bauten und Logistik in German Retrieved 3 May 2022 Bundeshaus Ost Bern Bundesamt fur Bauten und Logistik BBL Bundesamt fur Bauten und Logistik BBL in German 29 January 2014 Archived from the original on 1 May 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2022 Bundeshaus Ost steht auf Kellern des fruheren Inselspitals Bundeshaus Ost stands on the basement of the former Inselspital Neue Zurcher Zeitung in German 30 September 2012 Retrieved 3 May 2022 Das Parlamentsgebaude ist im Sommer wegen Bauarbeiten fur Besucher geschlossen The Parliament building is closed to visitors during the summer for construction work Die Bundesversammlung Das Schweizer Parlament in German 8 June 2019 Retrieved 3 May 2022 a b c Stuckelberger 1985 p 185 234 Visiting the Parliament Building Federal Assembly page visited on 11 September 2016 in French Dans les appartements des sept sages Le temps Sunday 12 May 2013 page visited on 11 September 2016 Swiss Schindler honoured with room in Federal Palace The Local Retrieved 15 February 2018 Larmbelastung im Nationalrat deutlich zu hoch in German 10vor10 12 December 2014 Retrieved 13 December 2014 Works cited Edit Stuckelberger Johannes 1985 Die kunstlerische Ausstattung des Bundeshauses in Bern The artistic furnishings of the Federal Palace in Bern in German Vol 42 Zurich Zeitschrift fur Schweizerische Archaologie und Kunstgeschichte doi 10 5169 seals 168629 Hauser Andreas Rollin Peter 1986 INSA Inventar der neueren Schweizer Architektur 1850 1920 Stadte INSA 2 Basel Bellinzona Bern Volume 0 INSA Inventory of Recent Swiss Architecture 1850 1920 Cities INSA 2 Basel Bellinzona Berne Volume 0 in German Zurich Gesellschaft fur Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte ISBN 9783280017166 Labhart Toni P 2002 Steinfuhrer Bundeshaus Bern Steinfuhrer federal building Bern in German Bern Gesellschaft fur Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte ISBN 9783857827198 Muller Andreas 2002 Der verbitterte Bundeshausarchitekt die vertrackte Geschichte des Parlamentsgebaudes und seines Erbauers Hans Wilhelm Auer 1847 1906 The embittered Bundeshaus architect the complicated history of the parliament building and its builder Hans Wilhelm Auer 1847 1906 in German Bern Orell Fussli ISBN 9783280028223 Bilfinger Monica 2009 Das Bundeshaus in Bern The Federal Palace in Bern in German Vol Schweizerische Kunstfuhrer Band 859 860 Serie 86 Bern Gesellschaft fur Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte ISBN 9783857828591 Weissberg Bernhard Rieben Edouard 2012 Das Bundeshaus The Bundeshaus in German Faro ISBN 9783037810385 Minta Anna Bernd Nicolai 2014 Parlamentarische Reprasentationen das Bundeshaus in Bern im Kontext internationaler Parlamentsbauten und nationaler Strategien Parliamentary representations the Federal Palace in Bern in the context of international parliament buildings and national strategies in German Peter Lang ISBN 9783034315029 Ruedi Martin 2018 Das Parlamentsgebaude von Bern 1894 1902 Genese eines Nationaldenkmals The parliament building in Bern 1894 1902 Genesis of a National Monument in German Freie Universitat Berlin Furrer Bernhard 15 May 2009 Ein Ganzes aus Alt und Neu A whole of old and new Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule Zurich in German TEC21 Fachzeitschrift fur Architektur Ingenieurwesen und Umwelt Tschachtli Angelica 2014 Ein Parlamentsbau muss auch Widerspruchlichkeiten vereinen Gesellschaft fur Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte GSK pp 36 40 Bilfinger Monica 2017 Das schweizerische Parlaments gebaude von Kunsthandwerk und zeitgenossischem Design The Swiss Parliament building of craftsmanship and contemporary design PDF Peristyle in German Societe d histoire de l art en Suisse GSK SHAS SSAS External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bundeshaus Bern Federal Palace of Switzerland Official website Federal Palace in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Portals Politics Switzerland Coordinates 46 56 48 N 7 26 39 E 46 94667 N 7 44417 E 46 94667 7 44417 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Palace of Switzerland amp oldid 1150969587, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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