MIES – Home office culture tip

Building design

HOMEOFFICE CULTURE TIP: Book (ILLUSTRATION: JURI AGOSTINELLI)

Spanish comic artist and architect Agustín Ferrer Casas depicts the life of Mies van der Rohe in his graphic novel.

2019 was the year of anniversaries: 100 years of Bauhaus, 90 years of the Barcelona Pavilion and the 50th anniversary of Mies van der Rohe’s death. The German version of the graphic novel “MIES – Mies van der Rohe: A visionary architect” by Spanish comic artist and architect Agustín Ferrer Casas was published to coincide with this. It depicts his life in flashbacks during a flight to the construction site of the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was one of the most important architects of modernism: he shaped our idea of modern architecture like no other. With his first German publication of the graphic novel “MIES – Mies van der Rohe: A visionary architect”, Spanish architect and comic artist Agustín Ferrer Casas not only provides us with the merits and work of the Baumeister, but also the often contradictory life story of the Aachen-born architect. Casas portrays him with all his contrasts, light and dark sides. The Spanish illustrator explains that he was particularly interested in Mies van der Rohe’s life in the context of the turbulent events of the 20th century.

The story begins in 1965: on the flight to West Berlin for the laying of the foundation stone of the New National Gallery, Casas has the architect reflect on his eventful life in conversation with his grandson Dirk Lohan. The architecture is not neglected either: all the important buildings are staged in precise drawings, including his early works Haus Riehl in Potsdam-Neubabelsberg (1907) and Haus Perls in Berlin (1911).

Perhaps the architect’s most famous building, the exhibition pavilion of the German Reich at the 1929 World’s Fair in Barcelona, served to present the Weimar Republic and was intended to symbolize the efficiency of German industry and craftsmanship through its novelty and precision. Not least because of its reconstruction, the pavilion is confirmed as one of the architectural icons of the 20th century. Mies van der Rohe realized two of his fundamental design principles with this building, which was to become a style-defining example of modern architecture: In the “free floor plan”, the walls, freed from their load-bearing function, became light room dividers or surfaces in the room. The “flowing space” connected the living area with the outside through the almost transparent-looking walls with their large glass fronts and the filigree steel supports.

Precise lines

“Mies’ North American architecture was characterized by a preoccupation with detail, supported by the financial cushions of a booming economy,” says Casas, “The American phase is undoubtedly a great time for him as an architect, with interesting bombastic and smaller commissions.” His first office building – the Seagram Building (1958) – was built in New York. The skyscraper defined the style of high-rise buildings in New York for several years and had an enormous influence on American architecture. His method of encasing an inner skeleton of reinforcing steel with a non-load-bearing shell has since become the standard method for constructing high-rise buildings. In Chicago, he was also the first to succeed in almost completely glazing all facades in high-rise construction.

The fact that Casas, born in 1971, is himself a trained architect is obvious when reading. He has caricatured his “Mies” at times. The graphic novel reads like a screenplay. “Of course, I’m not a contemporary witness, I don’t know which sentences were spoken in private,” explains Casas. “I invented all of the dialogs according to my intuition. And I also changed many facts and situations to increase their poetic impact and significance for the plot.” In this way, he describes the famous architect very vividly and very vividly – and not just with his extremely precise stroke.

Here you can find the latest home office culture tip: 2312.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Congratulations!

Building design
Group photo of the winners of the 2023 Monument Protection Medal with Art Minister Markus Blume and Conservator General Prof. Mathias Pfeil. Photo: BLfD

Group photo of the winners of the 2023 Monument Protection Medal with Art Minister Markus Blume and Conservator General Prof. Mathias Pfeil. Photo: BLfD

Yesterday evening, on the 50th anniversary of the enactment of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act, Art Minister Markus Blume and Conservator General Prof. Mathias Pfeil awarded the 2023 Monument Protection Medal to 18 individuals, foundations, associations and municipalities. The ceremony took place at the headquarters of the Bavarian State Office in the Renaissance courtyard of the Old Mint in Munich

Art Minister Markus Blume and General Conservator Prof. Mathias Pfeil awarded the 2023 Monument Protection Medal to 18 individuals, foundations, associations and municipalities yesterday evening, on the 50th anniversary of the enactment of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act. The ceremony took place at the headquarters of the Bavarian State Office in the Renaissance courtyard of the Old Mint in Munich.

Yesterday, on June 25, 2023, the Bavarian Monument Protection Act celebrated its birthday. To mark the anniversary – the law for the protection and care of monuments was enacted 50 years ago – the Bavarian State Ministry of Science and the Arts and the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments paid special tribute on Sunday evening at the Alte Münze in Munich to people who have rendered outstanding services to Bavaria’s monuments. Art Minister Markus Blume and General Conservator Prof. Mathias Pfeil awarded the winners of the 2023 Monument Preservation Medal at a ceremony yesterday evening: 18 individuals, families, municipalities, an association, a cooperative and a foundation were honored for their outstanding commitment to monument preservation. They have all invested a great deal of time and money in restoration work or passed on their heritage conservation expertise. And each one is worth a story. “In our fast-moving times, characterized by change, monuments are fixed points – anchors of stability that provide orientation,” emphasized Prof. Mathias Pfeil at the beginning of his speech yesterday. “This makes the commitment of our award winners to their preservation all the more valuable. They help to keep our history and culture alive. I would like to thank them all for their tireless commitment and courage.”

“Historic buildings were usually built cleverly, which is not necessarily the case in modern times,” explained general conservator Mathias Pfeil. “The throwaway mentality is an invention of the last few decades.” As a rule, monuments are climate-efficient and were built with the weather in mind, Mathias Pfeil continued. The construction expert emphasized how much we can learn from the past. In this context, the General Conservator also referred to the upcoming anniversary exhibition “Moment mal – Denkmal”, which can be seen from July 1 in the columned hall of the Alte Münze of the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments and answers, for example, what monument protection has to do with climate protection.

  • Evangelical-Lutheran parish of St. Sebald, represented by Pastor Dr. Martin Brons, for the restoration and conversion of the St. Sebald vicarage in Nuremberg, City of Nuremberg, Middle Franconia
  • Constanze and Dr. Matthias Ermer for the façade restoration of two residential and commercial buildings, Kelheim district, Lower Bavaria
  • JuraMarktStadel EG, represented by Dr. Thomas Feuerer and Thomas Semmler for the overall restoration of the Jurastadel Pittmannsdorf with the application of a lime tile roof, District of Regensburg, Upper Palatinate
  • Markt Falkenberg, represented by the First Mayor Matthias Grundler for the restoration and revitalization of the Falkenberg castle complex, district of Tirschenreuth, Upper Palatinate
  • Dr. Sandra Schütz and Johannes Maria Haslinger for the restoration and reactivation of the former Red Schoolhouse, district of Regen, Lower Bavaria
  • City of Karlstadt, represented by First Mayor Michael Hombach for the restoration of the Karlstadt Museum, Main-Spessart district, Lower Franconia
  • Stadtprozelten, represented by the First Mayor Rainer Kroth for the renovation of the old town hall and the construction of a barrier-free extension, district of Miltenberg, Lower Franconia
  • City of Wunsiedel, represented by the First Mayor Nicolas Lahovnik for the renovation of eleven rock cellars in the Katharinenberg cellar alley, district of Wunsiedel im Fichtelgebirge, Upper Franconia
  • Claudia and Stephan Merkl for the renovation and use of the Pschorrstadl as an event venue (monument protection medal in the climate protection category), district of Fürstenfeldbruck, Upper Bavaria
  • Martina and Bernhard Nöbauer for the renovation of the Jostnhof farmhouse (monument protection medal in the climate protection category), district of Passau, Lower Bavaria
  • Friedrich Graf von Rechteren Limpurg and Cosima Gräfin von Rechteren Limpurg for the renovation of Sommerhausen Castle, Würzburg district, Lower Franconia
  • Verein Zeitreise Gilching e.V., represented by the first chairwoman Annette Reindel, for a wide range of voluntary work in researching and communicating archaeology, district of Starnberg, Upper Bavaria
  • Oberfrankenstiftung, represented by the Chairwoman of the Foundation Council, District President Heidrun Piwernetz and Managing Director Stefan Seewald for targeted and flexibly adapted funding in the field of monument preservation in Upper Franconia
  • Judith Spindler and Horst Traudisch-Spindler for the renovation of a former farmhouse, Ostallgäu district, Swabia
  • Hans Well and Sabeeka Gangjee-Well for the complete renovation and restoration of a Einfirsthof (former residence of the Pollinger Klosterbraumeister) and seven other listed buildings, district of Weilheim-Schongau, Upper Bavaria
  • Matthias Zink for the renovation of a former customs house of the Rothenburger Landhege, district of Ansbach, Middle Franconia
  • Gerhard Hilpert for his voluntary work, particularly in the preservation of archaeological monuments, Main-Spessart district, Lower Franconia
  • Former Ministerialrätin Dr. Birgitta Ringbeck for her outstanding commitment to the Bavarian cultural heritage sites on the UNESCO World Heritage List, Bavaria-wide

Preserving the cultural heritage of a region or country requires people who are committed to it – with passion and conviction. This requires perseverance, creativity and often also financial commitment. The Bavarian State Ministry of Science and the Arts and the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments recognize this commitment to the preservation of monuments and bring it to the attention of the public by awarding the Medal for the Preservation of Monuments. The Monument Protection Medal has been awarded since 1978. The medal shows a portrait of King Ludwig I, the founder of monument preservation in Bavaria, on the front. Since 2018, the reverse has featured the inscriptions: “Bavarian State Ministry of Science and the Arts” and “For special services to the preservation of monuments”.

Since 2023, the State Ministry of Science and the Arts and the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation have also awarded a monument preservation medal in the “Climate Protection” category for monument preservation projects that are particularly innovative or exemplary in terms of climate protection.

Every year, the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation asks the circle of eligible nominees for proposals for the award. From these, it makes a pre-selection, which it passes on to the Bavarian State Ministry of Science and the Arts. The Bavarian State Ministry of Science and the Arts makes the final decision as to who receives the Monument Preservation Medal.

Since 2009, the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments has published an annual brochure with the award winners. It presents the winners and the reason for awarding the medal. You can download the brochures from previous years as PDF files here.

The group of authorized nominators includes

  • the district presidents
  • the presidents of the district councils
  • district home preservationists
  • the Bavarian State Association for the Preservation of Local History
  • the dioceses and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria

To mark the 50th anniversary of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act, there are events throughout Bavaria – lectures, city walks and workshop visits. Munich residents in particular can look forward to the monument summer at the headquarters of the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments. Because from the day after tomorrow, from Wednesday, July 1, 2023, the beautiful Renaissance courtyard of the Old Mint will be transformed into a cultural beer garden (until September). There, the “Wirtshaus und Theater im Fraunhofer”, known as the operator of the Herzkasperl festival tent at the “Oidn Wiesn”, invites everyone to join in the celebrations from Thursdays to Sundays with music and entertainment in a modern Bavarian style. Come and have a look!

Brutalism – The little Baumeister style story

Building design
Gottfried Böhm, Pilgrim church in Neviges. 1963-1972 01. photo: seier+seier via Wiki Commons, CC BY 2.0

Gottfried Böhm, Pilgrim church in Neviges. 1963-1972 01. photo: seier+seier via Wiki Commons, CC BY 2.0

Brutalism doesn’t sound very friendly to the general public, but it is an established and well-known term in the history of 20th century architecture. It was coined in the 1950s and 1960s for buildings made of exposed concrete, which could be smooth or clad with patterns. Later, architecture in which the visibility of the building material became a stylistic feature was classified as Brutalism. What was previously intended to remain invisible was placed on the façade surfaces in order to break up the compact effect of a building: pipes, manifest lines, unclad walls, a lot of unadorned concrete and the spatial interplay of the components thus entered the urban space – all in all not a very delicate architectural style, as the name Brutalism suggests.

Brutalism doesn’t sound very friendly to the general public, but it is an established and well-known term in the history of 20th century architecture. It was coined in the 1950s and 1960s for buildings made of exposed concrete, which could be smooth or clad with patterns. Later, architecture in which the visibility of the building material became a stylistic feature was classified as Brutalism.

What was previously supposed to remain invisible was placed on the façade surfaces in order to break up the compact effect of a building: pipes, manifest lines, unclad walls, a lot of unadorned concrete and the spatial interplay of the components thus appeared in the urban space – all in all, not a very delicate architectural style, as the name Brutalism suggests. Here we reveal which architects played a decisive role in the style and created icons with their buildings.

The Swedish architect Hans Asplund was the first to coin the term Brutalism. Later, English architects adopted it and spread the term Brutalism, which they derived from “Béton brut” (exposed concrete). In Great Britain, the architect couple Alison and Peter Smithson played a pioneering role. As early as 1953, they described their architecture as examples of Brutalism. The author and theorist Reyner Banham defined the architectural style in 1955 in his essay “The New Brutalism” in the magazine Architectural Review, thereby sparking a lively international debate.

Brutalism was linked to the economic and material, but especially also to the mental and psychological situation of the post-war period. As a result, it became an international phenomenon on the one hand, while reacting to local conditions on the other. In addition to concrete, metal, brick and stone were also used as building materials.

Brutalism spread to all continents in the 1960s and remained in vogue until the 1980s. Its proponents believed that modern industrialized countries needed powerful, raw and honest architecture. In the 1990s, the architecture scene abandoned this path and brutalism was now even considered aesthetic vandalism. Urbanists and architects were now once again working on the renaissance of the civic city. Brutalist architecture was hardly maintained and concrete is very susceptible to dirt, algae growth and decay. The ravages of time were always clearly visible on the Brutalist icons and often made them unattractive in the cityscape.

Although architectural critics rediscovered and appreciated Brutalism as an aesthetic concept in the early 21st century, many of its buildings are still under threat of demolition today. Concrete and its use as a building material is currently considered a building and environmental sin – there is talk of “gray energy” in this context. Nevertheless, experts are campaigning for Brutalism. In 2018, the New York MoMA presented the exhibition “Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948-1980”, making the previously controversial architecture worthy of a museum. (More about the MoMA exhibition in the video).

We can find examples of Brutalism in architecture everywhere. Le Corbusier’s “Unité d’Habitation” in Marseille was one of the first significant buildings in this style. The apartment block was built between 1946 and 1952 as a residential project with room types for individual or communal living arrangements.

Measuring 138 meters along its longitudinal axis and built over 18 storeys, Le Corbusier’s first work in this area offers 330 residential units and many social islands on the roof terraces. The serial spatial structure enabled efficient planning and structural implementation and was something of a precursor to the prefabricated building in a reinforced concrete skeleton.

High-rise towers are very prominent in the cityscape. One successful example of well-designed vertical concrete architecture is the “Torre Velasca” in Milan by the BBPR architects’ collective, which has been a listed building since 2011. The plans for it were based on ideas from the early 1950s. In 1956 and 1957, the 106-metre-high tower was erected in just 292 days.

Its architecture anticipates what is known today as “mixed use” or “hybrid architecture”: The lower 18 floors house business premises and offices, while the upper floors of the mushroom-shaped, cantilevered transverse structure contain apartments with a great view over Milan.

The 81-metre-high “Torres Blancas” in Madrid, designed by Francisco Javier Sáenz de Oiza in 1961, is also used in this way. This tower, which was commissioned by the daring client Juan Huarte as an avant-garde experiment, is one of the most complicated and innovative reinforced concrete constructions of the 1960s. Incidentally, the architect himself lived in the tower until his death.

In Great Britain, London-based architects Alison and Peter Smithson were among the pioneers of Brutalism. Their “Economist Building”, which they worked on from 1960, was the editorial building of the British business newspaper The Economist. With its compact design and exposed concrete façade, it is considered a pioneering example of Brutalist design principles. In addition to administrative buildings, the Smithsons were also active in the field of social housing.

“Robin Hood Gardens” is the name of their London housing estate, which was built at the same time and completed in 1972. Long concrete blocks, wide walkways and green spaces characterize the complex, which consists of two buildings with seven and ten storeys respectively. The western block was demolished in 2017 due to its poor condition. Part of it was preserved by the Victoria & Albert Museum and presented in a documentary at the 2018 Architecture Biennale in Venice to show the world the Smithsons’ vision for a better urban life.

Cultural buildings were also given their scaffolding and shell with a large proportion of concrete. The main library building of the University of California in San Diego, the so-called “Geisel Library”, is one of the well-known brutalist examples. It was designed by William Pereira. Its sculptural design is a symbiosis of brutalism and futurism: in combination with the design of the individual floors, the arches of the building were intended to look like hands holding up a stack of books.

In London, the National Royal Theater, built between 1967 and 1976 according to plans by Denys Lasdun, is an interesting example of a cultural building in the Brutalist style. A great deal of exposed concrete was used here, which made the architecture the subject of much public debate. Prince Charles said that the building reminded him of a nuclear power station. The National Royal Theatre was voted one of the ten most loved and ten most hated buildings in the city by the people of London.

Church construction and exposed concrete also go well together: Gottfried Böhm and Fritz Wotruba have proven this. Böhm, known for his expressive concrete architecture in expressive cubature, created one of the largest pilgrimage churches in the archdiocese of Cologne with the Neviges pilgrimage cathedral in North Rhine-Westphalia from 1966 to 1968. He designed a suspended concrete structure in which the mutually supporting wall and ceiling elements form a single unit. From the outside, the sacred building appears as a cubist construction with a closed surface in exposed concrete.

The Viennese sculptor and set designer Fritz Wotruba designed a church building made of concrete blocks, while the architect Fritz Gerhard Mayr drew up the construction plans. The Roman Catholic church “Zur Heiligsten Dreifaltigkeit” in the south of Vienna was built from August 1974 to October 1976. It consists of 152 unclad concrete blocks, the tallest of which measures 13.10 meters. The light falls through simple panes of glass inserted into the irregular spaces between the blocks, resulting in overlapping beams of light.

Research buildings and experimental architecture have a lot of potential in common. In Berlin Lichterfelde, for example, there is the so-called “Mäusebunker”, a former animal laboratory of the Charité hospital. It was designed by architects Gerd Hänska and Kurt Schmersow in the early 1970s. The building was completed in 1981. The body of the building consists of an elongated and tilted truncated pyramid, the surface of which is made entirely of exposed concrete. Blue-painted ventilation pipes penetrate the façade surface from the inside – they almost look like gun barrels.

The façade openings on the long sides are designed as triangular window elements whose tetrahedrons also protrude from the façade plane. The “Mäusebunker” was actually supposed to be demolished, but last winter, with the support of the Berlin cultural scene, it was declared a model project of the State Monuments Office and will be preserved.

Would you like another history of style? When we think of Cubism today, the names of famous painters such as Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque or highly esteemed sculptors such as Alexander Archipenko and Henri Laurens spring to mind. But the art movement also had a central influence on architecture.