Florian Bolk Livres






Ambassade du Canada Berlin
- 32pages
- 2 heures de lecture
Les publications des éditions „Stadtwandel“ font découvrir avec des photos brillantes et des textes compétentes l’architecture d’un lieu, son développement et son intention. Ils sont dédiés à l’architecture classique et des projets actuels en Allemagne et donnent informations sur l’architecte, l’édifice et l’utilisation de l’objet.
Hackesche Höfe Berlin
- 32pages
- 2 heures de lecture
Auch sanierte Altbauten geben Impulse und stellen einen Bestandteil zeitgenössischer Architektur dar. Das in diesem Band vorgestellte Ensemble wurde um die Jahrhundertwende von August Endell und Kurt Berndt geplant und diente nach umfassender Wiederherstellung durch das Büro Fabrik N° 40 Weiß & Faust vor allem als städtebauliches Vorbild für das Quartier Neuer Hackescher Markt.
The publications of the Stadtwandel Verlag are dedicated to the architecture of a place, its development and intention. They are illustrated with brilliant photos and concise and dense texts. The new architectural guides explain classical architecture and current projects in Germany. The concise texts supply also information on the architect, the construction and its utilization.
The publications of the Stadtwandel Verlag are dedicated to the architecture of a place, its development and intention. They are illustrated with brilliant photos and concise and dense texts. The new architectural guides explain classical architecture and current projects in Germany. The concise texts supply also information on the architect, the construction and its utilization.
The German Historical Museum (GHM) is located in two distinct buildings that create a captivating dialogue between various architectural styles in Berlin. At the beginning of Unter den Linden boulevard stands the Baroque Zeughaus (arsenal), which has housed the Museum of German History since 2005. Behind it is a modern exhibition hall designed by renowned architect Ieoh Ming Pei, showcasing numerous special exhibitions. The Zeughaus, with its delicate pink façade and intricate sculptures, is one of the few remaining Baroque structures in central Berlin, reflecting the grandeur of the architecture that once adorned the residence of Prussian electors and kings. Originally serving as a weather-resistant storage for military equipment, it also conveyed the image of Friedrich I, the first King of Prussia, as a Baroque ruler during the age of absolutism. This image is evident in the building's architecture and its prestigious location near the royal Hohenzollern palace, which was destroyed after World War II by the East German government. Today, little remains of the original Baroque design or the extensive 19th-century alterations, most of which were lost in the war. The interior was rebuilt post-1945, and the exterior restored, with the building serving as East Berlin’s Museum of German History from 1952. The spatial structure established during that time has been preserved in the recent renovation by Winfried Brenne Architekten