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Start | Bauwerke | Hanseatenweg 10 Akademie der Künste – Werner Düttmann
13

Hanseatenweg 10
Akademie der Künste – Werner Düttmann

Special buildings
Cuboid with a covering of washed concrete slabs Landesarchiv Berlin; Foto: Horst Siegmann
Ground floor plan Landesarchiv Berlin, Amtlicher Katalog der Internationalen Bauausstellung Berlin 1957
Asymmetry and oblique angles in the auditorium of the studio building Landesarchiv Berlin, Wiederaufbau Hansaviertel; Sonderveröffentlichung zur Interbau Berlin 57
Lowered entrance in the glazed and recessed basement floor Archiv Akademie der Künste
Ensemble of three different components, connected by courtyards and glazed corridors Landesarchiv Berlin, Hansaviertel Berlin; Senator für Bau- und Wohnungswesen, Berlin, Juli 1964

[ Not part of Interbau ]

On the edge of Tiergarten, surrounded by greenery, Werner Düttmann erected the Akademie der Künste (West) as a generous, yet modest ensemble with three different building units linked to one another via courtyards and glazed corridors. The building was made possible by a donation from the Berlin-born American Henry H. Reichhold, who covered all the construction costs on condition that Düttmann be the architect. The GDR’s Akademie der Künste had already been formed in 1950; its West Berlin counterpart was founded four years later at a Dahlem villa, but it lacked space for public events. On a site that had originally been intended by Interbau for additional residential buildings, a large, windowless block clad with exposed concrete panels was erected as an exhibition area with its own atrium, along with a theater and foyer and a building with several storeys to house offices and studios. The entrance is sunken and located to the west in the glazed and recessed base of the exhibition hall . A wide staircase leads to the exhibition space on the first floor, which is U-shaped around a courtyard and provided with light in the northern part by way of a saw tooth roof with skylights. Its open construction and its grain-cut timber parquet flooring invoke elements of factory architecture. The architecture of the theater, called the “Studio”, speaks another language, with its many angles, jutting out towards the west. This multi-purpose hall resists the axial and orthogonal quality of the complex’s overall floor plan and that of the other buildings. With its asymmetrical shape, its copper roof, zigzagging towards the ground, and its windowless brick walls, it represents a new take on expressionist form. This impression continues inside the building with its oblique wall and ceiling surfaces; the askew wooden paneling of the ceiling amplifies the building’s dramatically expressive gesture. The hall with its two audience spaces in front of and behind the stage is beneath ground level. The large, yet intimate, foyer features a bar.

The administration and studio building to the east, called the “Blue Building” due to its original color, houses offices, meeting rooms, and studio apartments with small loggias on the top floors. It is l inked to the main building by way of a courtyard and a glazed corridor. The color and shape of the building, the windows, and facades take up motifs of modernist architecture and the Bauhaus. Walter Rossow, who had already been responsible for the overall landscaping in the Hansaviertel, designed the courtyards and free spaces around the building as extensions of the interiors, with the slate flooring continuing outdoors, with views of the courtyard and with accessible gardens of reeds and grasses.

Draft sketch main entrance Archiv, Akademie der Künste
Draft sketch inside Archiv, Akademie der Künste
Water fountain and sculptures in the courtyard Landesarchiv Berlin, Hansaviertel Berlin; Senator für Bau- und Wohnungswesen, Berlin, Juli 1964
Building
  • Tripartite building complex consisting of an exhibition hall, theater, and offices, linked by a courtyard and gardens (landscape design by Walter Rossow).
  • The corridors and foyers are largely glazed from floor to ceiling
  • Building completed in 1960
  • Exhibition building with 2000 square meters, the ground floor features a service area and café.
  • Flooring inside and outside clad with Theuma slate
  • On the first floor are exhibition spaces and an atrium garden
  • Facade of exposed concrete panels covered with Carrara marble pebbles
  • Theater studio with seats 600, brick-covered walls, ceiling with asymmetrical wooden paneling, copper tent roof
  • The carpeted foyer has a dropped ceiling
  • The five-storey studio building with houses offices, the library, an apartment for the complex’s caretaker, and studios on the top floors with a saw-tooth roof with three skylights

Situation after renovation in 2018

(by Brenne Architects)

Foyer Brenne Architekten; Foto: Mila Hacke
Boardroom Brenne Architekten; Foto: Holger Herschel
Staircase Brenne Architekten; Foto: Holger Herschel
Glazed connecting corridor Brenne Architekten; Foto: Holger Herschel
Office with built-in closets Brenne Architekten; Foto: Holger Herschel
Offices Brenne Architekten; Foto: Holger Herschel
Bartningallee 16
Hans Schwippert
Bartningallee 12
Otto Heinrich Senn

Werner Düttmann

* 1921 in Berlin
† 1983 in Berlin

  • studied at the Technical University Berlin, including under Hans Scharoun; Diploma 1948
  • 1950 studied at the Institute for Town & Country Planning Kings College, Durham University, England
  • 1953 Government Building Council, Berlin
  • 1956–1960 freelance architect in Berlin, member of various associations
  • 1957 contact architect of H. A. Stubbins during the construction of the Congress Hall
  • 1960 Senate Building Director of West Berlin; active in urban planning
  • from 1961 member of the Akademie der Künste (West)
  • from 1967 Director of Architecture at the Akademie der Künste
  • President of the Akademie der Künste from 1971 until his death
  • from 1964 honorary professorship
  • 1966–1970 professorship at the TU Berlin
  • from 1970 freelance architect again.
  • also active as painter, graphic artist and designer: numerous buildings, mainly in Berlin e.g. Brücke-Museum Dahlem, St. Agnes Church, Mehringplatz, Kreuzberg

See also
Altonaer Straße 15, district library
Hanseatenweg 10, Academy of Arts

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Interactive map

Building types

  • Solitary high-rises
  • Slab high-rises
  • Linear buildings
  • Special buildings
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Buildings

  • All buildings
  • Klopstockstraße 7-11
    Hans C. Müller
  • Klopstockstraße 13-17
    Günther Gottwald
  • Klopstockstraße 19–23
    W. Luckhardt – H. Hoffmann
  • Klopstockstraße 25–27
    Paul Schneider-Esleben
  • Klopstockstraße 29
    Kindergarten
  • St. Ansgar
  • Shoppingcenter
  • Bartningallee 5
    Luciano Baldessari
  • Bartningallee 7
    J. H. Van den Broek – J. B. Bakema
  • Bartningallee 9
    Gustav Hassenpflug
  • Bartningallee 11–13
    R. Lopez – E. Beaudouin
  • Bartningallee 16
    Hans Schwippert
  • Hanseatenweg 10
    Akademie der Künste – Werner Düttmann
  • Bartningallee 12
    Otto H. Senn
  • Bartningallee 10
    Kay Fisker
  • Hanseatenweg 1–3
    Max Taut
  • Hanseatenweg 6
    Franz Schuster
  • Bartningallee 2–4
    Egon Eiermann
  • Altonaer Straße 4–14
    Oscar Niemeyer
  • Altonaer Straße 3–9
    Schwedenhaus
  • Altonaer Straße 15
    Stadtteilbibliothek – W. Düttmann
  • Klopstockstraße 30–32
    Alvar Aalto
  • Händelallee 3–9
    W. Gropius – TAC, W. Ebert
  • Klopstockstraße 14–18
    Pierre Vago
  • Klopstockstraße 2
    K. Müller-Rehm – G. Siegmann, Giraffe
  • Ev. Kaiser-Friedrich-Gedächtniskirche
  • Altonaer Straße 1
    Eternit-Haus
  • Händelallee 26–34
    Eduard Ludwig
  • Händelallee 33–39
    Arne Jacobsen
  • Händelallee 29 & 41
    Gerhard Weber
  • Händelallee 43–47
    H. Mäckler – A. Giefer
  • Händelallee 49–53
    Johannes Krahn
  • Händelallee 59
    S. Ruegenberg – W. v. Möllendorff
  • Händelallee 55 & 57
    Sep Ruf
  • Händelallee 63
    Günter Hönow
  • Händelallee 67
    Haus – Prof. Blumentahl
  • Händelallee 65
    Klaus Kirsten
  • Händelallee 61
    J. Kaiser – G. Bodammer
  • Lessingstraße 5
    Hansa-Grundschule – B. Grimmek
  • Flatowallee 16
    Unité dʼHabitation Typ Berlin
  • John-Foster-Dulles-Allee 10
    Kongresshalle
  • Straße des 17. Juni 100
    Berlin Pavillon

Architects

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  • Le Corbusier
  • Werner Düttmann
  • Wils Ebert
  • Egon Eiermann
  • Herrmann Fehling
  • Kay Fisker
  • Alois Giefer
  • Daniel Gogel
  • Günther Gottwald
  • Bruno Grimmek
  • Walter Gropius
  • Gustav Hassenpflug
  • Günter Hönow
  • Hubert Hoffmann
  • Arne Jacobsen
  • Fritz Jaenecke
  • Josef Kaiser
  • Klaus Kirsten
  • Johannes Krahn
  • Willy Kreuer
  • Ludwig Lemmer
  • Raymond Lopez
  • Wassili Luckhardt
  • Eduard Ludwig
  • Herrmann Mäckler
  • Wolf von Möllendorff
  • Hans Christian Mueller
  • Heinz Nather
  • Oscar Niemeyer
  • Peter Pfankuch
  • Hansrudolf Plarre
  • Klaus Müller Rehm
  • Sergius Ruegenberg
  • Sep Ruf
  • Sten Samuelson
  • Paul Schneider-Esleben
  • Franz Schuster
  • Hans Schwippert
  • Otto H. Senn
  • Gerhard Siegmann
  • Hugh A. Stubbins
  • Max Taut
  • Pierre Vago
  • Gerhard Weber
  • Ernst Zinsser
  • Bezirk Tiergarten Hochbauamt

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  • Interbau 1957 live
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    ▼
    • History until 1933
    • The years 1933–1945
    • November 22nd, 1943
    • The years 1945–1953
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    • Views of the old Hansaviertel
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  • Bürgerverein
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    • Activities and Working Groups
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    • Charter
  • UNESCO
    ▼
    • On the way to becoming a World Heritage Site
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    • Submission
    • Publication of the proposal
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