Einstein Tower

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cid_1118761152_Einsteintower_side_view_1.150.jpg Einstein Tower
Designer Erich Mendelsohn
Location near Potsdam, Germany
Date 1919 to 1921
Building Type laboratory, observatory
Climate temperate
Context suburban
Architectural Style Expressionist Early Modern
Street Address Telegrafenberg
Notes Curvaceous, streamlined form.
At Great Buildings http://www.GreatBuildings.com/buildings/Einstein_Tower.html

Contents



Images

Discussion

Commentary

"Erich Mendelsohn's small, but powerfully modeled tower, built to symbolize the greatness of the Einsteinian concepts, was also a quite functional house. It was designed to hold Einstein's own astronomical laboratory... Mendelsohn was after a completely plastic kind of building, moulded rather than built, without angles and with smooth, rounded corners. He needed a malleable material like reinforced concrete, which could be made to curve and create its own surface plasticity, but due to post-war shortages, some parts had to be in brick and others in concrete. So the total external effect was obtained by rendering the surface material. Even so, this 'sarcophagus of architectural Expressionism' is one of the most brilliantly original buildings of the twentieth century."

— Dennis Sharp. Twentieth Century Architecture: a Visual History. p65.

Details

The tower was begun in 1919, was effectively finished in 1921 and was officially opened in 1924.

Maps

References

Dennis Sharp. Twentieth Century Architecture: a Visual History. New York: Facts on File, 1990. NA 680.S517. ISBN 0-8160-2438-3. p65. — Available at Amazon.com

Marvin Trachtenberg and Isabelle Hyman. Architecture, from Prehistory to Post-Modernism. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1986. photo, fig 806, p 514. — Available at Amazon.com

External Links

 

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