Category
page 2Modernist architecture in Germany
Der Ring
architectural collective founded in 1926 in Berlin
Essen City Hall
townhall of the City of Essen
Europahaus Leipzig
architectural structure
Mossehaus
thumb|Mossehaus, September 1923
Mossehaus is an office building on 18–25 Schützenstraße in Berlin, renovated and with a corner designed by Erich Mendelsohn between 1921 and 1923.
Dancing Towers
building
Wintergartenhochhaus
The Wintergartenhochhaus is a 32-story high-rise building in Leipzig-Mitte, subdivision Ostvorstadt. The residential building was built from 1970 to 1972 as Wohnhochhaus Wintergartenstraße (residential high-rise on Wintergartenstrasse) and is the third tallest high-rise in Leipzig after the City-Hochhaus and the Hotel The Westin. With a total height of and roof height, it was the tallest residential building in the East Germany and is now in the top hundred on the list of high-rise buildings in Germany. As a building of modernity and testimony of East German architectural history with rarity v
Donaueschingen railway station
railway station in Donaueschingen, Germany
Frauenfriedenskirche
thumb|Entrance structure with mosaic
thumb|View from the southwest
thumb|Interior
The Frauenfriedenskirche (German for ''Our Lady's Peace Church) is a Roman Catholic church in Bockenheim (Frankfurt am Main) (Germany). It was built by Hans Herkommer from 1927 to 1929, on a rise then known as Ginnheimer Höhe''. The church is an unusual example of interwar modernist church architecture, combining elements of expressionism with the "New Objectivity" of Bauhaus architecture, and using monumental mosaics for external and internal decoration.
Kuchlbauer Tower
tower in Abensberg, Bavaria
Atlantic Hotel Sail City
architectural structure in Bremerhaven, Germany
Omniturm
Omniturm is a skyscraper in Frankfurt, Germany. It was built by the U.S. real estate company Tishman Speyer Properties from early 2016, and was completed in 2019. The building reaches a height of , making it the sixth-tallest building in Frankfurt and in Germany upon completion. The name (from Latin omnis 'everyone') is an allusion to the usage of the building, including both residential and office space.
KölnTriangle
thumb|KölnTriangle in 2008
thumb|Observation level
KölnTriangle (formerly also known as LVR-Turm) is a tall building in Deutz, Cologne, and a prominent landmark in Cologne. The building was designed by Dörte Gatermann of Cologne-based architecture firm Gatermann + Schossig and completed in 2006. Its south facade consists of a double-facade, allowing natural ventilation even at high floors. Next to the high-rise structure, part of KölnTriangle is also a much larger six-story office block with a total gross floor area of .
Munich kitchen
early fitted kitchen concept, 1920s
Steglitzer Kreisel
high-rise building in Berlin
Glass Pavilion
pavilion in Deutz, Germany
IBC Tower
Nolde Museum Seebüll
museum in Seebüll
City Tower
high-rise in Offenbach am Main, Germany
Werkbund Exhibition of Cologne
1914 exhibition in Cologne, Germany
Stadttor
Stadttor () is a 20-storey high-rise building in the Unterbilk neighborhood of Düsseldorf, Germany. The building was designed by Düsseldorf-based architecture firm Petzinka Pink und Partner and completed in 1998. It marks the Southern entrance of Rheinufertunnel, which is also the reason for its parallelogram-shaped floor plan.
Church of Reconciliation
church in Leipzig, Germany
Großgaststätte Ahornblatt
architectural structure
Dreischeibenhaus
The Dreischeibenhaus (, also known as the Dreischeibenhochhaus) is a 95-metre office building in August-Thyssen-Straße in the Hofgarten district of the Düsseldorf city centre. It was also known as the Thyssenhaus or Thyssen-Hochhaus owing to its former use as the headquarters of the Thyssen and ThyssenKrupp groups. It is among the most significant examples of post-war modernist International style and a symbol of the so-called Wirtschaftswunder, or 'economic miracle' of post-war Germany, and contrasts with the neighbouring Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus on Gustaf-Gründgens-Platz. Dreischeibenhaus
Grand Tower
high-rise in the Europaviertel quarter in Frankfurt, Germany
Emporio (Hamburg)
high-rise structure
Haus der Kultur und Bildung
thumb|The Kulturfinger seen from the distance
The Kulturfinger is the nickname of a steel-framed tower built during the days of the communist German Democratic Republic that is the tallest building in Neubrandenburg, Germany. It is part of the Haus der Kultur und Bildung (German for House of Culture and Education) or HKB, the city's cultural institution.
Eduard Ludwig
German architect (1906-1960)
Business-Tower (Nuremberg)
tower
Tonhalle Düsseldorf
concert hall in Düsseldorf, Germany
Atrium Tower
high-rise in Berlin