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Building work on the famous
Bauhaus Building in Dessau started in 1925 and
was completed in 1926, following the relocation
of the Bauhaus from Weimar to Dessau. At the same
time, a short distance away, one detached and
3 semi-detached houses were put up to house teaching
staff from the Bauhaus (architectural design by
Walter Gropius). The client, The City of Dessau,
would rent the houses to the Bauhaus staff. The
detached house (the Director's House) would be
home to Walter Gropius for a number of years.
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and Lyonel Feininger initially
occupied the first semi-detached house. Georg
Muche and Oskar Schlemmer lived in the one in
the middle and Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee
shared the third semi. Walter Gropius described
the 3 semi-detached Masters' houses as equal in
size yet very different in effect.
With the rise of National Socialism
in Germany, the Nazis closed down the Bauhaus
in Dessau in 1932. The City of Dessau continued
renting out the Masters' Houses until 1939 when
the City of Dessau sold the Masters' Houses to
the Junkers-Werke pending that the
buildings should be modified as to eradicate this
alien architectural style from the
city. The modifications that were made included
the addition of external chimneys and a substantial
reduction of glazed areas, particularly those
of the galleries and the staircases to normal
sized windows. As intended, the changes
left the buildings almost unrecognisable.
Towards the end of the War,
Dessau was the target of heavy allied bombing
raids. The Director's House was destroyed and
the adjacent Masters House badly damaged.
After the war the houses were again used as rented
accommodation. Over the next 50 years or so the
buildings were lived in but their condition gradually
deteriorated. The architectural importance of
the Masters' Houses was largely unknown. It wasnt
until the early 1990s, following German Unification,
that extensive restoration work started on the
houses. Bricked up windows were opened up again
and external chimneys removed. The buildings were
meticulously restored to their intended purpose
and former splendour including restoration of
the original paintwork colours, both internally
and externally, which comes as a surprise if you
are only familiar with the buildings through the
original black and white photographs.
The restoration of all 5 houses
was finally completed in 2002. They are now open
to the public and are frequently used for exhibitions.
In 1996, the Bauhaus (including the Masters' Houses)
was declared an UNESCO World Heritage Site. During
my visit to Dessau in September 2002, I was told
that there are plans to rebuild the first semi-detached
house and the Director's House. The original foundation
and the garage of the Director's House are still
there. A modern house with a pitched roof was
built upon its foundation. The plan is to demolish
it and to erect a new building just like the original.
There are many other Bauhaus buildings still in
existence and use today in Dessau. For example,
The Arbeitsamt (Walter Gropius 1928/1929), which
now accommodates the Vehicle Registration Offices
and the much altered Törten Housing Estate
(Walter Gropius 1926-1928).
Images
Click the links to view other
images of the Masters' Houses:
Kandinsky-Klee
Masters House rear (Martin Eilers September
2002)
Site
Plan Masters Houses (Gropius, Bauhausbauten
Dessau, Neue Bauhausbücher 1930, reprint 1974)
Entrance
showing yellow paintwork (Kate Sclater September
2002)
Exterior
shot showing flash of orange (Kate Sclater September
2002)
Internal
staircase (Kate Sclater September 2002)
Further details
To see photographs of the buildings
before restoration visit www.archis.org/english/archis_art_e_2000/archis_art_0009_e.html
For more information on visiting
the Bauhaus and Masters' Houses visit www.bauhaus-dessau.de
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