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Dietrich & Dietrich Max-Plank-Institutfur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin - Opus 74 (German, Hardcover)
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Dietrich & Dietrich Max-Plank-Institutfur Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin - Opus 74 (German, Hardcover)
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Text in German & English. Dahlem has developed in two different
ways since the early years of the 20th century. An important
scientific centre emerged on the site of this former royal
territory south-west of Berlin, alongside a suburban villa colony.
Elite research institutes were established in Dahlem, with the
intention of creating a "German Oxford", including the first
institutes for the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft, founded in 1911.
Then Dahlem was chosen as the location for the Freie Universitat
Berlin after the Second World War. The Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
commissioned a new building in these surroundings in order to
provide the Institute for the History of Science, dating from 1994,
with accommodation appropriate to its needs. The building was
erected in 2004/5 to a competition design by the Stuttgart
architects Marion Dietrich-Schake, Hans-Jurgen Dietrich and Thomas
Tafel (who left the team after drawing up the planning
application). The buildings adjacent to the plot, which is bordered
by streets on three sides, date mainly from the 1930s. Alongside
the institutional buildings detached homes determine the local
character. The Max-Planck-Institut reflects the dimensions and
structure of its surroundings. Its height relates to the two-storey
homes; the building masses were structured as eight connected,
pavilion-like sections, which means that, despite its size, the
institute is reticent in its impact on the urban space. The
symmetrical complex is built around a spacious courtyard with old
chestnut trees. The library is the key element of the building, and
so was arranged around all four sides of the inner courtyard.
Extensively glazed internal and external walls afford a wide range
of views into the library rooms. This ensures a constant presence
for the institute's most important set of working tools, and at the
same time makes it accessible over very short distances from
various parts of the building.
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