With large angular windows designed to catch
maximum light, canted walls, and a metallic-coated ceramic façade, the 107,000 sq. ft. (10,000 m2)
Chausseestrasse 43 occupies the corner of a block in central Berlin.
Daniel Libeskind’s challenge was to create 73
desirable one- to four-bedroom apartments on a more or less rectangular plot a
little less than half an acre (16,000 sq. ft.), accommodating attractive
retail on the ground floor, underground parking, and a common outdoor
area.
The architect achieved this and more. The
dramatic coda is found at the top, where a penthouse apartment, perched on the
prow of the building, embodies the ultimate in inside/outside urban
living.
Here, a double-height living room is lined on
one side by a sloping wall of obliquely shaped windows, which leads out to a
patio overlooking Berlin.
A floating stairway ascends to an open-plan living area, bedrooms are tucked
into the rear, and the ceiling sweeps up to a height of 21 feet.
The façade cladding is an innovative
three-dimensional stoneware tile that Libeskind designed with the Italian
company Casalgrande Padana. The geometric ceramic panels not only create an
expressive metallic pattern, but they possess surprising sustainable properties
such as air purification and they are self-cleaning.
This cathedral for modern living occupies a
piece of land where the Wulffersche iron factory once operated before being
expropriated from its Jewish owners during World War II.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Architects: Studio Daniel Libeskind
Structural Engineer: PORR
Mechanical / Electrical / Plumbing Engineer: PORR
Cost & Site Supervision: W+W
Building size: 107,000
Completion Date: 2015
Client: Minerva






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