Berlin: New Objectivity Architecture
Places and attractions in the New objectivity architecture category
Categories
- Museum
- Park
- Neighbourhood
- Art museum
- Monuments and statues
- History museum
- Church
- Specialty museum
- Square
- Shopping
- Street
- Nightlife
- Natural attraction
- Nature
- Theater
- Bridge
- Memorial
- Baroque architecture
- Lake
- Historical place
- Shopping centre
- Concerts and shows
- Cemetery
- Dancing
- Tower
- Amusement park
- Art gallery
- Palace
- Architecture
- Forts and castles
- Amusement
- Library
- View point
- Karl Friedrich Schinkel
- Canal
- Concert hall
- Modern art museum
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Water park
- Swimming
- Nazi architecture
- City hall
- Performing arts
- Arenas and stadiums
- Neo-renaissance architecture
- Archaeological museum
- Science museum
- Music venue
- Cinema
- Memorial site
- Sculpture
- Shopping district
- Vernacular architecture
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Area
- Unesco
- Art Nouveau architecture
- Zoo
- New objectivity architecture
- Frederick the Great
- Synagogue
- Sacred and religious sites
- Hill
- Island
- Mosque
- Fountain
- Universities and schools
- City
- Event space
- Skyscraper
- Beach
- Climbing
Kino Babylon
The Kino Babylon is a cinema in the Mitte neighbourhood of Berlin and part of a listed building complex at Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz opposite the Volksbühne theatre. The building was erected 1928–29. It was designed by the architect Hans Poelzig in the Neue Sachlichkeit style.
Schloss Britz
The Schloss Britz is the former manor-house of the historical Rittergut and village Britz, now a district of Berlin-Neukölln. Today it is the headquarters of the cultural organization Kulturstiftung Schloss Britz and includes authentic reconstructed rooms from around 1880.
Berlin Modernism Housing Estates
Berlin Modernism Housing Estates is a World Heritage Site designated in 2008, comprising six separate subsidized housing estates in Berlin.
Hufeisensiedlung
The Hufeisensiedlung is a housing estate in Berlin, built in 1925–33. It was designed by architect Bruno Taut, municipal planning head and co-architect Martin Wagner, garden architect Leberecht Migge and Neukölln gardens director Ottokar Wagler. In 1986 the ensemble was placed under German heritage protection.
Großsiedlung Siemensstadt
The Siemensstadt Settlement is a nonprofit residential community in the Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf district of Berlin. It is one of the six Modernist Housing Estates in Berlin recognized in July 2008 by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.