
Major buildings at Potsdamer Platz
from the air in 2004.
(English Potsdam Square) is an important public square and traffic intersection in the centre of Berlin
, Germany
, lying about one kilometre south of the Brandenburg Gate
and the Reichstag
(German Parliament Building), and close to the southeast corner of the Tiergarten
park. It is named after the city of Potsdam
, some 25 km to the south west, and marks the point where the old road from Potsdam passed through the city wall of Berlin at the Potsdam Gate. After developing within the space of little over a century from an intersection of rural thoroughfares into the most bustling traffic intersection in Europe , it was totally laid waste during World War II and then left desolate during the Cold War era when the Berlin Wall
bisected its former location, but since the fall of the Wall it has risen again as a glittering new heart for the city and the most visible symbol of the new Berlin.
Historical background
Potsdamer Platz began as a trading post where several country roads
converged just outside Berlin's old customs wall.
The history of
Potsdamer Platz can probably be traced back to 29 October 1685,
when the Tolerance Edict of Potsdam
was signed, whereby Frederick William,
Elector of Brandenburg-Prussia from 1640 to 1688,
allowed large numbers of religious refugees, including Jews from Austria and
Huguenots expelled from France
, to settle
on his territory. A key motivation behind the Edict was so
the Elector could encourage the rapid repopulation, restabilising
and economic recovery of his kingdom, following the ravages of the
Thirty Years' War (1618-48).
Altogether up to 15,000 Huguenots alone made new homes in the
Brandenburg region, some 6,000 of these in its capital, Berlin
(indeed, by 1700 and for a while afterwards as much as 20% of
Berlin’s population was
French-speaking). Two other things resulted
from this huge influx.
Firstly, Berlin’s medieval fortifications,
recently rebuilt from 1658-74 in the form of a Dutch
-style star fort, on an
enormous scale and at great expense (and similar to examples still
in extant today in the Netherlands
like Naarden
and Bourtange
), became virtually redundant overnight; and
secondly, the already crowded city became even more
congested.
So several new districts were founded around the city's perimeter,
just outside the old fortifications.
The biggest of these
was Friedrichstadt
, just south west of the historic core of Berlin,
begun in 1688 and named after new Elector Frederick William III,
who later became King Frederick I
of Prussia. Its street layout followed the Baroque-style grid pattern much favoured at the
time, and was based on two main axes: Friedrichstraße
running north-south, and Leipziger
Straße
running east-west. All the new suburbs were
absorbed into Berlin around 1709-10. In 1721-3 a south-westwards
expansion of Friedrichstadt was planned under the orders of King
Frederick William I,
and this was completed in 1732-4 by architect
Johann Philipp Gerlach (1679-1748).
In this
expansion, a new north-south axis emerged: Wilhelmstraße
.
In 1735-7, after Friedrichstadt’s expansion was complete, a customs
or excise wall, 17 km long and 4.2 m high, was erected around
Berlin’s new perimeter. Consisting of a wooden palisade at first,
it was later replaced with a brick and stone wall, pierced by 14
gates (later increased to 18), where roads entered the city. Here
taxes were levied on goods passing through, chiefly meat and flour.
The most prestigious gate was the Brandenburg Gate, for the
important road from
Brandenburg, but 1 km to the
south was the entry point of another road that gained even greater
significance.
This road
had started out in the Middle Ages as a
lane running out from Berlin to the hamlet of Schöneberg
, but it had developed into part of a trading route
running right across Europe from Paris
to St. Petersburg
via Aachen
, Berlin and
Königsberg
. In 1660 the Elector Frederick William made
it his route of choice to Potsdam, the location of his palace,
which had recently been renovated. Starting in 1754 a daily
stagecoach ran between Berlin and Potsdam, although the road was in
poor shape. But in 1740
Frederick II had become King.
Not a
great lover of Berlin, he later built a new palace, the Sanssouci
, at Potsdam in 1744-7, followed by the New Palace in 1763-9, so the road now had to be
made fit for a King, plus all his courtiers and staff. After
numerous other improvements, in 1791-3 this section was made into
Prussia's first all-weather road. It later became
Potsdamer Straße; its point of entry
into Berlin, where it passed through the customs wall, became the
Potsdamer Tor (Potsdam Gate); once inside the gate
Leipziger Straße was its eastwards continuation, and Wilhelmstraße
was the first north-south thoroughfare that intersected with it. It
was around this gate that Potsdamer Platz was to develop.
Early days
As a physical entity, Potsdamer Platz began as a few country roads
and rough tracks fanning out from the Potsdam Gate. According to
one old guide book, it was never a proper platz, but a
five-cornered traffic knot on that old trading route across Europe.
Just
inside the gate was a large octagonal area, created at the time of
Friedrichstadt's expansion in 1732-4 and bisected by Leipziger
Straße; this was one of several parade grounds for the thousands of
soldiers garrisoned in Berlin at the height of the Kingdom of
Prussia
. Initially known appropriately as the
Achteck (Octagon), on 15 September 1814 it was renamed
Leipziger
Platz
after the site of Prussia's final decisive defeat
of Napoleon Bonaparte at the
Battle of
Leipzig
, 16-19 October 1813, which brought to an end the
Wars of Liberation that
had been going on since 1806. The Potsdam Gate itself was
redesignated the
Leipziger Tor (Leipzig Gate) around the
same time, but reverted to its old name a few years later.
The history of Leipziger Platz has been inextricably linked with
that of its neighbour almost since its creation (indeed, Potsdamer
Platz and Leipziger Platz, being side by side, have frequently been
regarded and discussed as being all one entity). Yet their
respective stories have in many ways been very different. The
future Potsdamer Platz was most definitely OUTSIDE Berlin, and
therefore not subject to the planning guidelines and constraints
that would normally be expected in a city keen to show itself off
as the capital of an empire. It grew very rapidly in a piecemeal
and haphazard way, and came to epitomise wildness and excess in a
manner that contributed much to its legendary status. Leipziger
Platz however, was INSIDE the city (and had a name almost a century
before its neighbour did), and always had an orderly, disciplined
look about it. After all, it had been planned and built all in one
go by Johann Philipp Gerlach. One late 18th century artistic
depiction shows a range of buildings relentless in their
uniformity. Indeed this, together with the grid pattern of the
streets, is what one would expect in Prussia’s chief garrison city.
One writer of the time said that a stroll round Friedrichstadt was
like walking round military barracks. In this respect the Potsdam
Gate was a dividing line between two different worlds. It was not
until later on that many of these buildings began to be replaced by
edifices of architectural magnificence, around Leipziger Platz,
along Leipziger Straße which bisected it, and also Wilhelmstraße.
Eventually these streets became lined with important historical
palaces and aristocratic mansions.
By this time however, Leipziger Platz was no longer a parade
ground, and there had been much speculation about a possible
complete redesign for the whole area. Back in 1797 had come the
first of two proposed schemes that would have afforded the future
Potsdamer Platz the appearance of a proper square. Under both
schemes the old rural intersection just outside the Potsdam Gate,
and the Octagon (Leipziger Platz) just inside, were to be joined
together to create a long rectangular space, with a gargantuan
edifice standing in the middle of it. The 1797 scheme came from the
renowned Prussian architect
Friedrich
David Gilly (1772-1800), who proposed a monument to the former
Prussian King,
Friedrich II.
Though
containing some Egyptian and French
neo-Classicist features, the design was basically a
huge Greek temple in the Doric style, loosely modelled on the Parthenon
in Athens
, though
raised up on an enormous geometric plinth and flanked by numerous
obelisks (the Egyptian element). A grand new Potsdam Gate
formed part of the design. It was never built, but eighteen years
later in 1815 Gilly's pupil,
Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1781-1841),
put forward plans for a National Memorial Cathedral to commemorate
the recent victories in the Wars of Liberation.
To be known as the
Residenzkirche, it was again, never built due to lack of
funds, and in any case the national fervour of the period favoured
the long-awaited completion of Cologne Cathedral
over a new building, but Schinkel went on to become
one of the most prolific and celebrated architects of his
time.
A new Potsdam Gate
So the layout stayed put, although in 1823-4 Schinkel did get to
rebuild the Potsdam Gate. Formerly little more than a gap in the
customs wall, it was replaced by a much grander affair consisting
of two matching Doric-style stone gate-houses, like little temples
(a nod to Friedrich Gilly perhaps), facing each other across
Leipziger Straße. The one on the north side served as the customs
house and excise collection point, while its southern counterpart
was a military guardhouse, set up to prevent desertions of
Prussian soldiers, which had become a major
problem. The new gate was officially dedicated on 23 August 1824.
The design also included a new look for Leipziger Platz. Attempts
to create a market there to draw off some of the frenetic
commercial activity in the centre of the city had not been
successful. And so Schinkel proposed to turn it into a fine garden,
although this part of the design was not implemented. It was a
rival plan by gardener and landscape architect
Peter Joseph Lenné (1789-1866),
drawn up in 1826, that went ahead in 1828 but with modifications.
In later
years Lenné would completely redesign the Tiergarten, a large
wooded park formerly the Royal Hunting Grounds, also give his name
to Lennéstraße, a thoroughfare
forming part of the southern boundary of the park, very close to
Potsdamer Platz, and transform a muddy ditch to the south into one
of Berlin's busiest waterways, the Landwehrkanal
.

Artistic view of the new Potsdam Gate
after completion.
Meanwhile, country peasantry were generally not welcome in the
city, and so the gates also served to restrict access. However, the
country folk were permitted to set up trading posts of their own
just outside the gates, and the Potsdam Gate especially. It was
hoped that this would encourage development of all the country
lanes into proper roads; in turn it was hoped that these would
emulate Parisian boulevards - broad, straight and magnificent, but
the main intention was to enable troops to be moved quickly. Thus
Potsdamer Platz was off and running.
It was not called that until 8 July 1831, but the area outside the
Potsdam Gate began to develop in the early 1800s as a district of
quiet villas, for as Berlin became even more congested, many of its
richer citizens moved outside the customs wall and built spacious
new homes around the trading post, along the newly developing
boulevards, and around the southern edge of the Tiergarten.
Initially the development was fairly piecemeal, but in 1828 this
area just to the west of Potsdamer Platz, sandwiched between the
Tiergarten and the north bank of the future Landwehrkanal, received
Royal approval for a more orderly and purposeful metamorphosis into
a residential colony of the affluent, and gradually filled with
houses and villas of a particularly palatial nature. These became
the homes of civil servants, officers, bankers, artists and
politicians among others, and earned the area the nickname
"Millionaires' Quarter" although its official designation was
Friedrichvorstadt (Friedrich's Suburb), or alternatively
the
Tiergartenviertel (Tiergarten Quarter).
Many of the properties in the neighbourhood were the work of
architect
Georg Friedrich Heinrich
Hitzig (1811-81), a pupil of Schinkel who also built the
original "English Embassy" in Leipziger Platz, where the vast
Wertheim department
store would later stand, although Friedrichvorstadt's focal point
and most notable building was the work of another architect - and
another pupil of Schinkel. The
Matthiaskirche (St. Matthew's Church),
built in 1844-6, was an
Italian
Romanesque-style building in alternating bands of red and
yellow brick, and designed by
Friedrich August Stüler
(1800-65).
This church, one of fewer than half a dozen
surviving pre-World War II buildings in the entire area, forms the
centrepiece of today's Kulturforum (Cultural Forum
).
Food and drink
Meanwhile, many of the Huguenots fleeing religious persecution in
France, and their descendants, had also been living around the
trading post and cultivating local fields. Noticing that traffic
queues often built up at the Potsdam Gate due to delays in making
the customs checks, these people had begun to offer coffee, bread,
cakes and confectionery from their homes or from roadside stalls to
travellers passing through, thus beginning the tradition of
providing food and drink around the future Potsdamer Platz. In
later years larger and more purpose-built establishments had begun
to take their place, which in turn were superseded by even bigger
and grander ones. The former district of quiet villas was by now
anything but quiet: Potsdamer Platz had taken on an existence all
its own whose sheer pace of life rivalled anything within the
city.
By the mid-1860s direct taxation had made the customs wall
redundant, and so in 1866-7 most of it was demolished along with
all the city gates except two – the Brandenburg Gate and the
Potsdam Gate. Though deprived of their function, Schinkel’s temples
lived on for eight more decades. More significantly though, the
removal of the customs wall allowed its former route to be turned
into yet another road running through Potsdamer Platz, thus
increasing still further the amount of traffic passing through.
This
road, both north and south of the platz, was named Königgrätzer Straße after
the Prussian
victory over Austria at the Battle of Königgrätz on 3
July 1866, in the Austro-Prussian War
.
The railways arrive
Potsdamer Platz - the Potsdamer Bahnhof around 1900.
Located a short distance away - the Anhalter Bahnhof around
1900.
The
railway first came to Berlin in 1838, with
the opening of the Potsdamer Bahnhof
, terminus of a 26 km line linking the city
with, perhaps appropriately, Potsdam, opened throughout by 29
October (in 1848 the line would be extended to Magdeburg
and beyond). Since the city authorities
would not allow the new line to breach the customs wall, still
standing at the time, it had to stop just short, at Potsdamer
Platz, but it was this that kick-started the real transformation of
the area, into the bustling focal point that Potsdamer Platz would
eventually become.
Just three years later a second railway terminus opened in the
vicinity.
Located 600 metres to the southeast, with a
front facade facing Askanischer
Platz, the Anhalter Bahnhof
was the Berlin terminus of a line opened on 1 July
1841, as far as Juterbog
and extended to Dessau
, Kothen
and beyond later.
Both termini began life as fairly modest affairs, but in order to
cope with increasing demands both went on to much bigger and better
things in later years, a new Potsdamer Bahnhof, destined to be
Berlin's busiest station, opening on 30 August 1872 and a new
Anhalter Bahnhof, destined to be the city’s biggest and finest,
following on 15 June 1880.
This latter station benefitted greatly from
the closure of a short-lived third terminus in the area - the
Dresdener
Bahnhof
, located south of the Landwehrkanal, which lasted
from 17 June 1875 until 15 October 1882.
In addition, a railway line once ran through Potsdamer Platz
itself. This was a connecting line opened in October 1851 and
running around the city just inside the customs wall, crossing
numerous streets and squares at street level, and whose purpose was
to allow goods to be transported between the various Berlin
stations, thus creating a hated traffic obstruction that lasted for
twenty years. Half a dozen or more times a day, Potsdamer Platz
ground to a halt while a train of 60 to 100 wagons trundled through
at walking pace preceded by a railway official ringing a bell. The
construction of the
Ringbahn around
the city's perimeter, linked to all the major stations, allowed the
connecting line to be scrapped in 1871, although the Ringbahn
itself was not complete and open for all traffic until 15 November
1877.
In later years Potsdamer Platz was served by both of Berlin's two
local rail systems. The
U-Bahn arrived
first, from the south; begun on 10 September 1896, it opened on 18
February 1902, with a new and better sited station being provided
on 29 September 1907, and the line itself being extended north and
east on 1 October 1908.
In 1939 the S-Bahn followed, its North-South Link between Unter den
Linden
and Yorckstraße
opening in stages during the year, the Potsdamer Platz S-Bahn
station itself opening on 15 April.
Heart of a metropolis
Potsdamer Platz around 1900, looking north.
The Grand Hotel Belle Vue and Palast Hotel stand on either
side of the northern portion of Königgrätzer Straße (to be renamed
Ebertstraße in later years).
By the
second half of the 19th century, Berlin had been growing at a
tremendous rate for some time, but its growth accelerated even
faster after the city became the capital of the new German Empire
on 18 January 1871. Potsdamer Platz and
neighbouring Leipziger Platz really started coming into their own
from this time on.
Now firmly in the centre of a metropolis
whose population eventually reached 4.4 million (the third largest
city in the world after London
and
New
York
), the area was ready to take on its most
celebrated role. Vast hotels and department stores, hundreds
of smaller shops, theatres, dance-halls, cafés, restaurants, bars,
beer palaces, wine-houses and clubs, all started to appear. Some of
these places became internationally known.
Also, a very large government presence, with many German imperial
departments, Prussian state authorities and their various
sub-departments, came into the area, taking over 26 former palaces
and aristocratic mansions in Leipziger Platz, Leipziger Straße and
Wilhelmstraße. Even the Reichstag itself, the
German Parliament, occupied the
former home of the family of composer
Felix Mendelssohn (1809-47) in Leipziger
Straße before moving in 1894 to the vast new edifice near the
Brandenburg Gate, erected by
Paul Wallot
(1841-1912).
Next door, the Herrenhaus
, or Prussian House of Lords
(the Upper House of the Prussian State Parliament),
occupied a former porcelain factory for a while, before moving to
an impressive new building erected on the site of the former
Mendelssohn family home in 1899–1904 by Friedrich Schulze Colditz
(1843-1912). This building backed on to an equally grand
edifice in the next street (Prinz-Albrecht-Straße
), also by Colditz, that had been built for the
Preußischer
Landtag
(the Prussian Lower House), in 1892-9.
In addition, the former Millionaires' Quarter just to the west of
Potsdamer Platz became a much favoured location for other countries
to site their embassies. Hence the area gradually acquired the new
designation "Diplomatic Quarter."
Interwar heyday
The heyday of Potsdamer Platz was in the 1920s and 1930s. By this
time it had developed into the busiest traffic center in all of
Europe , and the heart of Berlin's
nightlife.
It had acquired an
almost iconic status, on a par with Piccadilly Circus
in London
or Times Square in New York
. It was a key location that helped to
symbolise Berlin; it was known worldwide, and a legend grew up
around it. It represented the geographical centre of the city, the
meeting place of five of its busiest streets in a star-shaped
intersection deemed the transport hub of the entire continent.
These were:
- Königgrätzer Straße (northern portion), earlier names
Brandenburgische Communication and then Schulgartenstraße, running
along the former route of the customs wall and leading north to the
Brandenburg Gate. After a brief spell as Budapesterstraße in
the late 1920s (although this name was not widely recognised), on 6
February 1930 it was renamed Ebertstraße after Friedrich Ebert (1871-1925), first President
of the new German republic (termed the Weimar Republic
, after Weimar
, the city
to which its Parliament had effectively relocated, although the
name was not coined at the time). In 1935 the Nazis renamed it Hermann Göring Straße after
Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring,
whose official residence was on the east side of the street near
the Brandenburg Gate. On 31 July 1947, it reverted back to
Ebertstraße again.
- Königgrätzer Straße (southern portion), earlier names Potsdamer
Communication and then Hirschelstraße, also running along part of
the customs wall's old route, actually leading mainly south east.
On 6 February 1930, it was renamed Stresemannstraße after Gustav Stresemann (1878-1929), the first
Chancellor to serve under President Ebert. In 1935 the Nazis
renamed it Saarland Straße
after the region of south western Germany that had been under
League of Nations rule since the
end of World War I but which on 13
January 1935 elected by a huge (90.3%) majority to return to
Germany. On 31 July 1947, it reverted back to
Stresemannstraße.
- Leipziger Straße, leading east.
- Potsdamer Straße, developed out of that old road to Schöneberg
and Potsdam, part of the former trading route across Europe, and
leading south west. Today this section is called Alte Potsdamer Straße, a
pedestrianised cul-de-sac severed by post-World War II developments
and subsequently by-passed by a new section - the Neue Potsdamer Straße, leading
due west and then curving southwards to rejoin its old course at
the Potsdam Bridge, over the
Landwehrkanal.
- Bellevuestraße, earlier name
Charlottenburger Allee, leading north west through the Tiergarten
to Schloss
Bellevue
, today the official residence of the Federal President of
Germany.
Wertheim department store
The Werthiem department store in 1927, showing the main facade
along Leipziger Straße.
As well as the stations and other facilities and attractions
already mentioned, in the immediate area was one of the world’s
biggest and most luxurious department stores:
Wertheim, also mentioned earlier. Founded by German
merchant Georg
Wertheim (1857-1939), designed by architect
Alfred Messel (1853-1909), opened in 1897 and
extended several times over the following 40 years, it ultimately
possessed a floor area double that of the Reichstag, a
330-metre-long
granite and
plate glass facade along Leipziger Straße, 83
elevators, three
escalators, 1,000
telephones, 10,000 lamps, five kilometres of
pneumatic tubing for moving items from the various departments to
the packing area, and a separate entrance directly from the nearby
U-Bahn station. It also contained a summer garden, winter garden
and roof garden, an enormous restaurant and several smaller eating
areas, its own
laundry, a theatre and
concert booking office, its own
bank, whose
strongrooms were underground at the eastern end of the building
(and generated their own history decades later), and a large fleet
of private delivery vehicles. In the run-up to
Christmas Wertheim was transformed into a
fairytale kingdom, and was well known to children from all over
Germany and far beyond.
Haus Vaterland
In Stresemannstraße, and parallelling the Potsdamer Bahnhof on its
eastern side, was another great magnet for shoppers and tourists
alike - a huge multi-national-themed eating establishment: the
Haus Vaterland.
Designed by architect
Franz Heinrich Schwechten
(1841-1924), who was also responsible for the Anhalter Bahnhof and
the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial
Church
, it was erected in 1911-12 as the Haus
Potsdam. 93 m in length and with a dome rising 35 m above
the pavement at the north (Stresemannstraße) end, it contained the
world’s largest restaurant - the 2,500-seat Café Piccadilly, plus a
1,200-seat theatre and numerous offices. These included (from
1917-27), the headquarters of
Universum Film AG (aka UFA or Ufa),
Germany's biggest film company.
On 16 August 1914, less than three weeks after the start of
World War I, the Café Piccadilly was
given a new name - the more patriotic-sounding Café Vaterland.
However, in 1927-8 the architect and entrepreneur
Carl Stahl-Urach (1879-1933), transformed
the whole building into a gastronomic fantasy land, financed and
further elaborated upon by new owners the
Kempinski organisation. It reopened on 31 August
1928 as the Haus Vaterland, offering "The World in One House," and
could now hold up to 8,000 guests at a time. The Café Vaterland had
remained largely untouched, but the 1,200-seat theatre was now a
1,400-seat cinema. The rest of the building had been turned into a
large number of theme restaurants, all served from a central
kitchen containing the largest gas-fuelled cooking plant in Europe.
These
included: Rheinterrasse, Löwenbräu (Bavarian
beer restaurant), Grinzing (Viennese
café and wine bar), Bodega (Spanish
winery), Csarda (Hungarian
), Wild West Bar (aka the
Arizona
Bar) (American
), Osteria (Italian
), Kombüse (Bremen
drinking
den - literally "galley"), Rübchen (Teltow
, named
after the well-known turnip dish Teltower
Rübchen, made with turnips grown locally in the small town of
Teltow just outside Berlin), plus a Turkish
cafe and Japanese
tearoom; additionally there was a large
ballroom. Up to eight orchestras and dance bands regularly
performed in different parts of the building, plus a host of
singers, dancers and other entertainers. It should be pointed out
here though that not all of these attractions existed
simultaneously, owing to changes in those countries that Germany
was or was not allied to, in the volatile years leading up to and
during
World War II, a good example
being the closure of the Wild West Bar following America's entry
into the war as an enemy of Germany.
Major hotels (Esplanade, Excelsior, Bellevue, Palast,
Fürstenhof)
Among the major hotels at or near Potsdamer Platz were two designed
by the same architect,
Otto Rehnig
(1864-1925), and opened in the same year, 1908.
One was the 600-room
Hotel
Esplanade
(sometimes known as the "Grand Hotel Esplanade"),
in Bellevuestraße. Charlie
Chaplin and
Greta Garbo were guests
there, but
Kaiser Wilhelm II
himself held regular "gentlemens' evenings" and other functions
there in a room that came to be named after him - the
Kaisersaal.
The other
was the Hotel
Excelsior
, also 600
rooms but superior provision of other facilities made it the
largest hotel in Continental Europe, located in Stresemannstraße
opposite the Anhalter Bahnhof and connected to it by a
100-metre-long subterranean passageway complete with a parade of
underground shops.
Two other hotels which shared the same architect, in this case
Ludwig Heim (1844-1917), were the
68-room
Hotel Bellevue (sometimes
known as the "Grand Hotel Bellevue"), built 1887-8, and the
110-room
Palast Hotel, built 1892-3 on
the site of an earlier hotel. These stood on either side of the
northern exit from Potsdamer Platz along Ebertstraße. The Bellevue
was well known for its Winter Garden.
Meanwhile, facing the Palast Hotel across the entrance to Leipziger
Platz (the Potsdam Gate), was the 400-room
Hotel Fürstenhof, by
Richard Bielenberg (1871-1929) and
Josef Moser (1872-1963), erected in
1906-7, also on the site of an earlier building. With its
200-metre-long main facade along Stresemannstraße, the Fürstenhof
was less opulent than some of the other hotels mentioned, despite
its size, but was still popular with business people. The new
U-Bahn station was being built at the same time as the hotel and
actually ran through the hotel's basement, cutting it in half, thus
making the construction of both into something of a technical
challenge, but unlike the Wertheim department store (and contrary
to several sources), the hotel did not enjoy a separate entrance
directly from the station.
Weinhaus Huth
The
Weinhaus Huth, with its
distinctive corner cupola, was a wedge-shaped structure located in
the angle between Potsdamer Straße and Link Straße (literally "Left
Street"), and with entrances in both streets. Wine merchant
Friedrich Karl Christian Huth, whose great-grandfather had been
kellermeister (cellar-master) to
King Friedrich II back in 1769, had
founded the firm in 1871 and taken over the former building in
Potsdamer Straße on 23 March 1877. His son, the wine wholesale
dealer William (“Willy”) Huth (1877-1967), took over the business
in 1904 and, a few years later, commissioned the replacement of the
building by a new one on the same site. Running right through the
block into Link Straße, this new Weinhaus Huth was designed by the
architects
Conrad Heidenreich
(1873-1937) and
Paul Michel (1877-1938),
and opened on 2 October 1912, and contained a wine restaurant on
the ground floor, and
wine storage
space above, so it had to take a lot of weight. It was thus given a
strong steel skeleton, which would stand the building in very good
stead some three decades after its completion. Famous for its fine
claret, numerous members of European society were made welcome
there as guests.
A total of 15 chefs were employed there, and
Alois Hitler, the stepbrother of the future Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, was a waiter there in the 1920s,
before he opened his own restaurant and hotel at Wittenbergplatz
, in the western part of the city.
Café Josty
Café
Josty
was one of two rival cafés (the other being the
Astoria, later Café Eins A), occupying the broad
corner between Potsdamer Straße and Bellevuestraße.
The Josty
company had been founded in 1793 by two Swiss
brothers,
Johann and Daniel Josty, who had emigrated to Berlin from Sils in Switzerland
and set up a bakery from which the café was a 1796
offshoot. It had occupied various locations including
(from 1812 till 1880), a site in front of the Berlin City
Palace
, before moving to Potsdamer Platz in the latter
year. A major player on the Berlin café scene, Josty
attracted writers, artists, politicians and international society:
it was one of
the places to be seen. The writer
Theodor Fontane, painter
Adolf von Menzel, and
Dadaist Kurt
Schwitters were all guests;
Karl
Liebknecht, the
Spartacus
Communist movement leader read a lot here
and even made some key political speeches from the pavement
terrace, while author
Erich
Kästner wrote part of his 1929 bestseller for children,
Emil und die
Detektive (
Emil and the
Detectives), on the same terrace and made the café the setting
for an important scene in the book.
Despite the prestige associated with its name, Café Josty closed in
1930. It then went through an odyssey of reopenings, closures and
relaunches under various different names including
Conditorei
Friedicer,
Café Wiener,
Engelhardt Brau and
Kaffee Potsdamer Platz (sometimes appearing to have two or
more names simultaneously), before its eventual destruction in
World War II.
Beer palaces (Bayernhof, Rheingold, Pschorr)
Among the many beer palaces around Potsdamer Platz were two in
particular which contained an extensive range of rooms and halls
covering a large area. The
Alt-Bayern in
Potsdamer Straße was erected by architect
Wilhelm Walther (1857-1917) and opened in
1904. After closing in 1914, it underwent a revamp before reopening
in 1926 under the new name
Bayernhof.
Meanwhile, in Bellevuestraße, sandwiched between Café Josty and the
Hotel Esplanade but extending right through the block with a
separate entrance in Potsdamer Straße, was the
Weinhaus Rheingold, built by
Bruno Schmitz (1858-1916) and opened on 6
February 1907. Originally intended to be a concert venue until
concerns were raised about increased traffic problems in the
already congested streets, it was ruled that it should serve a
gastronomic purpose only. Altogether it could accommodate 4,000
guests at a time, 1,100 of these in its main hall alone. Many of
the total of 14 banquet and beer halls had a
Wagnerian theme - indeed, the very name of
the complex was taken from the
Wagner
opera Das
Rheingold, the first of the four parts of the cycle
Der Ring des Nibelungen, although
this name did hark back to the building's planned former role as a
concert venue.
Another building by the same architect but
which still stands - the "Rosengarten" in Mannheim
, has a remarkably similar main facade.
Finally, on the corner between Potsdamer Straße and the Potsdamer
Bahnhof, stood
Bierhaus Siechen,
built by
Johann Emil Schaudt
(1874-1957), opened in 1910 and later relaunched under the new name
Pschorr-Haus.
Vox-Haus
At 8.00 p.m. on 8 October 1923, Germany's first
radio broadcast was made,
using the world's first
medium-wave
transmitter, from a building (
Vox-Haus) close by in Potsdamer Straße.
Standing
alongside the Weinhaus Rheingold's Potsdamer Straße entrance, this
five-storey steel-framed edifice had been erected as an office
building in 1907-8 by architect and one-time Berlin inspector of
buildings Otto Stahn (1859-1930), who was
also responsible for the city's Oberbaumbrücke
over the River Spree
. In 1920 the Vox-group had taken over the
building and the following year commissioned its remodelling by
Swiss architect
Rudolf Otto
Salvisberg (1882-1940), and then erected two transmitting
antennae. Despite several upgrades between December 1923 and July
1924, the nearby Hotel Esplanade's formidable bulk prevented the
transmitter from functioning effectively and so in December 1924 it
was superseded by a better sited new one, but Vox-Haus lived on as
the home of Germany's first
radio
station,
Radiostunde Berlin,
founded in 1923, renamed
Funkstunde in
March 1924, but it moved to a new home in 1931 and closed in
1934.
- See also 1920s
Berlin.
Traffic lights
It has been claimed (although this is subject to some
disagreement), that the world's first electric
street lights were installed at Potsdamer
Platz in 1882 by the Berlin-based electrical giant
Siemens.
Also frequently stated is that the first
traffic lights in Continental Europe
were erected here on 20 October 1924, in an attempt to control the
sheer volume of traffic passing through (although a contraption at
Stephansplatz in Hamburg
is now thought to have predated them by two
years). This traffic had grown to extraordinary levels. Even
in 1900, more than 100,000 people, 20,000 cars, horse-drawn
vehicles and handcarts, plus many thousands of bicycles, passed
through the platz daily. By the 1920s the number of cars had soared
to 60,000. The trams added greatly to this. The first four lines
had appeared in 1880, rising to 13 by 1897, all horse-drawn, but
after electrification between 1898 and 1902 the number of lines had
soared to 35 by 1908 and ultimately reached 40, carrying between
them 600 trams every hour, day and night. Services were run by a
large number of companies, but in 1929 all these were unified into
the
Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (Berlin Transport Services)
company, which has operated Berlin’s trams ever since.
Up to 11 policemen at a time had tried to control all this traffic,
many of them standing on small wooden platforms positioned in key
locations around the platz, but with varying success.
The traffic lights,
again from Siemens, were mounted on a five-sided 8.5 m high tower
designed by Jean Kramer, shipped over
from the United
States
, and actually modelled on a similar one erected on
Fifth
Avenue
in New York in 1922, although towers like this had
been a feature of the Big Apple since 1918. A solitary
policeman sat in a small cabin at the top of the tower and switched
the lights around manually, until they were eventually automated in
1926. Yet some officers still remained on the ground in case people
did not pay any attention to the lights. The tower remained until
c.1936, when it was removed to allow for excavations for the new
S-Bahn line (on 26 September 1997, a replica of the tower was
erected, just for show, close to its original location by Siemens,
to celebrate the company's 150th anniversary. The replica was moved
again on 29 September 2000, to the place where it stands
today).
New plans and missed opportunities

Pre-World War II heyday: Potsdamer
Platz in 1932, showing the ultra-modern Columbushaus nearing
completion.
The traffic problems that had blighted Potsdamer Platz for decades
continued to be a big headache, despite the new lights, and these
led to a strong desire to solve them once and for all. By now
Berlin was a major centre of innovation in many different fields
including architecture.
In addition, the city’s colossal pace of
change (compared by some to that of Chicago
), had caused its chief planner, Martin Wagner (1885-1957), to foresee the
entire centre being made over totally as often as every 25
years. These factors combined to produce some far more
radical and futuristic plans for Potsdamer Platz in the late 1920s
and early 1930s, especially around 1928-9, when the creative
fervour was at its peak. On the cards was an almost total
redevelopment of the area. One design submitted by Wagner himself
comprised an array of gleaming new buildings arranged around a vast
multi-level system of fly-overs and underpasses, with a huge
glass-roofed circular car-park in the middle. Unfortunately the
worldwide
Great Depression of the
time, triggered by the
Wall
Street Crash of 1929, meant that most of the plans remained on
the drawing board. However, in Germany this depression was
virtually a continuation of an economic morass that had blighted
the country since the end of
World War
I, partly the result of the
war
reparations the country had been made to pay, and this morass
had brought about the closure and demolition of the Grand Hotel
Belle Vue, on the corner of Bellevuestraße and Königgrätzer Straße,
thus enabling one revolutionary new building to struggle through to
reality despite considerable financial odds.
Columbushaus
Columbushaus was the result of a plan by the
French retail company Les Galeries Lafayette
, whose flagship store was the legendary Galeries
Lafayette in Paris
, to open a
counterpart in Berlin, on the Grand Hotel Belle Vue's former site,
but financial worries made them pull out. Undaunted, the
architect,
Erich Mendelsohn
(1887-1953), erected vast advertising boards around the perimeter
of the site, and the revenue generated by these enabled him to
proceed with the development anyway. Columbushaus was a ten-storey
ultra-modern office building, years ahead of its time, containing
Germany's first artificial ventilation system, and whose elegance
and clean lines won it much praise. However, despite a
Woolworths store on its ground floor, a major
travel company housed on the floor above, and a restaurant offering
fine views over the city on the top floor, the economic situation
of the time meant that it would not be followed by more buildings
in that vein: no further redevelopment in the immediate vicinity of
Potsdamer Platz occurred prior to
World War
II, and so Columbushaus would always seem out of place in that
location. Nevertheless, its exact position showed that the platz
was starting to be opened out: the former hotel had mostly stood on
a large flagged area laid out in front of it, indicating that the
new building curved away from the existing street line; this would
have enabled future street widening to take place.
Hitler and Germania
Columbushaus was completed and opened in January 1933, the same
month that the
Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler
(1889-1945) came to power. Hitler had big plans for Berlin, to
transform it into the
Welthauptstadt Germania, to
be realised by his architect friend
Albert
Speer (1905-81). Under these plans the immediate vicinity of
Potsdamer Platz would have got off fairly lightly, although the
Potsdamer Bahnhof (and the Anhalter Bahnhof a short distance away)
would have lost their function. The new
North-South Axis, the linchpin of the
scheme, would have severed their approach tracks, leaving both
termini stranded on the wrong side of it.
All trains arriving
in Berlin would have run into either of two vast new stations
located on the Ringbahn to the north and south of the centre
respectively, to be known as Nordbahnhof (North Station)
and Sudbahnhof (South Station), located at Wedding
and Südkreuz
. In Speer's plan the former Anhalter Bahnhof
was earmarked to become a public swimming pool; the intended fate
of the Potsdamer Bahnhof has not been documented.
Meanwhile, the North-South Axis would have cut a giant swathe
passing just to the west of Potsdamer Platz, some 5 km long
and up to 100 m wide, and lined with Nazi government edifices on a
gargantuan scale. The eastern half of the former Millionaires'
Quarter, including Stüler's Matthiaskirche, would have been totally
eradicated. New U-Bahn and S-Bahn lines were planned to run
directly beneath almost the whole length of the axis, and the
city's entire underground network reoriented to gravitate towards
this new hub (at least one tunnel section, around 220 metres in
length, was actually constructed and still exists today, buried
some 20 metres beneath the Tiergarten, despite having never seen a
train). This was in addition to the S-Bahn North-South Link beneath
Potsdamer Platz itself, which went forward to completion, opening
in stages in 1939. In the event, a substantial amount of demolition
did take place in Potsdamer Straße, between the platz itself and
the Landwehrkanal, and this became the location of the one Germania
building that actually went forward to a state of virtual
completion: architect
Theodor
Dierksmeier's
Haus des Fremdenverkehrs (House of
Tourism), basically a giant state-run
travel agency. More significantly, its curving
eastern facade marked the beginnings of the
Runden Platz
(Round Platz), a huge circular public space at the point where the
North-South Axis and Potsdamer Straße intersected. Additionally,
the southern edge of the Tiergarten was to be redefined, with a new
road planned to slice through the built-up area immediately to the
north of Columbushaus (although Columbushaus itself would remain
unscathed); this road would line up with
Voßstraße, one block to the north of
Leipziger Platz.
Here Albert Speer erected Hitler's enormous
new Reich
Chancellery
building, and yet even this was little more than a
dry run for an even larger structure some distance further
away.
Meanwhile, the Nazi influence was no less evident at Potsdamer
Platz than anywhere else in Berlin. As well as
Swastika flags and propaganda everywhere,
Nazi-affiliated concerns occupied a great many buildings in the
area, especially Columbushaus, where they took over most of the
upper floors. As if to emphasise their presence, they used the
building to advertise their own weekly publication: a huge
neon sign on its roof proclaimed
DIE BRAUNE POST -
N.S. SONNTAGSZEITUNG (The Brown Post - N.S. Sunday
Newspaper), the
N.S. standing for
Nationalsozialist (National Socialist), i.e. Nazi.
Probably Potsdamer Platz's most prominent landmark in the
mid-1930s, the sign first appears in photographs dated 1935 but was
gone again by 1938.
On an even darker note, those Nazi concerns
included the Gestapo
, who set up a secret prison in an upper part of the
building, complete with interrogation and torture rooms.
Meanwhile, in another part of the building, the Information Office
of the Olympic Games Organising Committee was housed. Here much of
the planning of the
1936 Berlin
Summer Olympic Games took place.
World War II
As was the case in most of Berlin , almost all of the buildings
around Potsdamer Platz were turned to rubble by
air raids and heavy
artillery bombardment during the last years of World War II. The
three most destructive raids (out of nearly 400 that the city
suffered ), occurred on 23 November 1943, and 3 February and 26
February 1945. Things were not helped by the very close proximity
of Hitler's Reich Chancellery, just one block away in Voßstraße,
and many other Nazi government edifices nearby as well, and so
Potsdamer Platz was right in a major target area.
Once the bombing and shelling had largely ceased, the ground
invasion began as Soviet forces stormed the centre of Berlin street
by street, building by building, aiming to capture the Reich
Chancellery and other key symbols of the Nazi government.
When the
city was divided into sectors by the occupying Allies at the end of
the war, the square found itself on the boundary between the
American
, British
and Soviet
sectors.
Despite all the devastation, commercial life reappeared in the
ruins around Potsdamer Platz within just a few weeks of war’s end.
The lower floors of a few buildings were patched up enough to allow
business of a sort to resume. The U-Bahn and S-Bahn were partially
operational again from 2 June 1946, fully from 16 November 1947,
(although repairs were not completed until May 1948), and trams by
1952. Part of the Haus Vaterland reopened in 1948 in a much
simplified form. The new East German state-owned retail business
H.O.
(Handelsorganisation, meaning
Trading Organisation), had seized almost all of Wertheim’s former
assets in the newly-created German Democratic Republic
but, unable to start up the giant Leipziger
Platz store again (it was too badly damaged), it opened a new
Kaufhaus (department store) on the ground floor of
Columbushaus. An office of the
Kasernierte
Volkspolizei (literally "Barracked People’s Police") - the
military precursor of the
Nationale Volksarmee (National
People’s Army), occupied the floor above. Meanwhile, a row of new
single-storey shops was erected along Potsdamer Straße. Out on the
streets, even the flower-sellers, for whom the area had once been
renowned, were doing brisk business again.
The area around Potsdamer Platz had also become a focus for
black market trading. Since the
American, British and Soviet
Occupation Zones
converged there, people theoretically only had to walk a few paces
across sector boundaries to avoid the respective
Police officials.
The Cold War
Meanwhile, friction between the
Western
Allies and Soviets was steadily rising. The Soviets even took
to marking out their border by stationing armed soldiers along it
at intervals of a few metres, day and night, in all weathers. Since
there was not, as yet, a fixed marker, the borders were prone to
abuse, which eventually resulted (in August 1948), in white lines
in luminous paint appearing across roads and even through ruined
buildings to try to deter the Soviets from making unauthorised
incursions into the American and British zones. These measures were
only partially successful: after further skirmishes in which shots
were fired, barbed wire entanglements were stretched across some
roads, a foretaste of things to come.
The free Berlin press versus the wise Berliner
Remembering how the
Nazis had loved
propaganda, the opposing camps later began berating one another
with enormous signs displaying loud political slogans, facing each
other across the border zone. That on the western side was erected
first, in direct response to the ban on sales of Western newspapers
in East Berlin, and comprised an illuminated display board 30 m
wide and 1.5 m deep, facing east, supported on three steel lattice
towers 25 m high and topped by the words
DIE FREIE BERLINER
PRESSE MELDET (The Free Berlin Press Announces). Important
messages were spelt out on the display board using up to 2,000
bulbs. The sign was switched on for the first time on 10 October
1950, watched by a large crowd. A month later, on 18 November, the
Communist authorities in the east ordered its destruction using a
catapult made from a compressed air hose loaded with pebbles and
small pieces of metal. Fortunately the order was not executed and
the sign lasted until 1974, an eventual victim of its own high
maintenance costs.
Not to be outdone, East Berlin had meanwhile erected a sign of its
own. This was up and running by 25 November 1950, less than seven
weeks after its western counterpart although it had a much shorter
life, and was gone by 29 January 1953. Facing towards West Berlin
was the proclamation
DER KLUGE BERLINER KAUFT BEI DER H.O.
(The Wise Berliner Buys With The H.O.) Underneath were the words
NACHSTE VERKAUFSSTELLEN (Next Sales Premises), between two
arrows pointing left and right, suggesting that large shopping
developments were forthcoming in the immediate vicinity, although
these never appeared.
What was not apparent from the western side however, was that East
Berlin's construction boasted its own illuminated display board
facing east, whose messages comprised the version of the news that
the Communist authorities in the east wanted their citizens to
believe. In addition, the East Berlin sign was carefully placed so
that, when viewed from further away down Leipziger Straße, its
display board obscured the West Berlin sign standing a little way
beyond it. In response, West Berlin would regularly raise or lower
its sign to make it more easily visible from the east again - and
then East Berlin would raise or lower its own construction to
obscure it once more. This went on for more than two years.
Columbushaus got in on the act too, its battered facade providing a
ready-made notice board of huge dimensions, which the East Germans
were only too quick to exploit in this new propaganda battle.
The 1953 uprising
More significantly, living and working conditions in East Germany
were rapidly worsening under
Communist
rule. Tensions finally reached breaking point and a
Workers’ Uprising took
place on 17 June 1953, to be quickly and brutally crushed when
Soviet tanks rolled in; 401 people were killed including numerous
tourists and media reporters who got too close, 105 executed under
martial law, 1,838 injured, and 5,100
arrested (1,200 of them later being sentenced to a total of 6,000
years in penal camps), and some of the worst violence occurred at
Potsdamer Platz. For the second time in eight years, the "busiest
and most famous square in Europe" had been transformed into a
bloody battleground. Columbushaus, with its H.O. store on the
ground floor and military police station above, had been a prime
target in the insurrection and had been burnt out yet again, along
with the Haus Vaterland and other premises. This time, they were
not rehabilitated.
As
Cold War tensions rose still further
during the 1950s, restrictions were placed on travel between the
Soviet sector (
East Berlin) and the
western sectors (
West Berlin). For the
second time in its history, the Potsdam Gate (or what remained of
it), was like a dividing line between two different worlds. Lying
on this invisible frontier, Potsdamer Platz was no longer an
important destination for Berliners. Similarly, neither East Berlin
nor West Berlin regarded their half as a priority area for
redevelopment, seeking instead to distance themselves from the
traditional heart of the city and develop two new centres for
themselves, well away from the troubled border zone.
West Berlin
inevitably chose the Kurfürstendamm
and the area around the Kaiser
Wilhelm Memorial Church
, while East Berlin built up Alexanderplatz
and turned Frankfurter
Allee (which they renamed Stalinallee
in 1949, Karl-Marx-Allee
in 1961), into their own showpiece
boulevard. Potsdamer Platz, meanwhile, was more or less left
to rot, as one by one the ruined buildings were cleared away,
neither side having the will to repair or replace them.
On the
western side things did improve later on with the development of
the Cultural
Forum
, whose site roughly equates with the former
Millionaires' Quarter.
The Berlin Wall
With the
construction of the Berlin
Wall
on 13 August 1961, along the intracity frontier,
Potsdamer Platz now found itself physically divided in two.
What had once been a busy intersection had become totally desolate.
With the clearance of almost all remaining bomb-damaged buildings
on both sides (on the eastern side, this was done chiefly to give
border guards a clear view of would-be escapees and an
uninterrupted line of fire), almost nothing was left in an area of
dozens of hectares. Only two buildings in the immediate vicinity of
Potsdamer Platz did still stand - one complete, the other in a
half-ruined fragmented form: the
Weinhaus
Huth's steel skeleton had enabled the building to withstand the
pounding of
World War II virtually
undamaged, and it now stood out starkly amid a great levelled
wasteland, although now occupied only by groups of squatters.
A short
distance away stood portions of the former Hotel
Esplanade
, including the Kaisersaal, used at various times as a much
scaled-down hotel, cinema, nightclub and occasional film-set
(scenes from Cabaret were shot
there). Apart from these, no other buildings remained. The
area would remain like this for the next 28 years. Below ground,
the U-Bahn section through Potsdamer Platz had closed entirely;
although the S-Bahn line itself remained open, it suffered from a
quirk of geography in that it briefly passed through East German
territory en route from one part of West Berlin to another.
Consequently Potsdamer Platz S-Bahn station became the most
infamous of several
geisterbahnhofe (
ghost stations), sealed off from the outside
world, patrolled by armed guards and which trains ran straight
through without stopping.
During its nearly three decades in limbo, Potsdamer Platz exuded a
strange fascination towards many people on the western side,
especially tourists and also visiting
politicians and
heads
of state. For the benefit of the former, the row of post-war
single-storey shops in Potsdamer Straße now sold a wide variety of
souvenir goods, many of which were purchased by coach-loads of
curious visitors brought specially to this sad location. An
observation platform had been erected, primarily for military
personnel and police but used increasingly by members of the
public, so that they could gaze over the Wall at the wilderness
beyond.
Meanwhile, among the many V.I.P.s who came to look were U.S.
Senator Robert
F. Kennedy (22
February 1962), Prime Minister
Harold Wilson of the United
Kingdom
(6 March 1965), H.M. Queen Elizabeth II of the
United Kingdom (27 May 1965),
H.R.H. Charles, Prince of Wales (3
November 1972),
U.S.
President Jimmy Carter (15 July 1978), and
U.S. Vice President (later
President)
George H. W. Bush
(George Bush Senior) (1 February 1983).
Some scenes of the 1987
Wim Wenders
movie
Der Himmel über Berlin (English title:
Wings of Desire) were filmed on the
old, almost entirely void Potsdamer Platz before the Berlin Wall
fell. In one scene an old man named Homer, played by actor
Curt Bois (1901-91), searches in vain for
Potsdamer Platz, but finds only rubble, weeds and the
graffiti-covered Berlin Wall. The movie thus gives
a good impression of the surroundings at the time, which are
completely unlike what can be seen today.
After the Wall
An East German policeman monitors traffic returning to East Berlin
through the newly opened crossing.
The short-lived Potsdamer Platz crossing passport stamp.
Breaching the Wall
After the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989, Potsdamer
Platz became one of the earliest locations where the Wall was
"breached" to create a new
border crossing between East and
West Berlin.
The crossing began operating on 11 November
1989, earlier than the iconic Brandenburg Gate
crossing which opened more than a month
later.
The crossing required the dismantling of both the inner and outer
walls and the clearance of the "death zone" or "no man's land"
between the two. A temporary road, lined with barriers, was created
across this zone and checkpoints were set up just inside East
German territory. Proper dismantling of the entire wall began in
1990 and all border checks were abolished on 1 July 1990 as East
Germany joined West Germany in a currency union.
On 21
July 1990, ex-Pink Floyd member Roger Waters staged a gigantic charity concert
of his former band's rock extravaganza The Wall to commemorate the
end of the division between East
and
West
Germany
. The concert took place at Potsdamer Platz -
specifically an area of the former "No Man's Land" just to the
north of the Reich Chancellery site, and featured many guest
superstars. Ironically it was preparations for this concert, rather
than historical interest, that brought about the first detailed
post-Cold War survey of the area with a view to determining what,
if anything, was left of Hitler's bunker and any other underground
installations.
Although sections of the main Führerbunker
were found, partially destroyed or filled in,
another bunker complex was found further north that even the East
German authorities had apparently missed, plus other cavities
beneath land bordering the east side of Ebertstraße, although these
turned out to be underground garages belonging to a former SS
accommodation block.

Potsdamer Platz in 2005, with the
replica of Germany's first traffic lights.
In the background stands the Beisheim Center.

Potsdamer Platz: the Sony Center and
Bahn Tower in 2007.

Residential building by Richard
Rogers, part of the Daimler complex at Potsdamer Platz, in
2008.
Rebuilding starts
After 1990, the square became the focus of attention again, as a
large (some 60 hectares), attractive location which had suddenly
become available in the centre of a major European capital city. It
was widely seen as one of the hottest, most exciting building sites
in Europe, and the subject of much debate amongst architects and
planners. If Berlin needed to re-establish itself on the world
stage, then Potsdamer Platz was one of the key areas where the city
had an opportunity to express itself. More than just a building
site, Potsdamer Platz was a
statement of intent. In
particular, due to its location straddling the erstwhile border
between east and west, it was widely perceived as a "linking
element," reconnecting the two halves of the city in a way that was
symbolic as well as physical, helping to heal the historical wounds
by providing an exciting new mecca attracting Berliners from both
sides of the former divide. Whether fairly or unfairly, a great
deal was riding on the project, and expectations were high.
Europe's largest building site
The Berlin
Senate (city government) organised
a design competition for the redevelopment of Potsdamer Platz and
much of the surrounding area.
Eventually attracting 17 entrants, a winning
design was announced in October 1991, that from the Munich
-based
architectural firm of Hilmer &
Sattler. They had to fight off some stiff competition
though, including a last-minute entry by British
architect Richard
Rogers.
The Berlin Senate then chose to divide the area into four parts,
each to be sold to a commercial investor, who then planned new
construction according to Hilmer & Sattler's masterplan. During
the building phase Potsdamer Platz was the largest building site in
Europe. While the resulting development is impressive in its scale
and confidence, the quality of its architecture has been praised
and criticised in almost equal measure.
Daimler
The
largest of the four parts went to Daimler-Benz (later Daimler-Chrysler and now Daimler AG), which charged Italian
architect Renzo Piano
with creating an overall design for their scheme while sticking to
the underlying requirements of Hilmer & Sattler's
masterplan. A major development bordering the west side
of the former Potsdamer Bahnhof
site, some of its 19 individual buildings were then
erected by other architects, who submitted their own designs while
maintaining Piano's key elements. One of these was Richard
Rogers, who played a part in the development after all (his great
British rival,
Norman
Foster, was putting the new dome on the Reichstag at about the
same time). The 19 buildings include the remarkable Potsdamer Platz
No. 1 by
Hans Kollhoff, now home to a
number of prestigious law firms. Potsdamer Platz No. 1 is also home
to the "Panoramapunkt" viewing platform, located 100 m above ground
level, which is accessed by riding Europe's fastest elevator.
From the
Panoramapunkt one can see such landmarks as the Brandenburg
Gate
, Reichstag
, Federal Chancellery, Bellevue Palace
, Cathedral, Television Tower
, Gendarmes
Market
, Holocaust Memorial
and Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church. The
complex also contains the former
Weinhaus
Huth, now restored to its former glory and occupied by a
restaurant, café, and Daimler AG's own art gallery ("Daimler
Contemporary"). The first spade at the start of the Daimler-Benz
development was turned by the
Mayor of
Berlin,
Eberhard Diepgen, on 11
October 1993, and the finished complex was officially opened by the
Federal President of
Germany,
Roman Herzog, on 2 October
1998, in a glittering ceremony featuring large-scale celebrations
and musical performances.
Sony
The second largest part went to
Sony, which
erected their new European headquarters on a triangular site
immediately to the north of Daimler-Benz and separated from it by
the re-routed Potsdamer Straße.
This new Sony Center
, designed by Helmut
Jahn, is an eye-catching monolith of glass and steel featuring
an enormous tent-like conical roof, its shape reportedly inspired
by Mount
Fuji
in Japan
, covering
an elliptical central public space up to 100 m across, and thus
differing substantially from Hilmer & Sattler's original plan
for the site; yet it is considered by many people to be one of the
finest pieces of modern architecture in Berlin. Its
26-storey "Bahn Tower" is so named because it houses the corporate
headquarters of
Deutsche Bahn AG,
the German state railway system.
Surviving
parts of the former Hotel Esplanade
have been incorporated into the north side of
the Sony development, including the Kaisersaal which, in a complex and costly
operation in March 1996, was moved in one piece (all 1,300 tonnes
of it), some 75 metres from its former location, to the spot that
it occupies today (it even had to make two right-angled turns
during the journey, while maintaining its own orientation).
Nearby is
a new Café
Josty
, opened early in 2001, while between the two is
"Josty's Bar," which is housed in the Esplanade's former breakfast
room. This, like the Kaisersaal, had to be relocated, but
here the room was dismantled into some 500 pieces to be reassembled
where it stands now.
Topped out on 2 September 1998, the Sony Center was formally opened
on 14 June 2000 (although many of its public attractions had been
up and running since 20 January), in another grand ceremony with
more music - this time with Sony's
Japanese Chairman
Norio Ohga himself conducting the
Berlin Philharmonic
Orchestra.
A keen lover of classical music, he had
helped to choose the site because of its close proximity to the
orchestra's home in the Cultural Forum
.
Beisheim
The third part became the
Beisheim
Center and adjoining buildings, on another triangular site
bordered on the east side by Ebertstraße, financed entirely out of
his own pocket by the German
businessman
Otto Beisheim, the founder of the
diversified
retail and
wholesale/
cash and
carry group
Metro AG, based in Germany
but with operations throughout Europe and in many other countries
around the world.
Park Kolonnaden
The fourth part is the
Park
Kolonnaden, a range of buildings running down the east side of
the Potsdamer Bahnhof site, parallelling Daimler-Benz. This complex
occupies the site of the former Haus Vaterland, and its principal
building, which for a few years was the headquarters of the large
German
trade union ver.di (
Vereinte
Dienstleistungsgewerkschaft, meaning United Services Union),
has a curving glass facade designed to evoke the shape of that
erstwhile landmark.
Leipziger Platz
Other developments, more piecemeal in nature, are gradually
recreating the octagonal layout of neighbouring Leipziger Platz
immediately to the east.
One of these is Kanada Haus, the
new Embassy of Canada
, on the
platz's north-west diagonal. Its turf-cutting ceremony was
carried out on 18 February 2002 by the Canadian
Prime Minister,
Jean Chrétien, and it was officially
opened on 29 April 2005.
Controversy
The whole project has been the subject of much controversy from the
beginning, and still not everyone applauds how the district was
commercialised and replanned. For example, the decision by the
Berlin Senate to divide the land between just four investors, when
numerous others had submitted bids, had raised many eyebrows.
Additionally the remarkably low price for
which Daimler-Benz had been allowed to secure their plot had
prompted questions from the Berlin Auditor-General's office and the European Union in Brussels
, after which Daimler-Benz were billed for an
additional sum. There were wrangles over land-usage:
although a central feature of the Daimler-Benz development is a top
shopping mall - the
Arkaden
(Arcades), this did not form part of the plans until the Berlin
Senate belatedly insisted that a shopping mall be included, and the
plans were altered accordingly. Despite its undoubted success, this
in turn led to what many saw as an "Americanisation" of the area,
with even its private security force kitted out in something
resembling
New York
Police uniforms.
Further wrangles effectively brought work on the north side of
Leipziger Platz to a complete stop for several years; even now
there are some "fake facades" where completed new buildings should
be, while a long-running dispute over who owned the Wertheim
department store site (or had claims to the revenue from its sale
by the government), has to this day left another large gap in the
central Berlin cityscape that is only now finally being
redeveloped.
This development brought about the demise
(after several stays of execution), of the legendary Tresor
nightclub and centre
for techno music. Founded on 8
Mar 1991 in the basement strongrooms of the former Wertheim store's
bank, these having survived the decades largely undamaged, the club
finally closed on 16 April 2005 (it later reopened on 24 May 2007
in a renovated power plant on Köpenicker Straße).
In spite of the controversy, the rebuilt Potsdamer Platz now
attracts around 70,000 visitors a day, rising to 100,000 at
weekends, and some critics have been surprised by the success of
the new quarter. Fears that the streets would be dead after 6pm
have proven false. At almost any time of the day, the place is
alive with people. It is a particularly popular attraction for
visitors: the "Arkaden" shopping mall contains around 150 shops and
restaurants on three levels, the lowest (basement) level being a
food floor; there are also four major hotels, and Europe's largest
casino (the "Spielbank Berlin").
It is also very popular with film fans, as it has nearly 30 screens
in three
cinemas, including an
IMAX cinema and an English speaking cinema,
plus a film academy and a film museum. There is also an
1,800-seater theatre, the "Theater am Potsdamer Platz," which
doubles up as another cinema (the "Berlinale Palast") and the
principal venue of the annual
Berlin International Film
Festival. This venue sits above a popular night-spot: the
"Adagio Nightlife," located entirely underground.
The
U-Bahn and S-Bahn stations have both been refurbished and reopened;
a new underground main-line station or Regionalbahnhof
(Bahnhof Potsdamer Platz
) has been constructed. A new U-Bahn
station has also been built, although a decision is still pending
on whether to proceed with completion of the line passing through
it; in the meantime the station area serves as an impromptu art
gallery and exhibition space. There are also plans to reintroduce
trams to Potsdamer Platz. In addition, many bus routes pass through
the platz, while for people with their own cars there are some
4,000 parking spaces, 2,500 of which are underground.
On 2
March 2008, a statue by the Berlin artist Alexander Polzin dedicated to Italian
philosopher, priest, cosmologist, and
occultist Giordano Bruno (1548-1600), was erected
inside one of the entrances to the Potsdamer Platz Regionalbahnhof
[4043].
Future
Whilst on the surface the new Potsdamer Platz appears so far to
have lived up to its expectations as a futuristic centre of
commerce at the heart of Europe's youngest capital city, there has
been much debate as to just how successful it really is. Certainly
its long term success and viability have become much harder to
judge in these times of growing worldwide financial instability, a
situation compounded by the recent actions of its two principal
owner-occupiers.
Daimler and
Sony caused a major surprise on 2 October 2007 when
both announced that they were putting their respective complexes at
Potsdamer Platz on the market. Whilst neither intended to move out,
both felt it preferable to rent the space from new owners rather
than continue to be the owners themselves (and so be responsible
for the buildings' upkeep and maintenance). Daimler had recently
come through a painful separation from its former American
subsidiary
Chrysler and needed a quick
injection of cash in order to refocus on automotive production.
Ironically, the announcement came on the ninth anniversary of its
complex's official opening, a fact not lost on many people. Sony
meanwhile, put its decision down to a need to review their global
strategy in the face of a fast-changing worldwide economic climate.
The implications for Potsdamer Platz were ominous, with suggestions
that overall confidence in the project was faltering, and more
pessimistic claims that the development had largely failed in its
original intentions.
On 17
December 2007, Daimler announced that they were selling its entire
complex of 19 buildings at Potsdamer Platz to SEB Asset Management,
a Frankfurt
-based subsidiary of the Swedish
banking group SEB. On 28 February
2008, Sony made a similar announcement, of impending sale to a
consortium led by American
investment
banking giant (now
bank holding
company)
Morgan Stanley. Both
deals were finalised by the end of March 2008. Whilst the amounts
involved have not been publicly disclosed, it is believed that
neither Daimler nor Sony recouped all of their original investments
(what Daimler managed to get was reportedly well short). The
long-term benefits (or otherwise) of these sales, remain to be
seen, but whilst they may have baffled many people at the time,
they may turn out to have been a shrewd move, as Daimler and Sony
have avoided being saddled with something they might have found
much harder to sell at a later date, just when they needed the cash
the most.
It is unarguable that the development is a considerable commercial
success at street level. The numbers of shoppers visiting the
Arkaden, guests passing through the doors of the many bars, cafes
and restaurants, theatres and cinemas, hotels and casino (not to
mention passengers thronging the platforms of the stations), all
point to a thriving focal point right at the very heart of Berlin.
Detractors however, may draw attention to the floors above and
point out the high percentage of office and residential space that
allegedly still stands empty more than a decade after its
completion. Although examples of "over-provision" like this can be
found all over Berlin, it is Potsdamer Platz that, rightly or
wrongly, has been used to highlight the problem.
The other major sticking point, which is reportedly causing concern
at government level, is that the majority of people going to
Potsdamer Platz are visitors to the city, implying that the
original vision of the development as a linking element attracting
Berliners themselves, and Berliners from both sides of the former
divide, has not really materialised.
There are criticisms
that the development does not sit easily with or connect with its
surroundings, and as a result Berliners have had difficulty
accepting it as theirs (despite the fact that the choice
of Hilmer & Sattler's masterplan was partly because it was the
only one to address the way the development juxtaposed with the
Cultural
Forum
immediately to the west, although the Cultural
Forum has itself faced similar criticisms of its own).
Another, more psychological factor that has played a part here is
that a long-standing mutual distrust or
antipathy felt between former East Berliners and
West Berliners (
Ossi
and
Wessis according to the
well-known slang terms), is still very much in evidence in the city
and elsewhere in Germany, and bold civil engineering projects and
architectural statements are not going to make it go away by
themselves. Politicians past and present have been accused of
short-sightedness in speculating that they would.
It is feared that the current economic downturn may exacerbate all
these problems.
Meanwhile, Deutsche Bahn AG are due to
relocate to a purpose-built new structure at Berlin's new main
train station (Berlin Hauptbahnhof
), when the lease on the Sony Center's Bahn Tower
expires in 2010.
References
- Fodor's Germany 2002. Fodor's Travel. 2001
Sources
- Tony le Tissier: Berlin Then and Now, 1992, After the
Battle Publishers, ISBN 090091372X
- Peter Fritzsche, Karen Hewitt: Berlinwalks, 1994,
Boxtree Limited Publishers, ISBN 0752216023
- Ulrike Plewina, Horst Mauter, Laszlo F. Foldenyi, Ulrich
Pfeiffer, Alfred Kernd'l, Thies Schroder: Potsdamer Platz - A
History in Words and Pictures, 1996, Dirk Nishen Verlag, ISBN
3889403344
- Raimund Hertzsch: The Potsdamer Platz around 1930
(Number 184 from the series Der Historische Ort), 1998,
Kai Homilius Verlag, ISBN 3897069938
- Mark R. McGee: Berlin 1925-1946-2000, 2000,
Nicolai'sche Verlag, ISBN 3875849019
- Yamin von Rauch, Jochen Visscher: Potsdamer Platz - Urban
Architecture for a New Berlin, 2002, Jovis Verlag, ISBN
3931321959
External links