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Architect Dorte Mandrup on Building at Anhalter Bahnhof | Louisiana Channel 

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"It’s hugely relevant today, with more refugees than ever before in the world. I hope that the museum can call attention to the relevance of understanding what it means to be forced into exile.“
Meet Danish architect Dorte Mandrup, who took on the awe-inspiring task of drawing the new Exile Museum placed behind the portico ruin of the historic Berlin train station Anhalter Bahnhof.
“It’s a very poignant place to build something. When you hear interviews with former exiled Germans who left Berlin in 1933, they all mention this place. They all mention that they said goodbye to their home and their loved ones at Anhalter Bahnhof,” Mandrup says about the site.
The fragment embodies an essential piece of contemporary European history. As the biggest train station in Europe in the 1920s and 1930s, it witnessed Berlin's buzzing and creative capital and the devastations that followed the rise of Nazism.
“We want to show respect for its history without being sentimental or exaggerating that aspect. We’ll create a space between the new building and the portico to represent both the history and the time that has passed since the train station was demolished,” Mandrup says about the project.
The new Exile Museum aims to tell the stories of those driven into exile during the Second World War while at the same highlighting the fate of the millions of people who are displaced from their homes at this present day, Mandrup explains:
“It’s hugely relevant today with more refugees than ever before in the world. You lose your identity along with your mother tongue and culture. All the features make you who you are and make up your identity. So, I hope that the Exile Museum can call attention to the relevance of understanding what it means to be forced into exile.”
Dorte Mandrup (b. 1961) graduated from the Aarhus School of Architecture, Denmark, in 1991. Eight years later, she founded her Copenhagen-based studio, where she continues to be Creative Director. As a humanist with a distinct nonconformist outlook, Dorte Mandrup is well known for her commitment to the development of the architectural practice and her frequent participation in public debates. She has won numerous awards - the latest of which are: Member of the RIBA Honours Committee 2021, Architect of the Year at ICONIC Awards 2021, Visiting Professor at Mendrisio Accademia di Architettura, Switzerland, AZ Awards 2020 for Environmental Leadership, Canada, Kunstpreis Berlin by the Academy of Arts, Chairwoman of the prestigious Mies van der Rohe Award 2019. In 2018 her Icefjord Centre in Ilulissat, Greenland, was part of the curated international exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia. In 2022 Dorte was elected member of one of Europe’s oldest and most important cultural institutions, Akademie der Künste in Berlin.
Dorte Mandrup was interviewed by Marc-Christoph Wagner.
Camera: Simon Weyhe
Edited by Simon Wehye
Music: Simon Dokkedal
Sound Mix: Torsten Larsen, Sound Everest
Color Grade: Klaus Elmer
Produced by Marc-Christoph Wagner & Simon Wehye
Copyright: Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2021
Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet and C.L. Davids Fond og Samling. This film is supported by Dreyersfond and Realdania.
#Architect #Architecture #ExileMuseum
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9 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 8   
@WinstonBrehznev
@WinstonBrehznev 2 года назад
It’s a pity the original station building was not rebuilt rather than this new construction. The station building could incorporate this new museum. The Anhalter had a significant history before the Nazis came to power and many other parts of Berlin are as associated with them and the deportations. For those interested, there’s a model railway with the Anhalter Bahnhof as it was pre war in the Deutsche Technik Museum which is based further down what would have been the train lines. This museum has trains from the period in original rail sheds. There are many other technical interests there as well from textiles to computers. Well worth a visit.
@renatocamurca2713
@renatocamurca2713 Год назад
It would be something extraordinary to rebuild the original project of Anhalter Bahnhof. I wish fervently Germans could consider this possibility a reality. Cheers from Brazil and love to Berlin.
@Legitcar117
@Legitcar117 2 года назад
Don’t get me wrong, but I wish they would rebuild the torn down sections and attach them to the surviving section, and rebuild it as it was and then use for its new purpose.
@YukariAkiyamaTanks
@YukariAkiyamaTanks 2 года назад
Honestly same
@Queenie-the-genie
@Queenie-the-genie 2 года назад
I guess, in some way, those who were exiled were the lucky ones who did not end up in the camps - like those who did not have the means or the fame and were otherwise unable to get out. I am glad for those who did get out….Despondent still, for those who did not get out alive. Or only got out through death after having endured a horrifying, years long experience.
@mationetta
@mationetta Год назад
I don’t see the real big sense in building it there if you don’t include the ruin sorry not sorry. So sad that the design from the architect from berlin didn’t win.
@checkpointcharlie1788
@checkpointcharlie1788 17 дней назад
What a boring looking building; all the lofty words and descriptions used to justify a flat-out boring looking slab-sided building.
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