Karl-Marx-Allee

The Karl-Marx-Allee is a monumental socialist boulevard built by the GDR between 1952 and 1960 in Berlin Friedrichshain and Mitte. Today the boulevard is named after Karl Marx.

The boulevard was named Stalinallee between 1949 and 1961 (previously Große Frankfurter Straße), and was a flagship building project of East Germany's reconstruction programme after World War II. It was designed by the architects Hermann Henselmann, Hartmann, Hopp, Leucht, Paulick and Souradny to contain spacious and luxurious apartments for plain workers, as well as shops, restaurants, cafés, a tourist hotel and an enormous cinema (the International).

The avenue, which is 89 m wide and nearly 2 km long, is lined with monumental eight-storey buildings designed in the so-called wedding-cake style, the socialist classicism of the Soviet Union. At each end are dual towers at Frankfurter Tor and Strausberger Platz designed by Hermann Henselmann. The buildings differ in the revetments of the facades which contain often equally, traditional Berlin motifs by Karl Friedrich Schinkel. Most of the buildings are covered by architectural ceramics.

On June 17, 1953 the Stalinallee became the focus of a worker uprising which endangered the young state's existence. Builders and construction workers demonstrated against the communist government, leading to a national uprising. The rebellion was quashed with Soviet tanks and troops, resulting in the loss of at least 125 lives.

Later the street was used for East Germany's annual May Day parade, featuring thousands of soldiers along with tanks and other military vehicles to showcase the power and the glory of the communist government.

De-Stalinization led to the renaming of the street, after the uncontroversial (in the GDR) founder of Marxism, in late 1961. Since the collapse of Eastern European communism in 1989/1990, renaming the street back to its prewar name Große Frankfurter Straße has periodically been discussed, so far without conclusive results.

The boulevard later found favour with postmodernists, with Philip Johnson describing it as 'true city planning on the grand scale', while Aldo Rossi called it 'Europe's last great street.'[1] Since German reunification most of the buildings, including the two towers, have been restored.

Contents

Stalin's Bathroom

In February 2009 an anonymous author edited the article "Karl-Marx-Allee" in the German language edition of Wikipedia, claiming that during the time of the GDR the road had garnered the nickname "Stalin's bathroom" due to the buildings' tiled facades.[2] Subsequently, several media outlets reiterated this claim.[3][4][5] No alternative verification for the term was given, making it a self-referential claim.

After a letter written in the Berliner Zeitung doubting that the term "Stalin's bathroom" had actually been in common use during the GDR period[6] Andreas Kopietz, a journalist at the newspaper, published an article admitting he had invented the phrase and was the original anonymous Wikipedia editor, allowing the record to be set straight.[7]

Photographs

See also

References

  1. ^ Ladd, Brian (1998). The Ghosts of Berlin: Confronting German History in the Urban Landscape. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 187. ISBN 9780226467627. http://books.google.com/books?id=tzL37_S_nWcC&lpg=PA185&pg=PA187#v=onepage&q=&f=false. 
  2. ^ "Karl-Marx-Allee," Wikipedia: Die freie Enzyklopädie [German]. Retrieved 16 February 2009
  3. ^ Das längste Baudenkmal Europas [The longest monument in Europe] in Berliner Morgenpost. 1 March 2011.
  4. ^ Maria Neuendorff, Viel Platz, wenige Kunden [Lots of space, few customers], in Märkische Oderzeitung. 16 November 2010.
  5. ^ Eva-Maria Hilker, Eine krude Mischung [A crude mixture] in Berliner Zeitung. 25 February 2011.
  6. ^ Leserbriefe [Letters to the Editor] in Berliner Zeitung. 1 March 2011.
  7. ^ Andreas Kopietz Wie ich Stalins Badezimmer erschuf. [How I created Stalin's bathroom] in Berliner Zeitung. 24 March 2011.

External links

Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Karl-Marx-Allee Karl-Marx-Allee] at Wikimedia Commons