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Copy of former DDR lanterns, Karl-Marx-Allee
Berlin

  • progetto Karl-Marx-Allee: Reconstruction of street lighting with 1960s design
  • cliente Senate Department for the Environment, Transport and Climate Protection / Berlin Monument Authority
  • fotografo Claus Boeckh

Karl-Marx-Allee was ini­tially called Sta­li­nal­lee and the street was inten­ded to demon­strate the pre­stige of the former GDR capi­tal of East Berlin. Fol­lo­wing the deva­sta­ting destruc­tion of the war, Germany’s first socia­list street” was desi­gned in a neo­clas­si­cal Sta­li­nist style in the 1950s. An entire sec­tion of Karl-Marx-Allee bet­ween Otto-Braun-Straße and Strauß­ber­ger Platz was recen­tly upgra­ded – as part of a moder­ni­sa­tion of Berlin-Mitte which had to be in line with accep­ted con­ser­va­tion prac­tice. Part of the pro­ject was the return of street lighting with a futu­rist 1960s design to the area close to Ale­xan­der­platz.

Bet­ween 1962 and 1969, when the block-con­struc­tion buil­dings in this sec­tion of the street were com­ple­ted, can­ti­le­ver street lan­terns made at the socia­list VEB Leu­ch­te­bau Leip­zig“ were instal­led. The design of the lan­terns was fairly bold and dif­fe­red from the typi­cal street lighting used in East Berlin city at the time After only seven years howe­ver it was demo­li­shed – pre­su­ma­bly for rea­sons of sim­pli­city – and repla­ced with Leip­zig Dro­plet Lumi­nai­res, which was the most common model used for stan­dard street lighting in the GDR.

Almost 60 years later, 39 repli­cas of this former GDR lan­tern that are fai­th­ful to the ori­gi­nal have now been retur­ned to the same part of the city in Karl-Marx-Allee. At a height of 15.5 metres, the hexa­go­nal poles serve as a remin­der of an age that has almost been for­got­ten. With their con­tem­po­rary lighting tech­no­logy, it is now pos­si­ble to expe­rience the extraor­di­nary lighting design of the 1960s once again.

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