The Fichte-Bunker is a nineteenth-century
gasometer in the
Kreuzberg district of
Berlin,
Germany that was made into an
air-raid shelter in
World War II and subsequently was used as a shelter for the homeless and for refugees, in particular for those fleeing
East Berlin for the West. It is the last remaining brick gasometer in Berlin.
The Fichte-Bunker is located between Fichtestraße and Körtestraße in an area of Jugendstil apartment houses, many of which are now under
historic protection. The gasometer itself is protected,[1] but in September 2006 the State of Berlin's Real Property Fund sold it to private investors and residences have now been constructed on the roof.
Construction and technical data
The Fichte-Bunker was constructed in 1874 for the Municipal Gasholder Authority to the design of
Johann Wilhelm Schwedler.[1] It was the second of four gasometers he designed for Berlin's street lighting;[2] the first was in
Friedrichshain and has since been destroyed. Both were topped with the "Schwedler cupola", an engineering innovation of his that used an unsupported curved steel vault to span diameters of up to 45 metres (148 ft).[3]
The gasometer is a cylinder 56 metres (184 ft) in diameter, 21 metres (69 ft) high exclusive of the cupola[2] and 27 metres (89 ft) high in total. Its form was based on an 1827 design by
Karl Friedrich Schinkel for a circular church.[3][4] The capacity of the telescoping gas container was 30,000 cubic metres.[5]
History
The Kreuzberg gasometer was one of four built to supply gas for street lighting during Berlin's explosive growth in the 1870s.[citation needed]
After the introduction of electric street lighting, the gasometer was taken out of service in 1922 and until 1940 stood empty. At the end of 1940,
Fritz Todt, Inspector-General of Buildings for the capital, had it converted into a 6-level air-raid shelter, one of three intended primarily for the protection of women and children. (The other two were side by side in
Wedding). These were the largest shelters built anywhere in the
Reich in the crash programme of shelter construction.[6] The roof, interior walls and floors were constructed of
reinforced concrete up to 3 metres (9.8 ft) thick. The contractors, Siemens-Bauunion, used predominantly prisoners-of-war and
forced labourers.[7][8] Originally the shelter was planned for 6,000 people, but during
the air raid of 3 February 1945, some 30,000 people took shelter[9] in the approximately 750 individual rooms, which are in many cases only 5 to 7 square meters.[10] In 1944-45, it sheltered Germans
expelled from the eastern territories as well as Berliners.[11] Despite heavy bombardment, the bunker survived the war more or less undamaged.[citation needed]
After the war, the Fichte-Bunker was initially a much needed place of refuge for the displaced.[12] It was used as a juvenile detention facility[13] and as a home for the elderly. It was also typically the first place where
refugees from East Germany stayed.[14][15][16] Finally it became a homeless shelter,[17] which rented rooms to the needy for 2.50
DM a night. Conditions were notoriously bad; it was called the Bunker der Hoffnungslosen ("Bunker of the Hopeless") and a reporter who went in incognito found it unbearable.[18]
The facility was closed for health reasons in 1963 and from then until
reunification, the city used the building as a storehouse for part of the
Senate Reserve, goods and provisions which the Senate of West Berlin was legally required to maintain in case of a second
Berlin Blockade.[2]
After 1990, the Fichte-Bunker again stood empty; entrance was only possible on special tours.[citation needed]
Luxury housing
In September 2006, the State of Berlin's Real Property Fund sold the building and approximately 8,000m2 of land to the newly formed development company SpeicherWerk Wohnbau GmbH. The investors planned to construct luxury 2-storey condominiums on top of the former gasometer and build townhouses and a five-storey apartment building on the land around the building.[2][19][20] Despite objections from neighbours to the density of the development, planning permission was granted and work began in December 2007; the freestanding residences were completed in 2009.[7][21] In spring 2008, there was concern about possible violation of the historic building code,[22] and in summer 2009 the scaffolding around the gasometer was set on fire as part of Action Weeks by squatters and opponents of demolition of housing to build for the rich.[23] In spring 2010, completion of the "Circlehouse" of 13 condominiums on top of the bunker was announced. Designed by architect Paul Ingenbleek and engineer Michael Ernst, they have rooftop gardens in front of the lower storey and front walls of steel and glass and are reached by means of a bridge from a tower which contains a lift and stairs.[3]
^Kristin Feireiss and Julius Posener, Berlin - Denkmal oder Denkmodell? : Architektonische Entwürfe für den Aufbruch in das 21. Jahrhundert / Berlin - Monument ou modèle de pensée?: Projets architecturaux pour l'entrée dans de 21ème siècle, Staatliche Kunsthalle Berlin, Berlin: Ernst, 1988,
ISBN3-433-02285-2,
p. 252 (German, French).
^Arnold and Janick,
p. 126: "Der Großbunker in der Fichtestraße bietet täglich rund 1 600 Vertriebenen, Umquartierten und entlassenen Kriegsgefangenen ein Obdach - The huge bunker in Fichtestraße daily offers a refuge to some 1,600 exiles, transients and released prisoners of war".
^Jennifer V. Evans, "Life Among the Ruins: Sex, Space, and Subculture in Zero Hour Berlin", in Berlin Divided City, 1945–1989, ed. Philip Broadbent and Sabine Hake, New York / Oxford: Berghahn, 2010,
ISBN978-1-84545-755-6, pp. 11–22, p. 19.
^Hans Joachim Reichhardt, Joachim Drogmann, Hanns U. Treutler, Berlin: Chronik der Jahre 1951-1954, Landesarchiv Berlin, Berlin: Spitzing, 1968, OCLC 1024670,
p. 440: "im Fichtebunker . . . , wo politische Flüchtlinge untergebracht sind - in the Fichte-Bunker . . . , where political refugees are housed".
^Curt Riess, Berlin Berlin 1945-53, 1953, repr. ed. Stefan Damm Berlin: Bostelmann & Siebenhaar, 2002,
ISBN3-934189-81-4,
p. 270: "Diese Flüchtlinge, die in des Wortes wahrste Bedeutung die Freiheit gewählt hatten, kamen zuerst einmal im Fichtebunker unweit des Flugplatzes Tempelhof, im amerikanischen Sektor von Berlin, unter - These refugees, who had chosen freedom in the truest sense of the word, were first housed in the Fichte-Bunker, not far from
Tempelhof Airport, in the American Sector".
^Frank Roggenbuch, Das Berliner Grenzgängerproblem: Verflechtung und Systemkonkurrenz vor dem Mauerbau, Berlin: De Gruyter, 2008,
ISBN3-11-020344-8,
p. 141: "im Kreuzberger so genannten »Fichtebunker« (wo üblicherweise politische Flüchtlinge untergebracht waren) - in the so-called 'Fichte-Bunker' in Kreuzberg (where political refugees were routinely housed)".
^Arnold and Janick,
p. 134: "Im September 1956 ziehen die letzten Flüchtlinge aus, einen Tag später belegen Obdachlose die freigewordenen Kammern - In September 1956 the last refugees move out, a day later homeless people occupy the vacated rooms".
^Arnold and Janick,
pp. 134-35: "Nach drei Stunden hab' ich den Bunkerkoller. Ich weiß nicht, ob die Sonne scheint, ob es regnet, ob es Nacht ist, ich drehe durch. Wie um alles in der Welt halten die Menschen es hier aus? - After three hours I've got the bunker madness. I don't know if the sun is shining, if it's raining, if it's night, I'm cracking up. For the sake of everything in the world, how do people put up with this place?"