Nalina Moses

ARCHITECT, WRITER, CURATOR

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SQUAREDI ended my European vacation perfectly, in Berlin, with a visit to 
Karl Friedrich Schinkel’s 
Neuer Pavillon

at the 
Schloss Charlottenburg. This small villa, set a five-minute walk from 
the palace, was built for
King Friedrich Wilhelm III…

SQUARED

I ended my European vacation perfectly, in Berlin, with a visit to Karl Friedrich Schinkel’s Neuer Pavillon at the Schloss Charlottenburg. This small villa, set a five-minute walk from the palace, was built for King Friedrich Wilhelm III in 1824 as a private retreat. I had visited once before, more than twenty years ago, in the fall, and photographed its handsome neoclassial exterior against bare trees. The building has since been fully restored and reopened in 2011 as a museum devoted to Schinkel and his work.

The building has a nine-square plan, with a staircase at its center leading to a second floor. As one steps into the front vestibule this geometric order becomes perfectly clear. Each square is a single room and each room is generously proportioned, so that a group of three or four can sit inside comfortably. The interiors, which were restored to their original finishes, are surprisingly opulent. Each corner room has its own strong signature color scheme, with coordinating draperies and upholstery. One chamber is blood red, one sky blue, and one mint green. And each one is furnished with period-appropriate display cases, chairs and tables, in dark polished wood. (None of them are as refined as the chairs Schinkel himself designed, which are displayed in a gallery on the second floor.)

This supremely traditional building feels, somehow, coolly modern. Its nine-square organization provides logical structure and circulation while allowing each room to maintain its own identity, creating drama as one moves from one to the next. One is delighted to walk all the way around a floor and then once again. The building’s exterior, as taut as a drum, is cleanly organized, with high narrow openings that don’t disrupt the integrity of the single volume. This building, rigorous in plan and modest in its facades, opens up to generous accommodations. It’s a lesson in the richness and complexity possible within geometric restraint.

Photograph © Nalina Moses.

September 09, 2018 by Nalina Moses
September 09, 2018 /Nalina Moses /Source
ARCHITECTURE, KarlFriedrichSchinkel, NeuerPavilion, Berlin
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