Eiermann Building Apolda

Eiermann Building, Roof Deck of the 'Open Factory', Apolda (Thuringia), Architect: Egon Eiermann, 1938–39.
Eiermann Building, Roof Deck of the 'Open Factory', Apolda (Thuringia), Architect: Egon Eiermann, 1938–39. © IBA Thüringen, Foto: Thomas Müller.

construction

  • 1906 — 1907
  • Hermann Schneider

extension

  • 1919
  • Hermann Schneider

extension

  • 1936
  • Adolf Bauer

overmolding


renovation

  • 2010 — 2011
  • Delta-Plan GmbH

The Eiermann Building in Apolda is an icon of industrial architecture. The 1930s changes to this factory building, made in the style of the New Architecture established Egon Eiermann’s reputation. The architect, little known at the time, had been commissioned to expand a former weaving mill. The building, with its multi-storey reinforced-concrete frame, its light-flooded halls and its roof terrace modelled on a ship’s deck, is still regarded as an outstanding example of sustainable building conversion. Eiermann later became one of the most prominent German architects of the post-war period.

The original building was erected in 1906/07 as a weaving mill by the Apolda-based architect Hermann Schneider. However, TOTAL KG Foerstner & Co later purchased the building with the intention of using it to manufacture fire extinguishers, thus necessitating expansion of the production facility. Egon Eiermann succeeded in elegantly extending the existing building’s structure. He remodelled the factory in 1938/39, employing a modern design vocabulary based on the aesthetics of the Bauhaus. It was the friendship between the manufacturer Waldemar Foerstner and the young architect that made this advance possible in the heart of rural Thuringia. The alteration is still viewed today as a milestone in the history of modern industrial architecture. Like Egon Eiermann’s later works, the project is characterised by simplicity, strict geometry and the immediate recognisability of its functions. This 1930s building in Apolda thus prefigures typical elements of 1950s architecture.

The Eiermann Building survived World War II and East Germany’s planned economy, but not privatisation after the fall of the Berlin Wall: fire extinguisher production permanently ceased in 1994. The building then stood empty for years. Since 2016, the International Building Exhibition (IBA) Thuringia has championed its revitalisation. In 2018 they moved their headquarters into the building. Their “Open Factory” project is creating co-working spaces, workshop areas and event rooms here, making the Eiermann Building a place where skilled crafts and production gather alongside educational and networking opportunities, art and culture. [DB/DK]

Map

Contact and opening hours

Address

Eiermannbau
Auenstraße 11
99510 Apolda

conveying formula

Firma Borgmann & Co., Total Kommanditgesellschaft Foerstner & Co., VEB Feuerlöschgerätewerk Apolda

Förderformel

The property is funded by the state of Thuringia.

Eiermann Building, Hall on the 3rd floor, Apolda (Thuringia), Architect: Egon Eiermann, 1938–39.
IBA Thüringen, Foto: Thomas Müller.
Eiermann Building, Hall on the 3rd floor, Apolda (Thuringia), Architect: Egon Eiermann, 1938–39.
Eiermann Building, Roof terrace, Apolda (Thuringia), Architect: Egon Eiermann, 1938–39.
IBA Thüringen, Foto: Thomas Müller.
Eiermann Building, Roof terrace, Apolda (Thuringia), Architect: Egon Eiermann, 1938–39.

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