750 Cubic Meters of Extracted Concrete Turned This Nazi Bunker Into a Gallery & Home

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In a cultural capital like Berlin, where ‘pop-up’ stores appear in abandoned warehouses, local brands emerge from stores over-run with squatters, and nightclubs rave in power plants, it is only appropriate that an art gallery would find its home in a nearly indestructible concrete vessel. Such is the case with the “Berlin Bunker” in the heart of the fashionable “Mitte” district.

Monolithic and symmetrical, decorated only by thin strips of vertical windows on its four identical facades, this former Nazi air-raid shelter stands as a relic of Germany’s past.  Yet a closer look beyond its sharp-edged cornice reveals something unexpected: luscious green gardens and a luxurious penthouse, completed in 2007. This is the home of Christian Boros, the art collector whose private collection is stored and exhibited in the depths of the fortified bunker below.

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Cite: Gili Merin. "750 Cubic Meters of Extracted Concrete Turned This Nazi Bunker Into a Gallery & Home" 11 Jul 2014. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/526149/750-cubic-meters-of-extracted-concrete-turned-this-nazi-bunker-into-a-gallery-and-home> ISSN 0719-8884

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