Hascher Jehle, Kunstmuseum Stuttgart
Produktform: Buch
The Kunstmuseum in Stuttgart occupies the explosive site in the
centre of Stuttgart known as the 'Kleiner Schloßplatz' since the
1960s. This square opposite the Neues Schloß became synonymous
with post-war planning errors. Transport planners had cut it
to bits with their underground tubes before it was covered over
with fashionable structures in the style of their time.
The irreconcilable arguments alone that subsequently flared up
about the future of the Kleiner Schloßplatz made it the most important
location for the Stuttgart architecture debate in recent decades.
Over thirty years passed, and several competitions were needed –
in the course of which an absurd Postmodern and then a technocratic
proposal triumphed –, before a convincing solution was found
by the architects Rainer Hascher and Sebastian Jehle, who work in
Berlin but come from Stuttgart. They had already created a stir with
a project for EXPO 2000 in Hanover, in which a large 'office landscape
' was not just euphemistically promoted as such, but – protected
by a monumental glass wave – was actually realized as a
roofed park.
The prize-winning design for the Kleiner Schloßplatz, of which
all that can be seen from the outside is a glass cube making an impact
over a distance and defining the urban situation, solved the
enormous space problem of an art collection including 15000
works, the most outstanding of which are by Otto Dix, Willi Baumeister,
K.R.H. Sonderborg and Dieter Roth by placing most of the
galleries in a disused tunnel from the old road system. This gave
the building the generous amount of space that contemporary art
demands from a museum. In contrast, the austere simplicity of the
cube is pure Swabian understatement. But the cube’s top floor,
which is open to the public, offers some of the finest views in the
city centre.
Svenja Bockhop, who studied architecture after training as a
photographer, works for Hascher Jehle Architektur. Roland Halbe
has been an architecture photographer in Stuttgart for almost
20 years. His work extends far beyond Germany; Halbe has photographed
almost all Spain’s important new buildings. The architect
and architecture historian Kaye Geipel, the author of numerous
pub-lications in magazines and books, is chiefly concerned with
the structural change in modern architecture since the mid 20th
century; he has worked as editor for Bauwelt since 1995.weiterlesen