Home International As form emerges, new US embassy in Berlin triggers debate

As form emerges, new US embassy in Berlin triggers debate

By Ulrike von Leszczynski, DPA,

Berlin : The removal of the scaffolding from the US embassy construction site in Berlin has triggered fresh debate about this symbol of Washington’s power on the site of the former Berlin Wall.

The inauguration is set for July 4, US Independence Day, and tourists are already snapping pictures of the building, which has a front door on prestigious Pariser Platz, with the Brandenburg Gate, French Embassy and luxurious Adlon Hotel as neighbours.

Its completion fills the last gap on an upscale square that in less than two decades has turned into a gallery of contemporary architecture. The US project was delayed by years of wrangling with the city of Berlin over buffer zones to foil car bombings.

Lines of waist-high pillars are the most obvious security features around the four-storeyed sandstone building, which has its longest frontage not on the square but on a four-lane road, which is where most tourists in buses will see it first.

The embassy website says the design is intended to “provide an open yet secure presentation of America”.

From the penthouse, US ambassador William Timken will have a panorama on Berlin history all around him.

The view has been carefully composed to show the Quadriga horses on top of the Brandenburg Gate seeming to ride across the embassy’s rooftop garden of native American grasses. Timken will also have a close-up view of the dome on the Reichstag and the Tiergarten woods.

To the south, he will gaze across the expanse of the sombre Holocaust Memorial to the lofty office towers of Potsdamer Platz, 400 metres away. Timken remembers standing on the site as a visitor to Germany in the early 1990s when it was weed-covered wasteland.

“The Berlin Wall had stood there just a short time before with the ‘death strip’ next to it,” said Timken, who arrived as ambassador in 2005. “I couldn’t have imagined it as the site for our embassy.”

He spoke of his “wonder” at the embassy’s return to the historic site.

Much about the building’s design seems influenced by security needs rather than such emotions: the walls are reinforced, the glass bomb-proof, and a strong fence separates the site from the main road where visitors to the consular office enter the building.

The security is part of the price the US has paid since the Sep 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington.

But compared to the old US embassy in Berlin, which is isolated behind ugly concrete and steel barriers with gun-toting guards, the airy, $120 million new embassy with its many windows seems like a project in disarmament.

Gerwin Zohlen, a Berlin architecture reviewer, is not satisfied. In an interview, he partly blamed the design by California architecture practice Moore Ruble Yudell, calling the newly unveiled exterior “boring” and a “rather uninspired” example of 1980s post-modernism that was already out of date.

Instead of projecting the grandeur of a superpower, the building suggested a nation that had given up being world policeman and withdrawn into self-defence, he said. “It would look okay in the US Midwest. But it doesn’t suit an inner city in Old Europe.”

It would have been easy to build a compound with an ample buffer zone well away from the city centre, but the diplomats had wanted to be “part of Germany” at the heart of Berlin, Timken said.

Ebertstrasse, separating the embassy from the park, was slightly realigned so the buffer zone would be wider.

In any case, the US mission is not the only embassy fixated on security.

The British embassy has prevailed on Berlin to close its street to all traffic.

The US link to Pariser Platz goes back to the early 1930s when the US bought a fire-gutted palace there, but could not restore it at first because of the Great Depression. When Adolf Hitler came to power, the US embassy was in rented premises.

The embassy finally moved to Pariser Platz as Hitler’s chief architect, Albert Speer, was drawing up grandiose plans to rip down the old diplomatic quarter of Berlin and put a Nazi showcase in its place. Germany and the US went to war from 1941.

The post-war communist authorities ripped down the ruins, but the land remained US property and was recovered after the communist system collapsed in 1989.