Fagus Works
Les noms des biens figurent dans la langue dans laquelle les Etats parties les ont soumis.
Allemagne (Europe et Amérique du nord) |
|
| Date de soumission : | 20/09/1999 |
| Catégorie : | Culturel |
| Soumis par : | Niedersächsisches Landesamt für Denkmalpflege- Abteilung Bau- und Kunstdenkmalpflege-Scharnhorstst.1 |
| Etat, province ou région : | Lower Saxony, Alfeld (Leine), Hannoversche Str. - 50km south of Hannover |
| Ref.: | 1364 |
Description
Between 1911 and 1914, the architect's offices of Edward Werner and Walter Gropius in conjunction with Adolf Meyer erected a new building for a factory belonging to the Alfeld industrialist Carl Benscheidt directly to the east of the Hannover-Gottingen railway line, in the centre of the German shoe last industry.
From north to south, the asymmetrical arrangement consists of a more or less informal group of production-linked buildings with sawmill, storage and drying building, production hall, forwarding department, machine building, office block and, at a slight distance from the rest, the locksmith's shop and the porter's building with access road.
The task of Gropius' office was to use purely architectural means to achieve a distinctively modern design for the building complex, whose cross-section and spatial programme were already defined. The solution aimed at by the owner was, in competition to the existing shoe last factories in the town, also to be a symbol of technical progress and social commitment.
Valeur universelle exceptionnelle
Satements of authenticity and/or integrity
The Fagus Works present a high extension of authenticity because they were producing shoemakers'lasts still up to now.
Comparison with other similar properties
The Fagus Works designed by Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyer are widely considered one of the origines of modern architecture; constructed from 1911 onwards, they were worldwide unique in their time.
Document Word
Nations Unies - Copyright © 1992-2009 UNESCO Centre du patrimoine mondial, Tous droits réservés | v3.0, Mis à jour le 24 nov. 2009