CO N FE R E N C E PR O C E E D I N G S The 6th Baltic Sea Region Cultural Heritage Forum From Postwar to Postmodern – 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage RIKSANTIKVARIEÄMBETET The 6th Baltic Sea Region Cultural Heritage Forum From Postwar to Postmodern ...... ... ... : ... ... The 6' Balt ,c Sea Region ... ~ i;. ... ... ... Cultural Heritage Forum ... ~ ';. ;' ~ ...... ... ,.. ... ~ .. ~ ~ ... ... .. i;. ... ~~~~~ i ... The conference logotype shows a variety of different coloured triangles. This pattern is taken from the windows of the University Church of Kiel, part of the University Campus where the conference took place. The church was built in 1965 and is an appropriate as well as a very beautiful symbol for this conference. Please read more about the architecture of the 1960s and 1970s on Kiel University Campus in the article of Dr Nils Meyers in this publication. Swedish National Heritage Board (Riksantikvarieämbetet) P. O. Box 5405 SE-114 84 Stockholm Tel. +46 8 5191 80 00 www.raa.se registrator@raa.se Riksantikvarieämbetet 2017 The 6th Baltic Sea Region Cultural Heritage Forum: From Postwar to Postmodern Editor Maria Rossipal Cover illustration: Konrad Rappaport, The Science Communication Lab, Kiel. Photo (back cover): Małgorzata Rozbicka; KRIPOS/Scanpix; Karin Hermerén; Torben Kiepke; von Bonin, National Board of Antiquities, Finland. Copyright according to Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND, unless otherwise stated. Terms on https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5 ISBN 978-91-7209-800-8 (PDF) ISBN 978-91-7209-801-5 (Tryck) Content 5 Foreword 6 Introduction 8 Joint Statement Session I: History and Heritage – Postwar 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage in the Baltic Sea Region 11 MART K ALM | Whose Happiness is Better? The Architecture of the Industrial Societies around the Baltic Sea 21 DAVID CHIPPERFIELD | Restorations and Reconstructions: Reflections on Berlin 28 PETER ARONSSON | The Role of Cultural Heritage and the Use of History in the 20th-Century Baltic Sea Region 34 MARIJA DRĖMAITĖ | Long Life of the Socialist Modernism in the Baltic States 40 MAŁGORZATA ROZBICK A | Poland’s Postwar Architectural Heritage: A Record of Political, Social, and Economic Change 51 SIRI SK JOLD LEXAU | Lost Cultural Heritage: The Aftermath of the Bombing of the Government Quarter in Oslo and the Need for Collective Memory 58 JĀNIS LEJNIEKS | Rebranding the Soviet Regime’s Built Cultural Heritage 64 HÅK AN HÖKERBERG | Difficult Heritage: Various Approaches to Twentieth-Century Totalitarian Architecture Session II: Demolition, preservation or adaptive re-use? Contemporary challenges for Postwar 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage 73 WESSEL DE JONGE | Heritage for the Masses. About Modern Icons & Everyday Modernism, Historic Value & a Sustainable Future 86 PANU LEHTOVUORI & GEORGIANA VARNA | Urbanism at a turning point – Modern, Postmodern, Now 99 DENNIS RODWELL | The Values of Heritage: A New Paradigm for the 21st Century 106 PER STRÖMBERG | Creative Destruction or Destructive Creativity? Negotiating the Heritage of the Cold War in the Experience Economy 113 ANDRZEJ SIWEK | Protection of the Architectural Heritage of the Post-war Poland – Current Status and Future Prospects Session III: Management of the Postwar and Postmodern Built Cultural Heritage 123 SUSAN MACDONALD | Moving on: approaches and frameworks for conserving the heritage of the postwar era and beyond 134 TORBEN KIEPKE & K ATJA HASCHE | Between Rejection and Adaption. Listing buildings of the period 1950–1990 141 K ARIN HERMERÉN | What about the art? Challenges of Authenticity and Preservation of Art Related to Buildings and Architecture 149 CISSELA GÉNETAY & ULF LINDBERG | A contemporary approach to assessment and prioritisation of cultural heritage 155 RIIT TA SALASTIE | Policy making – Preservation Methodologies for the Modern Built Cultural Heritage in Helsinki Outside the conference programme 163 NILS MEYER | Architecture of the 1960s and 1970s on Kiel University Campus – Heritage Value and Assessment 169 HANNU MATIKK A | Working Group Coastal Heritage 170 SALLAMARIA TIKK ANEN | Working Group Underwater Cultural Heritage 171 List of contributors 175 The Baltic Region Heritage Committee 5 Foreword Heritage is primarily not about the past but rather about our relationship with the present and the future and our ability to deal with a constant changing society. Therefore there is a strong need for understanding the active processes of making cultural heritage. To ensure a sustainable develop­ ment of society, based on democratic values, there is need of constant reflection on what we choose to preserve from the past. This process of understand­ ing our past must also encompass what is some­ times called difficult heritage. The interest for 20th century built cultural heri­ tage coincides with the changes of the framework and organization of the heritage sector. Given the quantity and quality of monuments and buildings from the postwar 20th century period, different methods of conservation, in terms of fabrics and constructions, need to be further discussed and tested. As do methods of inventory and assessment. The changes in roles and responsibilities, the dif­ ferent positions in conservation theory and the var­ ious approaches to assessment have implications for how the heritage sector’s work can be conducted. Today, the legacy of postwar municipal planning and architecture in the Baltic Sea region, faces great challenges, both socially and economically not least, politically. Deeper knowledge of postwar 20th century built heritage, particularly postmodern built her­ itage, is decisive. There is also a strong need to elaborate common approaches for cultural assess­ ment and conservation. In order to tackle the spe­ cific challenges of postwar 20th century built heri­ tage there is a strong need for closer cooperation in our region. A closer collaboration can contribute to a mutual better understanding of the various values that can be ascribed to this period from a Baltic Sea region perspective and can also contribute to a better understanding of the region’s shared history. Lars Amréus Director General Swedish National Heritage Board 6 Introduction The theme of the 6th Baltic Sea Region Cultural Heritage Forum was From Postwar to Postmodern – 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage. The objective of the conference was to raise awareness of the built cultural heritage of the postwar and postmodern period in the Baltic Sea region. The Forum was arranged in cooperation between the Swedish National Heritage Board and the State Archaeo­ logical Department Schleswig Holstein under the supervision of the Baltic Region Heritage Com­ mittee (the former Monitoring Group on Cultural Heritage in the Baltic Sea States). The national heritage agencies, represented in the Baltic Region Heritage Committee (BRHC), have all been invited to contribute in conceptualizing the main theme. The working group on 20th Cen­ tury Built Heritage has in close collaboration with the Baltic Region Heritage Committee elaborated the theme. The three main sessions mirrored the main themes of the Forum, namely History and Herit­ age – Postwar 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage in the Baltic Sea Region; Demolition, Preservation or Adaptive Re-use? Contemporary challenges for Post­ war 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage and Man­ agement of the Postwar and Postmodern Built Cultural Heritage. Discussions following the three main ses­ sions and more intimate parallel sessions made it possible for deepened reflection and analysis. Most of the lectures were filmed and can until summer of 2018 be found on the website http://www.kiel­heritage­forum­2016.eu/home/ videos­from­the­lectures/. In addition to the lecturer programme, the Working group on Underwater Cultural Heritage contributed with the poster­exhibition Glimpses of Maritime Heritage – modern and ancient. Elements of modern 20th century underwater cultural heritage and maritime landscapes. The Norwegian Directo­ rate for Cultural Heritage & Arts Council Norway contributed with the poster exhibition People and possibilities – a photo exhibition showing how cultural cooperation can create new economic and social possibil­ ities for people and organizations across Europe. The Working group on Coastal Heritage also arranged a non­stop short film show The coastal heritage around the Baltic Sea. Acknowledgements The Baltic Region Heritage Committee wishes to thank everyone who was involved in organizing this conference. This conference could not have been arranged without professional support from the Swedish National Heritage Board, responsible for the conference programme, and the State Archaeological Department Schleswig Holstein, who was responsible for the conference arrange­ ment. The State Office for Preservation of Monu­ ments Schleswig Holstein also contributed with the guided tours on the last day of the conference. A special thanks to the guides Mr Bastian Müller and Dr Margita Meyer. The conference received financial contributions from the Ministry of Justice, Cultural and Euro­ pean Affairs Schleswig­Holstein, for which we are very grateful. The Baltic Region Heritage Commit­ tee is also very thankful to the Chamber of Archi­ tects Schleswig­Holstein for their great generos­ ity to invite lecturers and organizers to dinner the night before the conference. Special thanks also to Dr Nils Meyer for guiding conference participants on the University Campus and to the architect of the University Church, Mr Erhart Kettner, for his enthusiastic guidance in the magnificent building he has created. 7 The Baltic Region Heritage Committee is also greatly in debt to the lecturers for their presenta­ tions, manuscripts and cooperation in the prepara­ tion of this publication. Last, but not least, we thank the students at the Institute of Modern German Literature and Media at Kiel University, responsible for the live streaming, the sound, the light and the practical arrangements on stage during the Forum. Anita Bergenstråhle-Lind Chair of the Baltic Region Heritage Committee Swedish National Heritage Board 8 Joint statement. Postwar and late 20th Century Built Heritage in the Baltic Sea Region Preamble The 6th Baltic Sea Cultural Heritage Forum calls for the attention of safeguarding the postwar and late 20th century built environments as valuable manifestations of the region’s history and develop­ ment. The postwar 20th century built heritage in the region reflects the ideology and different interpre­ tations of the welfare society in an eastern and a western context. Furthermore the late 20th century built heritage represents the general shift towards globalization and a stronger emphasis on individ­ uality. The conference fosters to understand the importance of postwar and late 20th century built heritage as an integral part of sustainable develop­ ment strategies of urban and rural landscapes. Statement The postwar and late 20th century built heritage in the Baltic Sea Region is at risk due to extensive social changes and a lack of recognition from soci­ ety in general. The architecture, ideology and func­ tion that intervene in the legacy of 20th century built heritage require specific demands. The prac­ tical core challenges are the exceptional scope in quantity, the experimental use of different materials and the rapid change of functions and use. A deep­ ened regional cooperation is decisive in order to safeguard the legacy of postwar and late 20th cen­ tury built heritage in the Baltic Sea Region. The Conference call upon all state parties to recog­ nize and strive towards the following: • Promote research in the field and spread know­ ledge and raise awareness of postwar and late 20th century built heritage in the Baltic Sea Region. • Deepen cooperation in order to tackle the specific challenges of postwar and late 20th century built heritage to enhance safeguarding; that includes adaptive re­use and classification. • Elaborate common approaches for cultural assessment regarding postwar and late 20th century built heritage, landscape and public spaces and promote integration of these methods in planning processes, property management and property development. • Mediate tangible and intangible values of post­ war and late 20th century built heritage for the purpose of integrating democratic perspectives in order to obtain sustainable development. • Promote preservation and management of 20th century built heritage as part of global effort to reduce global warming. Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a valuable tool in addressing this angle. • Promote research on a cross­sector basis regard­ ing materials, best practice/methods and tech­ niques for the preservation of postwar and late 20th century built heritage including sustainable improvement of the energy performance. • Recognize preservation and continuous use and reuse of 20th century built heritage as important aspects of ecological and social sustainability. • Highlight postwar and late 20th century archi­ tecture in a Baltic Sea Region context in order to attract tourism and regional development/foster heritage based economy. 9 Session I: History and Heritage – Postwar 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage in the Baltic Sea Region 10 11 MART KALM Whose happiness is better? The architecture of the industrial societies around the Baltic Sea The East and the West World War II clearly divided the countries around the Baltic Sea into two separate camps, the East and the West. This was a completely unprecedented situation, for so far, the sea had been a connecting and unifying force. This is not to say that it hadn’t been used to carry out plans of conquest throughout history, be it by the Vikings, the German­speaking Hanseatic merchants from Lübeck, or Denmark, Poland, Sweden, Russia and Germany with expan­ sionist ambitions. By the late 1940s, the Cold War was taking shape with the opposing sides dividing into the capitalist West and communist East, each demonising the other; for more than four decades the Iron Curtain set the balance between the Bal­ tic Sea countries. The line between the two camps simply followed the contours of the territory seized by the Soviet Union in WW II. That terri­ tory stretched from Karelia, which was taken from Finland, to Mecklenburg, which became part of the German Democratic Republic; East Prussia was simply made an exclave of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. The Baltic Sea was not, however, among the hotspots of the Cold War, which was dominated by the global tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union. Perhaps the most notorious incident occurred in 1981, as a Soviet submarine carrying nuclear war­ heads ran aground near the Swedish naval base in Karlskrona. The Baltic Sea region provided opportunities for détente and soft transitions rather than outright confrontations between the two systems in the Cold War. And this is of particular interest because of the alternatives offered here. The Soviet­friendly attitude, forced on Finland after the war, transformed the country into some­ thing like a middleman between the East and the West. In the eyes of the Soviet Union, Finland, having stuck to a capitalist economy and Western social organisation, was half as bad as the rest of the capitalist countries. It was during excursions to Finland that Soviet citizens got to see life in the West, for there were much fewer opportunities for them to travel anywhere else outside the Eastern bloc. The Finnish­Estonian cultural bridge con­ stituted a special line of communication here,1 for as closely related nations they could, if interested, understand each others language and had tradi­ tionally close ties until WW II. There was even some resentment in Moscow over the fact that the activities of the Soviet­Finnish Friendship Soci­ ety were disproportionately focused on Estonia. Although not particularly similar as cities, Tallinn and Kotka established close ties under the twinned town movement, which served as an instrument of détente all over Europe. Finnish architects had their first post war visit to Estonia in 1963, with their Estonian colleagues in turn visiting Finland the following year. Until the 1968 events in Czecho­ slovakia, the architecture students of the two coun­ tries even had study tours in both directions and joint competitions. Professional ties often devel­ oped into personal ones. In northern Estonia, peo­ ple watched Finnish television, hoping to access less distorted news coverage. Here the influence of Finnish TV on mass culture, fashion and life style was more apparent. Similar in principle, although less striking, was the role of Polish television for Lithuanians, not to mention the information war 12 within the divided Germany. In 1965, the ferry connection between Helsinki and Tallinn was resumed. Although the Soviet side was essentially interested in getting foreign currency from the binging Finns, many professional and personal ties developed in the process, friendships between fam­ ilies emerging as especially important. Close grass­ roots ties between Finland and Estonia were in fact one of the biggest leaks in the Iron Curtain, and their influence makes itself felt even today. Theoretically, one could think that détente was supported by the social organisation that flourished in Sweden, or the Nordic countries more broadly, in the post­war years; it served as an example for many and was seen as outright socialist by the right wing in America and elsewhere. However, the Soviet Union did not recognise the possibility of a compromise solution with a strong public sector between communism and capitalism; to Soviet cit­ izens, Sweden was presented as a typical, militarily aggressive capitalist jungle. An important exception rather than a typical case in the Soviet Union, the Baltic States were a peculi­ arity of the Baltic Sea region, one that both mitigated and escalated the Cold War. The predominantly Lutheran Estonia and Latvia and Catholic Lithuania were culturally not part of the Orthodox Russia, despite having belonged in the tsarist empire for a long time. As in the Nordic countries and Poland, German had been the most widely spoken foreign language in Estonia and Latvia, while in Russia, French firmly held this position. For the Russian intelligentsia, the Baltics were “our little West” or “an inner abroad”2, where they came to relish the Euro­ pean old towns full of Gothic architecture, the cafés, whipped cream, long­haired youngsters and other things that could not be found in Russia. Even if the Baltic consciousness grew numb to the trauma of Soviet occupation brought on by the war and got used to the situation, the people still lived with the unspoken knowledge that they were unjustly subjected to Moscow’s foreign rule. On the other side of the Iron Curtain, however, no one was to know anything about this and the Soviet Union perpetuated the myth of 15 equal brotherly Soviet republics. The Estonian and Latvian émigré com­ munities in Sweden sought to draw the attention of the locals to the occupation of the Baltic States, but they achieved little in terms of influencing offi­ cial policy. Aesthetic confrontation during the post-war decade Architecture was an important means of visual­ isation of the Cold War. Aesthetic confrontation characterised the first post­war decade, as Stalin­ ist Russia continued to cultivate historicist mon­ umental architecture based on academicism. It was architecture characteristic of the dictator­ ships of the 1930s. In the Baltics and Poland as well as East Germany, immediately after the war attempts were made to continue building on the pre­war modernist experience, which had at dif­ ferent times fluctuated between various degrees of modernism and traditionalism. By the end of the 1940s, however, these countries were forced to sub­ mit to Moscow’s model.3 Following the example of the American­style tower blocks in Moscow4, sim­ ilar buildings were to be erected in the capitals of the other Soviet republics, scaled down slightly to reflect the relative importance of their respective locations. While these buildings were completed in Riga, Tallinn kept looking for an ever more perfect solution until Stalinism came to an end.5 According to the Soviet architectural doctrine, buildings were to be nationalist in form and social­ ist in content. As the former Hanseatic cities had a strong Gothic heritage, Gothic décor was applied to the Stalinist residential buildings erected in Rostock Lange Strasse.6 What makes this all the more intriguing is the fact that, according to the com­ munist understanding of history, the Middle Ages were a particularly backward period in history, due to being dominated by religion. Historical periods only started to become more progressive with the Renaissance, where humanism emerged. But when neo­mannerism was used on new buildings in Tal­ linn old town and neo­baroque in Riga, this was not so much for ideological reasons, as mannerism was all but non­existent in Tallinn, although Swed­ ish baroque is historically important in Riga. It was just an abstract attempt to adapt the buildings to the historical environment, an aim to which these styles were thought to be best suited aesthetically. As con­ cerns nationalism in form, the situation in Poland was even more complicated.7 When they were reset­ tled in German merchant cities, the Poles from for­ mer Polish territories now part of Ukraine or Bela­ rus didn’t feel at home and set out to Polonise key historical buildings. In order to cope in Danzig/ Gdansk, they brought with them from Lviv the 13 equestrian statue of the Polish king Jan III Sobieski. They restored the merchants’ houses in a rational, modernising spirit, leaving the main volumes of the buildings unchanged, while at the same time trans­ forming the narrow inner courtyards and outbuild­ ings into communal green areas.8 The mandatory Stalinism of the early 1950s did not, however, leave a very strong mark on the exist­ ing environment, for the crudely organised con­ struction efforts and by then under­industrialised VÄXJÖ PUBLIC LIBRARY. Architect Erik Uluots, 1954–65. Photo by author 2016. Erik Uluots (1930–2006) is one of Swedish architects of Estonian origin. All they left from Estonia to Sweden in September 1944. VATIALA CHAPEL, near Tampere, 1960. Architect Viljo Revell. Photo by author 2007. pre­war technology meant that little was built and many large projects were only completed in a sim­ plified form in the second half of the decade. A counterpoint to the grand and ceremonial architecture of the Eastern bloc was provided by Nordic modernism, which had started to attract global attention in both architecture and design as early as the 1930s. In contrast to the local archi­ tects in the Eastern bloc, the Nordic countries pro­ vided the biggest international stars of the post­war 14 years. These included Finnish architects who had already made a name for themselves before the war – Alvar Aalto and Erik Bryggmann, an architect from Turku whose position in historical writing has unfortunately lost prominence over time; in Sweden, Sven Markelius and Sigurd Lewerentz remained active, while Gunnar Erik Asplund had died in 1940; in Denmark, Arne Jacobsen had returned after having sought refuge from the war in Sweden, and Vilhelm Lauritzen and Kay Fisker continued to work. Emerging as new bright stars were Jørn Utzon in Denmark, the British­born architect Ralph Erskine in Sweden as well as Aarne Ervi and Viljo Revell in Finland. Nazism and the war had devas­ tated the powerful architectural scene in Germany, where in the 1950s, a new generation sprang up with Egon Eiermann, Werner Düttmann and others. Already in the pre­war years, Nordic modernism had started to use softer forms and natural mate­ rials for cosiness and simplicity instead of a cool laboratory­like atmosphere. Traditional building methods, natural colours and unpretentiousness were well suited to the post­war period of recovery. But here, too, the contrast was not absolute, for in the Eastern bloc, family homes, which were on the fringes of the official architectural discourse, held on firmly to the tradition of the cosy home. And in Estonia, family homes took a significant step closer to Heimatstil than they had before the war. This contraband of German culture in an otherwise Germanophobic Soviet Union can per­ haps be explained by the wartime period of Ger­ man occupation, during which the architects, who were sitting idly at home after the 1930s construc­ tion boom, were, in the absence of anything else, time and again leafing through German architec­ ture magazines, which had been filtered down to traditionalism. International modernism and industrial housing In the post­WW II period, modernisation picked up speed in all the Baltic Sea countries. In the West, a welfare society with a regulated free market econ­ omy developed; in the East, a society without pri­ vate property clumsily tried to make headway under a bureaucracy of state controlled command economy, while officially striving for communism. A distinct parallel development, which both sides saw as the foundation of prosperity, was indus­ trialisation. In retrospect, the post­war decades have also been called the high­industrial period.9 This meant mass urbanisation and the abandon­ ing of villages. The industrialisation process was so intense that the local hinterland was incapable of filling the jobs offered by industry, a fact that attracted immigrants. In search of a better life, many Finnish people moved to Sweden, while Denmark and Sweden opened the doors to Italians and Yugoslavs, and Germany to the Turks. Esto­ nia and Latvia received Russians, who did not just come for a better life, but as part of a colonisation process directed from Moscow with the aim of homogenising the whole population of the Soviet Union into Russian speakers. In constant rivalry, both the East and the West declared boundless care for their citizens. Both sides aspired to build a more just society offering better conditions of life, all the while refusing to officially recognise the other side’s aspirations. While in the West there were young people and left­wing intellectuals who admired the building of communism, such pluralism wasn’t tolerated in the undemocratic East, which didn’t stop all the popu­ lation from desiring the shiny stuff in the West. Khrushchev’s campaign of catching up with the US meant that the USSR was to produce the same volumes of consumer goods as the West. The eco­ nomic growth of the 1960s allowed the significantly less well off East to increase consumption; refriger­ ators, TVs and other household appliances started to make their appearance. All this, however, required a modern home in which to cultivate this dream of a consumer society. A necessary concomitant of an industrial society with swelling urban populations is the construction of housing on a mass scale, which in the 20th cen­ tury increasingly meant social housing. In the 1930s, when most of Europe was veering towards totalitar­ ianism, Sweden, under the Social Democratic leader Albin Hansson, began to build the Folkhemmet, or People’s Home, which involved extensive construc­ tion of housing for the less well off. Indeed, large­scale social housing projects financed with state loans in cities and communes/ municipalities are considered a characteristic fea­ ture of post­war architecture in the Nordic coun­ tries. On the outskirts of cities, low­density, free­ plan neighbourhoods of 3 to 4­storey residential buildings began to appear, drawing inspiration 15 from England. Along the edges of these neighbour­ hoods, the increasingly popular terraced houses for larger families were added.10 These settlements on the border between the city and the country offered a semi­urban experience to those arriving from rural areas: the children could play outside without finding themselves on a busy street as soon as they went out the door. In contrast to the city centre, each apartment had plenty of sunlight and a view of nature. It has been said that while in Sweden more attention was focused on socialising within a neighbourhood, in Finland integration with the landscape was seen as particularly important. In almost all the Nordic countries, housing research institutions were established in order to work out optimal floor plans for apartments, and building codes to ensure high standards. Although the early apartments only had two or three rooms, warm water and central heating were a great joy to the residents. Given the family structure at the time, the so­called “green widows” appeared in these new city districts, housewives condemned to boredom in their modern homes in semi­natural surroundings. Then again, the Finnish feminist art historian Kirsi Saarikangas has emphasised the importance of the open plan of the apartments of the time, where the smooth transitions from the kitchen to the dining area and on to the living room stressed the unity of the family and no longer secluded the wife in the kitchen.11 This calming and vitalising neo­empiricist Nor­ dic architecture not only found a lot of followers in Germany, but was also a popular example for many architects from Scotland to Italy, not to mention the Eastern bloc. Nikita Khrushchev, who introduced the Khrush­ chev Thaw in the mid­1950s, declared Stalinist architecture excessive and demanded a transition to industrial methods of construction. This meant that global modernist architecture was now accepted in the Eastern bloc. But in the 1960s and 1970s, architecture in the Nordic countries was also los­ ing its regional character and took on the form of homogenised international modernism. Similarities between the architecture in the East and West didn’t mean that Cold War rivalry was coming to an end; rather, there was now an ambition to com­ pete in the same weight class. From 1959, housing factories using the Camus technology bought from the French to produce pre­ fabricated concrete panels the size of a whole room were erected all over the Eastern bloc and kept churning out panels until the collapse of the system in 1991. And so, Plattenbauten, or housing con­ structed of large prefabricated concrete panels, can be found from Vladivostok to East Berlin, even on legendary Friedrichstrasse. The first 5­storey Plattenbauten, which are known as khrushchovkas in Russian, mainly had 2­room apartments; over the years, 9, 12 and 16­storey blocks were introduced, with increasingly spacious apartments. In the Nor­ dic countries, apartments grew larger with each decade, and the Eastern bloc never caught up with the mass construction of 100­square­metre, 4­room apartments in Sweden in the 1980s. As the Eastern bloc was experiencing the most acute apartment shortage, with masses of people living in communal apartments, and the govern­ ments building on state land, they didn’t bother with small neighbourhoods as in the Nordic coun­ tries. In the Eastern bloc, the equivalent of a neigh­ bourhood was a micro­district, or microrayon: a school and a kindergarten surrounded by apart­ ment buildings; as a rule, however, new residential districts were made up of roughly ten such micro­districts, and towards the end of the Soviet era, districts with several hundreds of thousands of residents were planned. This pursuit of large vol­ umes was somewhat similar to the Swedish Social Democrat programme of building a million apart­ ments, which was realised in ten years between 1964 and 1974. Both aimed to ensure the happiness of the citizens by constructing homes with mod­ ern amenities for them. Although the neighbour­ hoods never reached such gigantic dimensions in Sweden, the country did introduce the industrial­ ised production of housing made of prefabricated concrete slabs.12 Now the Swedes experienced first­ hand what was long since clear to the people in the Eastern bloc, that even if the policy goal of build­ ing an apartment for every family is achieved, the mass construction campaign results in a dreary, unarchitectural environment with poor building quality, with the landscaping typically not fitting in the budget. While in the rest of the Soviet Union new hous­ ing districts were usually built in empty fields out­ side the city, in the Baltic republics attempts were made at least to some extent to take into account the surrounding natural environment and adapt 16 SUMMER COTTAGE of architect Modris Gelzis in Saulkrasti, Latvia, 1959–60. Photo by author 2011. to the existing landscape, following the example of Helsinki’s Tapiola district in particular, but also other developments. Starting from the late 1950s, the Agenskalna priedes district in Riga and Mustamäe in Tallinn were both built in a pine grove. However, being used to plodding about freely, the builders only managed to leave a few pine trees standing. Built in the 1960s, the Lazdy­ nai district in Vilnius13 was more of a success, as the builders actually managed to arrange the houses within the surrounding greenery. The architects never made a secret of the fact that they used Tou­ louse­Le Mirail, Vällingby and Tapiola as their models. Unfortunately, the element most strongly reminiscent of Vällingby – a cultural and shopping centre across the trenched motorway to the city centre – was planned but never built. Despite that, however, Lazdynai received the highest award in the USSR, the Lenin Prize, from Moscow in 1972, and was to serve as an example for future projects. In Central and Northern Europe, workers living in apartment buildings had been cultivating small patches of land in allotment gardens, or Schreber­ gärten, outside the city since the early 20th century. These offered activities in the fresh air for both visual pleasure and dietary variety. In the Soviet Union, the establishment of gardening coopera­ tives was permitted from the late 1950s, as mass housing construction was picking up speed. Given the constant shortage of foodstuffs in the Soviet Union, growing your own food was of vital impor­ tance. While this lovely hobby allowed for experi­ ments in landscape architecture when planning the allotments in Denmark (e.g. Naerum), in the Soviet Union people stuck to the plain old grid plan. This is not to say that people didn’t invest much in their garden houses, however; designed by architects, these sometimes looked quite smart. Cottages fur­ ther away from the city, often by a lake or on the coast, became very popular in the Nordic countries 17 FARUM MIDTPUNKT HOUSING in Copenhagen, 1972–75. Architects Jørn Ole Sørensen, Viggo Møller-Jensen and Tyge Arnfred. Photo by author 2012. in the post­war decades, but were quite widespread in the Baltics, too. Added to this in the 1960s, was the introduction of Finnish saunas, which trans­ formed what had been a washing place into a party venue. Company holiday houses for employees were common in the West, but became especially popu­ lar in the Eastern bloc, which officially promoted a collective way of life. As the German researcher Elke Beyer points out, the idea that the existing urban planning based on expert knowledge was inadequate was gaining ground in the East as well as the West in the 1970s, and traditional architectural know­ ledge was increasingly valued.14 The East, where most of the buildings constructed only came from the housing factories, envied the West, where low­ rise, high­density housing was built widely in the 1970s. Among the most exciting experiments in this field is the Farum Midtpunkt (designed by Jørn Ole Sørensen, Viggo Møller­Jensen and Tyge Arn­ fred, 1972–75) in Copenhagen, a group of residential buildings, which takes its cue from the world of mega structures. Cars enter under the buildings and people are led to each apartment along inner streets; as a result, the only views of the natural surround­ ings open from the apartments’ spacious terraces. Although rare, attempts to build such gigantic social containers can also be found in the Eastern bloc. In Estonia, the Kolkhoz Construction Office of the Pärnu region built a stepped house almost a kilometre long for its staff (designed by Toomas Rein, from 1971).15 An inner street at ground floor level brings together the residents from both wings of the building to the centre, where a shop was planned but never built, leading on to a kindergar­ ten and sports complex. Although the kindergarten was completed, the absence of the shop means it is not accessible through corridors and children still need to be dressed warmly to be taken across the yard in the winter. 18 Playground of architects Industrial mass construction pushed the architect aside in both the East and the West; with the cri­ sis of modernism, a distrust of expert knowledge followed starting from the 1970s. While before the war architects were increasing their grip on con­ struction, now they maintained control over just a fraction of the construction process, despite the increasingly huge numbers of architects being trained. THE LONG HOUSE of the Pärnu KEK, Estonia, from 1971, architect Toomas Rein. Photo by author 2016. PALACE OF WEDDINGS, Vilnius, 1968–74. Architect Gediminas Baravykas. Photo by author 2014. The standard view is that equality between men and women has been cultivated for a long time in the Nordic countries and not so in the post­com­ munist societies. Nevertheless, the post­war archi­ tects in the Nordic countries were mostly men, although they may have had strong wives by their side (for example, Heikki and Kaija Sirén or Reima and Raili Pietilä). In the Baltics, however, where Soviet modernisation brought large num­ bers of young women into universities right after 19 the war, female architects emerged as very impor­ tant indeed. In Estonia, Valve Pormeister, who had a background in landscape architecture, was among the most highly esteemed promoters of Nordic modernism starting from the late 1950s.16 In Latvia, Marta Staņa, who began her architectural education already before the war, was among the co­designers of the Daile Theatre (1961–76) in Riga, a central piece of post­Stalinist modernism in the country.17 Elena Nijolė Bučiūtė won a competition and designed the Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet Theatre (1960–74) in Vilnius.18 In the egalitarian Nordic countries, churches were a laboratory of architectural experimentation and a key opportunity for architects’ self­expression in the second half of the 20th century. The distinc­ tive church buildings with their sculptural forms stood out against the conformist background archi­ tecture. In the Eastern bloc, churches were being built in Poland, especially in the 1980s, after the Gdańsk strikes, when extravagant religious archi­ tecture served the function of demonstrating oppo­ sition to the authorities. In Lithuania, another Catholic country, the Soviet authorities, however, invested effort into rituals aimed at replacing the church, and so ostentatious wedding palaces and funeral homes were built.19 Cultural transfer Throughout the entire post­Stalinist period, attempts to emulate Western architecture are observable in the Eastern bloc. Nordic architecture was enjoying its heyday and was more familiar, which made it a likely model during that period in particular. Some­ times, however, the transfers could also be based on chance or pragmatism. The inclined side walls of the long volume of the 1972 Olympic Centre in Kiel (Olympiazentrum Schilksee) reappeared in the hotel section of the Tallinn Olympic Yachting Cen­ tre erected for the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow. Although this was a rather common device in the architecture of the time, the functional similarity of the buildings alerts one to the possibility of a con­ nection. Indeed, the then city architect of Tallinn Dmitri Bruns came from a mixed family and was fluent in German as well as having close ties with architects in Hamburg. He was able to get hold of the design documents for the Kiel building, which were relied on when drawing up the conditions for the Tallinn competition. The Baltic Sea countries on both sides of the Iron Curtain also had some shared sources of inspiration. During the Cold War, Germany and Northern Europe were among the most receptive to Amer­ ican influences. In the USSR, however, a bipolar worldview of a race between Moscow and Washing­ ton dominated. While during the Khrushchev Thaw around the turn of the 1960s the goal had been to catch up with America in terms of welfare (i.e. con­ sumption), this pursuit was given up as hopeless dur­ ing the 1960s, focusing on rivalry in the conquest of space instead. The corporate modernism of Ameri­ can architecture, as exemplified by the minimalist, coolly anonymous General Motors Technical Center in Warren (1948–55) by Finnish­born architect Eero Saarinen, was perfectly capable of serving as a model for both Arne Jacobsen, when he designed the Rødovre Town Hall (1956–69) outside Copenhagen, and Ell Väärtnõu, when she designed the kolkhoz sanatorium “Tervis” (1967–71) in Pärnu. The univer­ sality of modernism made the same aesthetic code serve the needs of a technical centre of a major cor­ poration, a social democratic municipality and Soviet veteran workers alike. These instances of cultural transfer should not, however, be seen as mere pairs of giver and taker, original and copy. And it is not just that borrowed ideas are always treated differently in new circum­ stances; in the Baltics, the primary importance of these loans was to reaffirm being part of Western culture despite the Soviet occupation. It is disputable whether this attitude was part of a resistance move­ ment or intentional collaboration where imitating the West gave architects an advantage over their col­ leagues in Moscow. In any case, what was important was to be different from the rest of the Soviet Union and to build one’s identity on being different. Despite the fact that the Cold War divided the Baltic Sea countries between different sides of the Iron Curtain, which the people were able to per­ forate with peepholes, both sides sought to build a happy society through intensive industrialisation. The contemporaries on both sides were unhappy with much of the new architecture, but the half­ century that has passed since then has healed the wounds. Today, the buildings constructed at the time are instead seen as heritage, which in turn is forcing us to revise the current principles of herit­ age conservation. This, however, is an exciting task that is still on­going. 20 ENDNOTES 1. Hallas­Murula, K. (2005). Soome – Eesti: sajand arhitek­ tuurisuhteid [Finland – Estonia: A Century of Architectural Relations]. Tallinn: Eesti Arhitektuurimuuseum. 2. Gerchuk, Y. (2000). The Aesthetic of Everyday Life in the Khrushchev Thaw in the USSR (1954–64). in: S. Reid, D. Crowley, ed­s., Style and Socialism. Modernity and Material Culture in Post-War Eastern Europe. Oxford, New York: Berg, pp. 82. 3. Åman, A. (1992). Architecture and Ideology in the Eastern Europe during the Stalin Era. New York : The Architectural History Foundation. 4. Зуева, П. П. (2010). Нью-йорские небоскребы как прототипы «сталинских высоток». in: Ю. Л. Косенкова, ed., Архитектура сталинской эпохи. Опыт историческово осмысления. Москва: КомКнига, pp. 435–451. 5. Kalm, M. (2014). The Spatial Sovietisation of Tallinn dur­ ing the Stalin period (1944–1955). In: G. Wagner­Kyora, ed., Wiederaufbau europäischer Städte / Rebuilding European Cities. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, pp. 367–386. 6. Durth, W., Düwel, J. and Gutschow, N. (2007). Architektur und Städtebau der DDR. Die Frühen Jähre. Berlin: Jovis, pp. 437–442. 7. Rampley, M (2012) . Contested Histories: Heritage and/as the Construction of the Past: an Introduction. In: M. Rampley, ed, Heritage, Ideology, and Identity in Central and Eastern Europe. Contested Pasts, Contested Presents. Suffolk: The Boydell Press, pp. 1–20. 8. Friedrich, J. (2010). Neue Stadt in altem Gewand. Der Wiederaufbau Danzigs 1945–1960. Köln: Böhlau. 9. Fellman, S. and Isacson, M. (2007). The High­Industrial Period in the Nordic and Baltic Countries. In: A. Kervanto Nevanlinna, ed. Industry and Modernism. Companies, Architecture, and Identity in the Nordic and Baltic Countries during the High-Industrial Period. Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society, pp. 41–63. 10. Nikula, R. (2014). Suomalainen rivitalo. Työväenasunnosta keskiluokan unelmaksi. [Finnish Terraced House. From Workers’ Dwelling to a Middle­class Dream] Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura. 11. Saarikangas, K. (2005). On the Edges of the Forest. Encounters and Ambiguities Between Planning and Habitation in Finnish Suburbs. In: M. Kalm and I. Ruudi, ed­s, Constructed Happiness – Domestic Environment in the Cold War Era. Tallinn: Estonian Academy of Arts, pp. 200–220. 12. Caldenby, C (1998). The Time of the Large Programmes 1960–75. In: C. Caldenby, J. Lindvall and W. Wang, ed­s, 20th Century Architecture. Sweden. Prestel: Munich, pp. 143– 169. 13. Dremaite, M. (2012). Modern Housing in Lithuania in the 1960s. Nordic Influences. In: Survival of Modern from Cultural Centres to Planned Suburbs. Nordic-Baltic Experi ences. Copenhagen: The Royal Danish Academy of Fine ­ Arts, pp. 71–82. 14. Beyer, E. (2012). ‘The Soviet Union is an Enormous Construction Site’. In: K. Ritter, E. Shapiro­Obermair, D. Steiner and A. Wachter, ed­s. Soviet Modernism 1955–1991. Unknown History. Wien: Architekturzentrum, Zürich: Park Books, p. 270 15. Kalm, M. (2007). The Oasis of Industrialised Countryside in Soviet Estonia. In: A. Kervanto Nevanlinna, ed. Industry and Modernism. Companies, Architecture, and Identity in the Nordic and Baltic Countries during the High-Industrial Period. Helsinki: Finnish Literature Society, pp. 352–371. 16. Ruudi, I. (2016). Women architects of Soviet Estonia: four approaches to design in rural context. In: M. Pepchinski and M. Simon, ed­s, Idealogical Equals. Women Architects in Sovialist Europe 1945–1989. New York: Routledge, pp. 91–104; Jänes, L. (2005). Valve Pormeister. Eesti maa-arhitek tuuri uuendaja [Valve Pormeister. Modernizer of Estonian Countryside]. Tallinn: Eesti Arhitektuurimuuseum. 17. Rudovska, M. (2012) Expired Monuments. Case Studies on Soviet­era Architecture in Latvia through the Kaleidoscope of Postcolonialism. Kunstiteaduslikke Uurimusi [Studies in Art History]. 21(3–4), pp. 76–93. 18. Zettersten Bloxham, G. (2012). Five Performing Arts Build­ ing Projects from 1960s to 2011. In: Survival of Modern from Cultural Centres to Planned Suburbs. Nordic-Baltic E xperiences. Copenhagen: The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, pp. 54–63. 19. Dremaite, M. and Petrulis, V (2012). Inventing A Soviet Ritual: Funeral Homes In Lithuania. In: K. Ritter, E. Shapiro­Obermair, D. Steiner and A. Wachter, ed­s. Soviet Modernism 1955–1991. Unknown History. Wien: Architektur­ zentrum, Zürich: Park Books, pp. 55–58. ­ I 21 DAVID CHIPPERFIELD Restorations and Reconstructions: Reflections on Berlin I come here today not as somebody who can talk with much authority on heritage, and I must admit that I am not particularly fascinated with herit­ age per se. As an architect, I happen to have become involved in heritage. However, looking at heritage as something not only from the distant past but also as something closer to our time can bring us into a stronger dialogue with a fundamental issue in archi­ tecture: its meaning to society. I hope to illustrate this through sharing some of my experiences. I come here from a battleground, from the front­ line. When I look out from the window of my office in London I see a city being rebuilt and the struggle between protection and development in its most explicit form. We all know that protect­ ing history through monuments is important, and it is societally accepted that we protect important rel­ ics of our past. In 1882, the UK government passed the Ancient Monuments Protection Act which was specifically set up to protect any pre­historic sites IMAGE OF THE LONDON SKYLINE from David Chipperfield Architects London. Credit: David Chipperfield Architects. -~-ru lfil 11 22 PROJECT ON FRIEDRICHSTRASSE IN BERLIN. Copyright: Ute Zscharnt for David Chipperfield Architects. 23 that are links to deep in our past. To many the her­ itage argument has been won. However, the topic of this conference brings to us to a pressing issue. If we start looking at the heritage of post­war architecture and our recent past, we must not only consider singular monu­ ments but also those other things which contribute in more vague ways to our idea of a city. We archi­ tects are currently seeing the development of archi­ tecture through singular architectural objects yet as architects we believe that buildings should contrib­ ute more than their individual qualities. Buildings should contribute to the idea of a society and a city. Architecture as an isolated individual act is some­ thing which endangers our cities. In Britain, we largely disregarded much of the country’s non­monumental architecture until the late 1960s. We had been demolishing large swathes of now­celebrated Georgian architecture until it became protected through listing. Though partly protected purely for its age, we came to realise that this architecture also had an important impact on the broader shape of our built environment. One case study that stimulates this debate is the competition to replace the Kaufhaus designed by Josef Eiderman in Munich, for which I was on the jury. The existing post­war building is not particu­ larly significant yet interesting as the city resisted its demolition, or substantial rebuilding, based on three main arguments. Firstly, that the building represented a moment in history and if too many of such structures are removed the sense of the city and its historic layers would be lost. Secondly, there was a general sense that whatever replaced would only be worse, indicating a general loss of confi­ dence in the abilities of contemporary architecture itself and its motivations. Lastly, and perhaps most strongly expressed, there was nervousness and scep­ ticism about the financial motivations behind a new building development. This experience raised many interesting ques­ tions. Outside the academic environment, how does one deal with protection and discussion of memory on the front line of an ever­increasingly commercial environment? How can we make issues of protec­ tion and development relevant to each other rather than polemicized against each other? How can we bridge these seemingly opposing sides? In Munich, the city’s arguments were not academic defences for a historic building but rather a more sentimen­ tal attitude about the shape and form of the city as a whole. In Berlin, my practice has worked on several small­scale projects, often rebuilding old war­dam­ aged buildings with commercial developers who were looking to protect and develop them. We must accept that damage is done to buildings because they are essential to our daily messy lives and subject to various uses. A building is not an artefact that can be easily stored away, new ones will often necessarily replace an old one. Of course, there are exceptional buildings that are preserved as artefacts, such as churches, but what about a school or an office building that is no longer in use? Often it involves modification, adaption and extension to give them new function and economy. Our most extreme example of this mediation between protection and development is in Shanghai where we were responsible for a row of mediocre buildings on the Bund. A developer had proposed ‘keeping them’ by rebuilding replicas in better quality. Over the 10­year process of the project, we argued for keeping the old bricks to ensure conti­ nuity of substance instead. It should not be forgot­ ten either that there is also the social side of the question of heritage redevelopment and changes to the societal mix of an area, particularly where former residential areas become retail areas for instance. We are often at risk of turning our cities into museums, I see it in China and in Europe. Another area of concern for architects practis­ ing today is the confusion of histories and which ones to protect. Some years ago, my office entered a competition to work on the cathedral of Pozzu­ oli in Italy. After a fire, it was discovered that the baroque church was built around an ancient Greek temple and we were tasked with working out how to deal with these many layers of history and which ones to refer to in the new project. When adapt­ ing buildings, I have come across an academic reluctance to adopt strategies that were had been used historically. It used to be possible to re­inter­ pret historic buildings but now we seem to have an ideological attitude that there is one moment in a building’s history that we must re­find or one cru­ cial characteristic that we must celebrate. There is a lack of confidence in what we might add, or even in just revealing more fully the complexity. With more recent buildings this is even more complicated, particularly if one has the drawings 24 RAVELINS OF CASTELLO SFORZESCO in Milan. Credit: Richard Davies (above top). NEUE NATIONALGALERIE by Mies van der Rohe in Berlin. A view from Postdamer Strasse. Credit: Ute Zscharnt for David Chipperfield Architects (above left). PROPOSAL FOR HAUS DER KUNST in Munich. View from southwest, Prinzregentenstraße. Credit: David Chipperfield Architects (above right). of a world­renowned architect that differ from the In the nineteenth century, the existing mili­ completed design. We seem more willing and able tary structure of the Castello Sforzeco in Milan to accept that there may be reversible mistakes in was embellished by the architect Luca Beltrami in the construction of a recent building but not in order to transform it into a more fantastical idea of older structures. In recent buildings, the design a castle. This confusing act has now been widely intent can often overrule the substance. If we want accepted as a layer of the structure’s history. We are to give some balance to the struggle between pro­ now involved in rebuilding a fragment of the cas­ tection and development – protection of layers of tle for the museum complex now established there. history in our city, not just single structure – then In this process, we are not looking to restore it but we ought to be a bit more flexible in how another rather to also build on the existing structure to sub­ building might be borne out of an existing one. stantiate it, stabilise it, and give it a new life. And yet, intellectually we don’t seem to like that. 25 In the next few years, the US Embassy in Lon­ don designed by Eero Saarinen will be vacated and given new life as a hotel. As one of America’s great­ est architects, there is an understandable interest in the building from an architectural heritage per­ spective. Yet, when talking about a building from the 1960s, it is debateable to what degree the arte­ fact is to be protected and left untouched. What happens if it’s not popularly liked? And what if the master architect to whom it is attributed was, in reality, not very closely involved in its construction or at times unsure of the design? These are ques­ tions with which we are grappling. In researching the history of the building, we found some draw­ ings that showed the building as a taller structure. Naturally, this discovery made the developer very happy because it could somehow validate proposed changes to the structure. We are aware that this is a very fragile discussion and we keep reassessing the values of the structure itself as well as the design intent. In the end, there must be some mediation between protection and reuse. It is often so difficult to understand where the line should be drawn between the conservationists and developers as both sides exaggerate and do not communicate well. In the end, the city is the victim of such failures. Returning to Berlin – a city with too much his­ tory – we find all sorts of confusion and paradoxes. For example, after the historic and much celebrated fall of the Berlin Wall, fragments were sold all over the world leaving recent tourists disappointed that they don’t get to see it, which in turn has led to dis­ cussions about rebuilding parts of it as a tourist attraction. The Neue Nationalgalerie by Mies van der Rohe was part of the provocative project to build the cul­ tural centre of West Berlin as close to the wall as possible. The buildings of this campus are utopian in spirit. The layout of Hans Scharoun’s Berlin Philharmonic concert hall seeks to develop new social concepts by changing of the relationship between the audience and musicians. Meanwhile, Mies’ temple­like building tries to bring a sense of order to a chaotic environment. At first it was dis­ liked because Mies’ had tried to build the design elsewhere first and it did not function well (it is dif­ ficult to hang art in large glass hall). Over time, however, it became a symbol of West Berlin even in its perceived uselessness, and embedded itself in the identity of the city. Today the fabric and structure of this icon are no longer in good condition and we have been tasked with its repair. It should be added, though, that despite the poor performance of the main exhibition space, there are many aspects of the building, including back of house facilities that still work very well and are testament to Mies’ skill. Heritage is an industry and it has often become an excuse for doing things in a fixed or formulaic way. As such, it often becomes isolated from daily practice. Nonetheless, I am interested in it and strongly feel that the Neue Nationalgalerie is an important piece of our architectural heritage. Some assume that in such a case of careful restoration the creative architectural input is almost zero, no desire to interpret the work of Mies but rather just the aim to save it. In a building such as this, everything is on show and any intervention is revealed – no walls can be thickened, no insulation added. So why am I interested in this work? When I am designing a building from scratch the client may well question the design and its cost implications. In such situations, it is me and my team trying to counteract these commercial forces. When there is a third person involved – Mies van der Rohe – it is already accepted that the design has quality and beauty, so there is a collective effort towards resolving any issues. It’s not that ‘you can’t do that to my façade’ but rather than ‘you can’t do that to Mies’ façade’. It is rare for an architect and the client to be in such agreement and collaboration. In most projects you have to ask the developer or client to trust you that the physical qualities of your design are worth the cost. It is difficult to convince someone of the importance of the ‘feel’ of a build­ ing and this is an issue with much of our modernist architectural heritage today. The construction qual­ ity is often poor because it is not considered worth the investment. When looking at the work of Mies, however, the ‘feel’ of the building is something everyone seems to understand and we are to avoid changing that ‘feel’ in any way. Seemingly simple decisions about glazing took a year to reach a result that would improve the thermal performance of the building without disrupting the integrity of Mies’ design. It must be added that a sophisticated environment is needed to create the right forum for debating and making these decisions, and my experience in Ger­ many has been very positive in this regard. 26 Neues Museum in Berlin, southwest corner. Credit: Ute Zscharnt for David Chipperfield Architects. Neues Museum in Berlin, staircase hall. Credit: SPK / David Chipperfield Architects, photo Joerg von Bruchhausen. 27 Let us look at another piece of difficult twen­ tieth­century heritage deeply rooted in German history: the Haus der Kunst in Munich. This is a building contaminated with history. Hitler was involved in the design by Paul Ludwig Troost for this art gallery which opened in 1937 with the ‘Great German Art Exhibition’. An insidious example of Nazi propaganda, the show was Hitler’s attempt to define an ‘authentic German art’ in con­ trast to ‘degenerate’ modern art. The building was camouflaged and survived the bombing of the city by Allied forces. After the war, it was used by the American occupation forces who sealed off the front door, only allowing access through the side doors to humiliate the building in some way. More recently, the steps leading up from the street have been removed and trees have been planted around the building to disguise it. We are now working on the renovation of the building and trying to promote it in its current role as a progressive contemporary art museum. In doing so we and the client are facing some dif­ ficult questions, not regarding architecture but regarding its meaning. Given that it is now a pub­ licly­funded institution that itself has meaning, we felt it should have a physical presence and our pro­ posal included the removal of the trees as a way of encouraging people to confront the fascist structure and engage with it. This has provoked a very active ongoing debate, and I am delighted that so many people are emotionally and intellectually engaged with the project. As architects, our work is often heavily criticised but if we want architecture to mean something to society, we should be glad that there are debates and views of all kinds. Though I very much enjoy grappling with dif­ ficult questions about heritage as a distinct scien­ tific intellectual activity, it is only because I think it really does mean something for our physical envi­ ronment that I am so enthusiastic about it. I am nervous that our built environment is undervalued, and that where it is valued it risks becoming simply a series of places to visit. Within the discussion about how to protect our history, however, one eventually leads to a discussion about how to pro­ tect our environment and how to ensure that the notion of permanence and the physical powers of architecture are respected more generally. Before turning to my work on the Neues Museum on Berlin’s Museum Island, I want to dis­ cuss the context a little and consider the nearby site of the Stadtschloss, the former Prussian palace that was badly damaged during the Second World War. Though the ruin could have been rebuilt after the war – several intellectuals argued it should stay – instead it was demolished and replaced with the GDR Palast der Republik which is in itself also a fascinating building. It is not often that you find bowling alleys and amusements in a political build­ ing. Unfortunately, it was ugly and the urban plan around it was weak. From an urban point of view, then, one can understand the need to fill the gap left by the Stadtschloss. A temporary awning of the façade on scaffolding revealed how the Stadtschloss formed an important part of the urban composition of Unter den Linden. Nonetheless, the revision of history through the eradication of buildings and records of moments in time is a questionable act. There is a need for a balance between protecting the layers of a city’s history while accepting that buildings are not artefacts, they are subject to dis­ cussions that are much more complex. The intense discussions around the Neues Museum were one of the aspects of the project that I enjoyed most. The building was badly damaged during the Second World War and, having been a ruin for the following 60 years, it developed a magical quality. Parts of the highly­decorated and didactic spaces were left intact while others were totally missing. We intended to protect and cele­ brate what survived while maintaining archaeolog­ ical integrity. The new building grew out of the old one by putting the damage back into perspective and accepting some of the loss. Under the full glare of public opinion there was continuous discussion and opposition about every corner. More than 500 newspaper articles were written over the 12 years.  In the end, what was important to me was that it was a project of meaning. It could not have been achieved without the intense discussion and collab­ oration regarding each decision. It seems that by gathering around historic build­ ings that have collective memory and meaning one can have discussions which do not exist in the production of contemporary architecture. It is my opinion that such a discussion of meaning should exist in the production of contemporary architecture. Thank you. 28 PETER ARONSSON The Role of Cultural Heritage and the Use of History in the 20th-Century Baltic Sea Region Making heritage Making heritage out of the material world is an act changing the appearance of the world. It has social, legal, commercial and political implications. Inter­ action also works the other way around: changing social and economic conditions creates possibil­ ities and a need for the making of new heritage. This is an act which involves drawing an epochal line. Heritage signals a past significance worthy of honour and remembrance but void of prag­ matic functiontality once its appearance has been defined. Heritagization moves reality from the sphere of pragmatic action to a more or less sacral zone (unless it is a church, then it is the other way around with the religious being translated to the semi­sacral sphere of heritage.) That zone contains new functionalities for creating a community, deal­ ing with conflicts and producing values for an experience economy. Heritage is made to deal with change. The agrarian society was heritagized when indus­ trial and urban society was making its way as his­ tory progressed. The heritagization of modernity and industrial society is connected to the process of making post­modernity viable. It entails some unquestionable tranformations of early ruins of industry into Industrial Cool, but the transfor­ mation as a whole has not set a new canon of how to represent this transformation. This signals an important question of the nature of current trans­ formations. What part of modernity is still in motion as a maker of the futures of society and what parts are ready or in nead for heritagization? Heritagization means an aestheticization of the material world. With legitimate institutions select­ ing, protecting and communicating heritage, the conceptualization of the past is stabilized to serve the victorious powers of change, also with the help of good taste and educated sensibilities. Without doubt, difficult heritage may also arise and serve important roles as contrast. Auschwitz is the example par excellence. This is not the rule, however, nor does it often happen that what is evil, ugly or boring can reach secure heritagization. Remains from industrial society are an ambivalent case: which parts are worthy of becoming heritage? Are they still representing the future (re­industri­ alization of Europe) or mainly an economic and environmental problem? This paper will discuss the ambivalent role of turning the modern period into history. Even the title of the conference can be seen as a contestable argument. While some art historians might argue that even post­modernism is now being historicized by the idea of contemporary art, a more social, global and economic standpoint might be that we are still in the midst of a world dominated by industrial capital with increasing individualism and neoliberal economics dominating and where conflicts globally take the forms of neo­nationalism and religious revivalism. The making of Heritage is an arena for arguing, not only for the value of reminiscences of the past, but also for the description of the contemporary world and its direction towards the future. Looking for reasons for differences is not only confined to academic perspectives but is subject to wider views of how the future should be shaped, involving the fears and hopes for the future of our societies. The hopes and fears for the future shape the mimetic logic which reassembles the past as a space of experience into a narrative logic proposing direc­ tions on how to direct the present to move into the future.1 Pre­modern society argued in principal for 29 Space of experiences Horizon of expectations Mimetic logic Narrative logic Drawing on Reinhart Koselleck, I have proposed the following model for the past-present-future relationship: fulfilling traditional patterns, overlapping space of experiences and horizon of expectations nearly completely, while modern society as an opposite celebrated radical and unique novelty. Post­moder­ nity realizes the power of contemporary logics to re­assemble the past to meet different issues and situations with more varied strategies. The transition from agrarian to industrial society gave birth to heritage It is perhaps easier to acknowledge the power and dynamics of the recoding of reality into heritage if, for the sake of argument, we look back to an earlier epochal shift, when the great leap was to move from agricultural to industrial society, or even more generally from pre­modern to modern society. The second half of the 19th century is a period that makes great and paradigmatic efforts to deal with changes through uses of the past, making it into history and heritage. However, in the 19th century, neither the academic nor the administrative spheres for action and management were well defined. His­ tory, on the one hand, gradually turned into one of the most fundamental formats for knowledge and, on the other, into a proper academic discipline. Nature and biology were historicized by glacial and evolutionary theories, and museums were set up to secure empirical evidence and to narrate both natu­ ral and human history. The framing was both uni­ versal, according to the Enlightenment ethos, and national in an increasingly political mobilization of identity and economic dynamics.2 At the end of the 19th century, the agricultural sector still dominated the GNP of most countries, including Sweden. Rapid change involving urban­ ization, marketization and secularization leading to migration as well as new ideologies questioning traditional hierarchies, socialist and Marxist move­ ments, all challenged the stability of traditional world views and polities. A sense of disappearing stability created a high need for anchoring nation­ making in a distant and homogenous past placed on a fundament of academic research in order to reject any suspicion of being the offspring of the ideology or insecure politics of the present. Scientific history developed at its fastest at the universities in Göttingen and Berlin. In 1853, Ger­ manische Nationalmuseum opened in Nuremberg. Academic disciplines and cultural institutions, securely anchored in science, created, materialized and visualized one of the most complex and insecure state­ and nation­building processes in Europe, for the very reason that it was so urgently needed.3 In Sweden, the economic and social transforma­ tion was among the fastest in the world. Here, the invention of the open­air museum celebrating tra­ 30 ditional agrarian society became one of the greatest exports to other nations in the making, especially in predominantly rural Eastern Europe. Opening Skansen for the popular co­creation of past worlds in 1891 and Nordiska museet, the new palace for saving the heritage of a lost world for scientific study, a decade later made some strong statements, which were, however, not obvious to the partici­ pants, who thought that they were rescuing a solid, undisturbed disappearing material and immaterial heritage, relics of Nordic culture and the Swedish nation.4 The function was more profound and con­ temporary: First, the institution made a strong statement that we are all Swedish, overrunning and transforming regional differences as well as differences in con­ sumption, crafts and class, but displaying differ­ ences as contributions to a concerted national glory. Secondly, these institutions made a tribute to popular and agrarian culture as carriers of long­standing values: simple, content, traditional and stable, to argue against the value of possibly radical changes in the social, economic and politi­ cal constitution. Thirdly, it secured national borders by natu­ ralizing them in response to recent changes and threats. The threats from Germany and Russia were looming over the Baltics, the bone of contention about the Union with Norway (dissolved unilater­ ally by Norway in 1905), and the territories earlier lost (Finland in 1809) were kept in mind, but never materialized into violent action. Sweden has not taken active part in war since 1814, and the trans­ formation of Scandinavian state hostilities to a realm of a shared Nordic heritage has been of major importance.5 Fourthly, placing agrarian society in a museum marks that the future belongs to industrial society. – “Thank you very much, we honour you by pre­ serving, and visiting you on Sundays – but you are History”, in the very sense of past practical signifi­ cance used in American English. Fifthly, it presents a field of activity and a play­ ground for polite society to role­play these changes, acting on feelings of insecurity as regards the legit­ imacy of the changing world order and a privileged position.6 These examples show the dynamics of negotia­ tions that are both possible and necessary to take on through the making of a viable past and insti­ tutionalizing it as heritage, in this case by paradig­ matically saving and moving built environment in a new musealized setting.7 Certainly, heritage was created before this period. Traces from all periods of human history give evidence of universal needs to apprehend the turning of time in the face of individual death. With the making of nation­states from the 16th century onwards, the uses of heritage were enhanced to state policy and laws of protection to ensure a heroic past for the newly emerged mon­ archies and their nation­states. Napoleon set an example in herding heritage treasures into Paris to demonstrate power, taste and the supremacy of the French nation. The making of national heritage and museums became a cultural consequence of this global competition to make nations out of dynastic states where former subjects were to be trans­ formed to engaged citizens and mobilized as will­ ing soldiers and tax­payers. The sovereignty of the state became dependent on heritage. The capacity of the heritage institutions and museums to per­ form a viable cultural constitution dealing with communities and differences productively is deci­ sive for the quality of the contract between civil society and the making of the political community, nation and state.8 Modes of transition to post-industrial society re-shape heritage If we jump one hundred years ahead, we can see that the predicament thought of as exclusive to our own time bears a striking resemblance to older undertakings. Heritage as a term was used for the first time in Sweden by the author Viktor Rydberg in 1887 and experienced its second strong revival in Europe from the 1990s onwards. The Swedish dis­ cussions of how to transform heritage to a relevant process for contemporary society include three main themes: how should migration and minori­ ties participate and be represented? What under­ takings need to be made to secure the relics of ear­ lier industrial society? How does heritage become a relevant tool for the making of a community, for democracy, integration and for cultural and travel industries? The re­making of the 20th­century built envi­ ronment from a purely practical, pragmatic and programmatically functional sphere of engage­ ment to cultural heritage interacts with the under­ 31 standing of the epochs involved. The forms this took differ dramatically from one state to another and change over time. Where the Swedish period from the 1930s to the 1970s is demarcated and his­ toricized as the heyday of Welfare society, the Peoples’ Home (Folkhemmet), and looked upon with productive nostalgia by various interests, the same period is sharply divided south and east of the Baltic by the Second World War and the ensuing Cold War. Moreover, the following period around 1989/91 is first dominated by a neo­liberal turn in connection with the dissolution of the Soviet empire ­ a period of hope, even the “End of History”.9 The Yugoslav Wars could be seen as a remaining unlucky heritage of the former com­ munist system. From 2001, the threat of global ter­ rorism, seemingly endless wars and unrest in the Middle East and international terrorism directed towards Western powers and modes of life have presented new challenges as has the new and more aggressive foreign policy of Russia. The sensibilities vis­à­vis the past might accord­ ingly shift dramatically in response to these recent turning points in history. The National Museum of the Romanian Peasant in Bucharest takes a radical stance against the use of text to present heritage – text being still too closely associated with Marx­ ist propaganda, while empirical evidence of peas­ ant realities is aestheticized and universalized to remind the nation of its authentic Christian pop­ ular heritage in modes very different from the aesthetics used in northern Europe. When the Deutsches Historisches Museum re­opened to present the same Marxist period, it used text exten­ sively to convince the audience of the temporary character of that period in the longer time perspec­ tive of German and European nation­making. Moving to the Baltic region, this post­war region contains very different meanings, drawing mainly on the pace of modernization and on its roles in the two world wars and the Cold War. Germany is the country having been in need of the most explicit and sustained working through of its past through its Vergangenheitsbewältigung. The process was more openly and, I would say, successfully nego­ tiated in BRD as the recognized heir of German statehood in the West, while DDR tried to escape responsibility for Nazism by associating with the anti­fascist struggle led by Soviet forces. Some of the difficulties in pleading the legitimacy in the relationship between the people and the state in Europe are, I would argue, due to the lack of a rele­ vant and legitimate working through of the respon­ sibilities for atrocities during the World War and the Cold War. The consequences have not always been as catastrophic as in the case of the Balkans but are more comparable to the enduring lack of trust between civil society and the state in the for­ mer eastern parts of Germany, making for prob­ lems otherwise more visible in Greece and Italy.10 Memories of modern heritage will carry very different meanings for countries with a history of being occupied by Soviet and of struggling to rebuild ruins after the war, on the one hand, and Scandinavian welfare states like Sweden, taking advantage of its undamaged production apparatus to pursue an even faster modernization and urban­ ization under social­democratic hegemony, on the other. It was able to draw heavily on the high appreciation of modernity and social engineering that was present as early as the 1920s. History and heritage were largely to be overcome, as they sig­ nalled either poverty or pre­democratic hierarchies. This is, of course, putting it rather strongly, but it is striking in comparison with the programme of rebuilding the medieval cities of Gdansk, War­ saw, Münster etc. after the Second World War. The anchoring in a pre­modern past was not on the agenda in the Nordic welfare states. Of course, there were slight differences here, with Denmark and Sweden representing the old empires and Swe­ den remaining the nation least threatened and occupied as the one extreme of modernity, while Finland and Norway still felt a strong need to anchor their independence in the medieval, pre­ occupied era. Memories of or in the welfare State Memories from the industrial era thus constitute an ambivalent field of heritage in several senses: • In what sense is it really a past historical epoch in need of protection? This is contested in several ways: even if part of the industrial production has moved to low­cost countries, there are still strong interest groups describing both Europe in general and Sweden as a country with an industrial econ­ omy with a future – very much similar to the case argued for agriculture around 1900. 32 • Heritage from the industrial epoch often con­ sists of massive, large­scale structures difficult to preserve at a reasonable cost. These structures are of less obvious aesthetic value than the selected heritage of pre­modern conspicu­ ous consumption filling up the art and crafts muse­ ums.11 It is obvious that a similar pattern from the 1900 turn of the century can be discerned. The new developments that do care for industrial heritage are to some extent institutionalized , in Sweden through Arbetets museum (“The Museum of Work”) and industrial heritage initiatives but are as often carried by actors identifying with the new economy. Industrial Cool is easier to develop for a new IT entrepreneur than for anyone who still works as a sub­contractor to a car industry out­ sourced to China.12 It is possible to discern a dominant mode of aesthetic and political modernity working hand in hand in Swedish historical culture. It is shared, with nuances, among the Scandinavian countries, often with an added international appeal, as in con­ cepts like Nordic design and Nordic Light, as well as being recognizable in material artefacts ranging from Alvar Aalto to IKEA. We should, however, not overstate the power of one dominant discourse, even when supported and orchestrated by cultural policy and official heritage institutions. Nostalgic modes of desire and visions of other futures are not only projected to moder­ nity and Industrial Cool. The typical Falu red col­ our croft in the countryside possesses considera­ ble attraction as a summer house and a dream of a simpler life not only for Swedes but also for Danes, Dutch and Germans buying and caring for houses abandoned by urbanized Swedes in southern Scan­ dinavia. New urbanism carries other references backwards, even if only seldom as openly as in the fake medieval city of Jakriborg between Lund and Malmö, or in a proposed national romantic build­ ing project in Växjö, re­creating a late nineteenth century street. These highly debated applications of post­modernity demonstrate that repetition is never possible. The attraction of the medieval in late­modern society is very different from both late­nineteenth century medievalism drawing on the origin of the nation and the desperate recon­ structions after the Second World War. In contem­ porary society, it merges with the dream of a more rustic and natural never­never land, less historical and more mythical than ever ­ a dream that seems to replay the long­standing dilemma of modernity: the need for refuge from the ever­changing demands of contemporaneity. Contemporary political implications The political impact of the ambivalences of contem­ porary challenges and relevant uses of the past can be demonstrated by the Swedish case. The clearest mark of the heyday of classical expansionist welfare state policy was the building of the Million Programme of concrete suburbs in the major cities. People outside these settings sel­ dom regard them as a valuable part of history, but mostly evaluate them more as a problem. With­ out doubt, many people, among them many sec­ ond­generation immigrants, embrace them with a similar warm feeling as earlier generation of Swedes have done through their local history com­ munities (hembygdsföreningar). At the other end of the spectrum, the city centre of Stockholm with legacies of ruthless modernization is becoming a field for more or less successful heritage argumen­ tation and protection (Slussen, Sergels Torg). This corresponds to a consumer hype for furniture, arts and crafts and even for IKEA products from the 1950s and 1960s. “Per Albin Hansson built the peo­ ple’s home and Ingvar Kamprad furnished it”. An IKEA Museum opened in Älmhult in 2016. It nar­ rates a story of successful Swedish modernity inter­ acting with local values and entrepreneurship in creating ideals for modern living and a successful company strategy. As a parallel to these aesthetic ambivalences, the turns in national politics show similar twists and turns. Around 1990, the neoliberal turn in Sweden entailed a strong stand against the culture associated with collective social democracy lumping together society and state into one expanding public sector, a Welfare State. This strategy emanating from the right­wing party did not lead to a strong and last­ ing governmental position. Changing the strategy to embrace the ethos of the People’s Home, Folk­ hemmet, the New Moderates could argue that they wanted to preserve this heritage but modernize the provisions through market mechanisms and individ­ ual choice. Even this turn paid tribute to the posi­ tive value of modernity within the broader political 33 culture in Sweden.13 As downsides of the new model show up, an even more open and insecure political situation has come to dominate political culture and has opened for a more right­wing and ethnic version of Folkhemmet as a political force. Consequently, this wrestling with heritage and politics is an ongo­ ing process, with parallels around the globe. Conclusions The tool box of history has basically remained stable since the late 18th century. Similar sites, arte­ facts and narratives are framed by a national his­ tory outlined already in pre­modern state­making, refined in the era of history in the 19th century and delivered to us. Using these tools can produce quite different and sometimes competing narratives rep­ resenting different modes of historical conscious­ ness. History is today less valued as a science (not to say destiny) and more as a source of meaning for identity politics and for production, as heritage industry. The epoch of modernity provided histori­ cal consciousness both for conservatism, liberalism, REFERENCES Alzén, A. and Burell, B., (red.) (2005) Otydligt, otympligt, otaligt. Det industriella kulturarvets utmaningar, Stockholm: Carlsson. Aronsson, P. (2011) “The Productive Dilemmas of History”, in Ruin, H. and Ers, A., (eds) Rethinking Time: Essays on History, Memory and Representation, p. 29–38. Stockholm: Södertörn University. Aronsson, P. (2012) “writing the museum”, in Hegardt, J. e. The museum beyond the nation, pp. 17–40. Stockholm: National Historical Museum. Aronsson, P. (2015a) “National museums as cultural constitutions”, in Aronsson, P. and Elgenius, G., (eds.) National Museums and Nation-building in Europe 1750–2010. Mobilization and legiti­ macy, continuity and change, pp. 167–199. London: Routledge. Aronsson, P. (2015b) “Shaping lives: negotiating and narrating memories”, Etnográfica, 19(3): 577–591. Aronsson, P. and Bentz, E. (2011) “National Museums in Ger­ many: Anchoring Competing Communities”, in Aronsson, P. and Elgenius, G., (eds.) Building National Museums in Europe 1750–2010. Conference proceedings from EuNaMus, European National Museums: Identity Politics, the Uses of the Past and the European Citizen, Bologna 28–30 April 2011, pp. 327–362. Linköping: LiU E­Press. Aronsson, P. and Elgenius, G., (eds.) (2015) National Museums and Nation-building in Europe 1750–2010. Mobilization and legitimacy, continuity and change, London: Routledge. Aronsson, P. and Gradén, L., (eds.) (2013) Performing Nordic heritage. Everyday practices and institutional culture, Burling­ ton: Ashgate. Berger, S. and Conrad, C. (2015) The past as history. National identity and historical consciousness in Modern Europe, Hound­ mills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. communism and fascism, all moving modernity in different directions. What roles will be played to open horizons of expectation for these different modernities for cre­ ating a future in a fundamentally challenging global setting, dealing with the past critically or as role models? Apart from more repetitive and reac­ tionary backlashes into old ­isms obviously at hand, we can identify both productive and legitimate ten­ dencies of two kinds: 1. To create a sense of belong­ ing and security we may see more site­ and situ­ ation­specific strategies and sensibility resulting in a much needed contribution to a qualitatively renewed heritagization of modernity, relating to a more complex appreciation of historical lega­ cies then the traditional national framing. 2. To gather and demonstrate positive roads towards future through making heritage, the framing needs to demonstrate not only warnings to the contrary but above all to celebrate and inspire innovation for sustainability in all the aspects needed for human­ ity to make the future both possible and desirable.   Bäckström, M. (2011) “Loading guns with patriotic love: Artur Hazelius’s attempts at Skansen to remake Swedish society”, in Knell, S. J., Aronsson, P. and Amundsen, A., (eds) National Museums. New Studies from around the World, pp. 69–87. London: Routledge. Fukuyama, F. (1992) The end of history and the last man, New York: Free Press: Toronto: Maxwell Macmillan Canada. Koselleck, R. (1985) Futures past: on the semantics of historical time, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. Rentzhog, S. (2007) Open air museums. The history and future of a visionary idea, Stockholm, Östersund: Carlsson; Jamtli förlag. Trägårdh, L. and Berggren, H. (2011) “Social Trust and Radical Individualism: The Paradox at the Heart of Nordic Capital­ ism”, Nordic way, 27 s. Stockholm: Global utmaning. Willim, R. (2008) Industrial cool: om postindustriella fabriker, Lund: Humanistiska fakulteteten, Lunds universitet. ENDNOTES 1. Koselleck 1985; Aronsson 2015b. 2. Aronsson 2011. 3. Berger and Conrad 2015; Aronsson and Bentz 2011. 4. Rentzhog 2007; Bäckström 2011. 5. Aronsson and Gradén 2013. 6. Bäckström 2011. 7. Aronsson 2012. 8. Aronsson and Elgenius 2015. 9. Fukuyama 1992. 10. Aronsson 2015a. 11. Alzén and Burell 2005. 12. Willim 2008. 13. Trägårdh and Berggren 2011. 34 MARIJA DRĖMAITĖ Long Life of the Socialist Modernism in the Baltic States In 2016 UNESCO World Heritage Committee Session inscribed the works of Le Corbusier on the World Heritage List.1 It must have been the moment of triumph for many lovers of the Modern Movement and people who initiated preservation programs for modern architecture. With key works of Mies van der Rohe, Walter Gropius and other masters on the World heritage list we can be sure that Modern Movement became an established cultural heritage. What about the socialist modernism? It already had its momentum few years ago with lectures, books, conferences and exhibitions. These events testify to the need to understand and consider Socialist pasts not as a “lost”, which is better ignored, but rather as a distinctive phenomenon that is still affecting us, exploring which can at least in part explain our present. And many of my colleagues ask why socialist modernism did not make it to the world heritage list. We can speculate that it might be because of the poor value of the socialist modernism, or, to put it in other words, because socialist modernism did not produce any World class architectural icons? Or maybe the reason is a less influential commu­ nity, which did not make enough effort to prepare an outstanding nomination? As a good provocation I would like to mention a book Belyaevo Forever (Strelka, 2014) by Polish researcher Kuba Snopek, who tried to put a Moscow mass housing area Bely­ aevo on the UNESCO world heritage list and dis­ cussed the values of generic architecture. However, it is so far a research project. Or maybe the post socialist world simply does not love socialist modernism at all and is not inter­ ested in preserving it? At a recent conference on Socialist Modernism, hosted by the Colle­ gium Hungarium in Berlin (24–26 April, 2016), an issue of general refusal of postwar modernism was raised focusing on an alarming example from Skopje. Macedonia’s capital was rebuilt after the 1963 earthquake with a modernist city center plan by Japanese architect Kenzo Tange (1965). Now, the hollow Doric columns and “antiquitisation” are transforming the city. Asked why, Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski told, that national feelings were suppressed in Tito’s Yugoslavia and “there were no monuments or statues to express our nationhood.”2 Doesn’t it suggest a thought that socialist modern­ ism is not worth preserving at all? It is quite paradoxical, but for the time being it was easier to find society’s support for the preserva­ tion of buildings from the Stalinist period, because of their elaborate Neo­Classical facades, perceived as architectural beauty. So architectural historians really have to struggle explaining architectural val­ ues of the modernist glass boxes, seen on almost every corner. Several years ago people thought that communism was already history. However, after the 2014 Russian invasion in Ukraine, there began a second wave of revisionism, when Soviet period monuments that remained after the first wave in 1990–1992 as rather neutral, were questioned again. The real communist legacy that bothered the soci­ ety was actually sculptural monuments that liter­ ally symbolized the Soviet. Some were even taken off in July 2015 in Vilnius, a well­known case of the Green Bridge. What about the socialist modernism, which does not speak ideology so explicitly? Wherever I go, my fellow modernists are complaining that social­ ist modernism is left abandoned and not preserved in their countries. Is it also the case in the Baltic Countries? Is it perceived as an ideological “other”? 35 It is important to notice, that buildings of socialist modernism has reached the moment, where they lived approx. 25 years in socialism and equally 25 years in democratic societies. When I look around, I see that most of the functional buildings are reno­ vated and used for the purposes they were designed for (schools, shops, offices, hospitals) and even edi­ fices built for communist regimes seem to be adapt­ able for the representational needs without moral problems – Ministries and Parliaments operate there. In recent years there have been significant public campaigns to save socialist­era buildings under threat. This rather pragmatic approach was well put by the 2013 Tallinn Architectural Bien­ nale’s topic “Recycling socialism”: “With Biennale we wanted to take the discussion further by gath­ ering architects­visionaries from all around Europe to find ideas for the future”.3 Baltic Modernism as “an inner abroad” within the Soviet Union Why modernist architecture from the 1960s to the 1980s is important in the Baltic Countries? Being the latest to be incorporated into the Soviet Union in 1940, with the still present national schools of modern architecture, in the late 1950s Baltic Republics generated a form of critical modernism towards Stalinist architecture and became media­ tors of the Western modernism in the USSR, fur­ ther gaining the title of the inner abroad or the Soviet West. That is a very short summary of the popular mythology. For the generation of young Baltic architects (born in the 1930s, graduated in the 1950s) the Khrushchev’s Thaw in 1955 encouraged the process of cultural liberation that could be characterized by a clear re­emergence of national, Western­ori­ ented and modernist aspects of culture. By graft­ ing westward looking orientation onto local tra­ ditions, architects at the Baltic periphery of the Soviet Union kept alive an historical ambition to be included in a Western European cultural commu­ nity.4 Gyorgy Peteri, editor of the book Imagining the West in Eastern Europe and Soviet Union, devel­ oped a concept of symbolic geographies, that reveal “how human agents, in particular historical and cultural contexts, define themselves by locating themselves spatially as well as temporarily, draw­ ing the boundaries of social spaces where they are MODERNIST PALACE OF ART EXHIBITIONS in the Old Town of Vilnius (Vytautas Čekanauskas, 1965–1967). Photo: Personal archive of Vytautas Čekanauskas. within, and relating themselves and their spaces to others. … What makes these socially and histor­ ically situated processes really important is their intimate relationship to the formation of identities and, indeed, to identity politics.”5 We can trace that temporal geography, or the modernism from the pre­war independent states, as an important source of inspiration. Another, spatial symbolical geography can be perceived as an interpretation of the Western modernism or the imagined West. The possibility to visit capital­ ist countries, and especially Finland, made impor­ tant influence. In the Nordic regional modernism Baltic architects saw the features they were aspiring to – an acceptable combination of the international modernism and regional identity. Therefore the national modernism in the Baltic republics was based on the use of local materials (red brick, stone and wood), combination of natural light, and respect to natural environment and historic herit­ age. First it was experimented in relatively small designs for interiors, recreation pavilions, and cafes. Later designs for major commissions employed modernism for the National Highlights, as in the Palace of Art Exhibitions in Vilnius, Dailes Theatre in Riga or Song Festival Arena in Tallinn. Officially Baltic design contributed for the Soviet urban planning – the first State and Lenin awards in the USSR were given for Lithuanian and Estonian mass housing microrayons and the Baltic 36 collective­farm settlements, and were also widely used for propaganda reasons as soviet architectural achievements. In 1988 the Lenin award went to the Lithuanian state farm Juknaiciai for completely dif­ ferent garden­city design and individualization of the kolkhoz architecture. It is evident that these designs were not following but setting the new standards and changing ideals of the soviet archi­ tecture. Together with critical processes in the late Soviet Period (for example the Tallinn School acted as a platform for presenting a criticism of building regulations, Soviet mass construction, standardiza­ tion and modernist urban planning), Baltic archi­ tecture earned the reputation of a very strong, west­ ern oriented architectural school with a regional identity. And they loved it. So, are we actually longing for something today? There are different types of longing. One of which – the architect’s longing for the lost honourable sta­ tus of the master after the fall of modernism (and the entire system). In the East and in the West alike there were architects whose personal vision coincided with the official one and this became a key to their success. This is related to the “urban legends” that have subsequently arisen – Lithu­ anian architects like telling stories about their “silent resistance” to the Soviet regime. By repeat­ ing it again and again they uphold the myth on the exclusivity of the architecture of the Baltic States. According to Andres Kurg, the loss of strong posi­ tions in 1990, when an architect became just a part of the real estate development programme, encouraged a nostalgic feeling for former positions and former powers: “It is quite paradoxical. They became theoreticians when they lost their power as architects. I think they are nostalgic for their lost status in society”.6 Adaptive re-use of socialist modernism buildings We have reached a turning point when many Euro­ pean architects consider socialist modernism as his­ torical architecture. It is no wonder that more than 20 pieces of Socialist Modernism listed in Lithua­ nia, and most of them were listed back in 1988–1990 as the achievements of the socialist Lithuania and it was initiated mostly by architects themselves. Most of them stood out the time challenge and now are on the renewed list after revision. An illustrative case is the Neringa cafe interior in Vilnius that was listed already in the Soviet period. During the wild 1990s, when all private cafes and restaurants refur­ bished their interiors, the Neringa cafe and hotel was bought by the Nordic investors. With respect to listed interior they have restored it. That is how the only authentic Socialist Modernist interior has survived and now is in great respect. There are a lot of socialist (in the essence) build­ ings that continue successfully their functional duties. Former Latvian Communist Party Central Committee building is now functioning as the World Trade Center, one of the most prestigious office buildings in Riga. The same building of the Lithuanian Communist Party is now functioning as the premises of the Lithuanian Government, and in Estonia it is now home to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The same can be said about the houses of Political Education that were built as modern educational buildings containing large halls and number of classes. Former House of Political Education in Riga is now a Riga Congress Center; House of Political Education in Kaunas was adapted to the University premises whereas in Vilnius it was not completed by the collapse of the Soviet Lithuania and was immediately turned into the Congress Hall. Famous cultural buildings, like Dailes Theatre in Riga or Opera and Ballet Theatre in Vilnius continue to function after thorough renovations. Revolution Museum in Vilnius was successfully renovated and adapted to the new use as a National Gallery in 2009. The Red Latvian Riflemen Museum and Monument was also adapted to the new Museum of the Occupation of Latvia. And there are of course many more functional build­ ings that are being used and are being renovated, however with much less attention to their archi­ tecture than function. I talk about architecturally important hospitals, schools and other functional buildings. There still are many problematic cases that are connected to the functions of the socialist society that are not anymore in use. For example, a funeral home in Kaunas built in 1978 for special purposes of secular funeral ritual is a very interesting building, both from the functional as well as architectural point of view. And it is listed. However, it is not in use anymore and it is really difficult to adapt it to new use. However, when there is a strategic interest in replacing a socialist building, socialist legacy is 37 CAFÉ NERINGA at the opening in 1959. Photo: Vilnius County Archive. CAFÉ NERINGA after renovation is still a popular place. Photo: Marija Drėmaitė, 2012. usually used in a negative way. This was said about There are also many significant buildings that the Palace of Sports and Concerts in Vilnius when did not survive, like the beautiful restaurant Jūras there was interest to demolish it and use its plot. It Pērle on the Latvian beach. Demolition of these was called a Soviet Concrete Monster. Then it was buildings is not usually ideological, but rather eco­ listed in 2006 and continued to stand derelict until nomical – usually a new development project. it got included into the major redevelopment pro­ However, demolition of the restaurant Banga on ject for the National congress center. And now it is the Lithuanian beach in Palanga last year sends a an architecturally and technologically interesting rather alarming “Skopje like” message. building from the 1960s. 38 LAZDYNAI RESIDENTIAL DISTRICT was the only mass housing Soviet district to be awarded with Lenin Prize and is now a listed urban area. However, Lazdynai do not have a management or renovation plan, which result in random renovation of houses. Photo: Marija Drėmaitė, 2012. FORMER REVOLUTION MUSEUM in Vilnius was renovated and adapted to the National Gallery in 2009 (Audrius Bučas, Gintaras Kuginys, Darius Čaplinskas). Photo: Marija Drėmaitė, 2011. 39 ARCHITECTS IN VILNIUS at the meeting against planned demolition of the Postmodernist Road Police Administrative building (1985). Photo: Audrius Ambrasas, 2016. What is the Future? Taking into account that approx. 70% of our built environment was built in the postwar period, we must be ready to deal with this load of construc­ tions. The attitude towards Socialist modernism has been changing over time – the judging aspect has been gradually diminishing (backwardness in comparison to the West or being in search for Western copies), more contextual questions appear (what were the conditions of the time? why were such commissions made?). In the post­Socialist world, an evaluation of architecture based on ideol­ ogy is no longer relevant. Even more so, buildings of the Socialist modernism are being devastated more often not because they are “Socialist”, but because of their strategic locations in city centres, under the pressure of developers or any other com­ mercial interests. There is also an issue with aes­ thetical acceptance of Socialist Modernism, which looks “standard, industrial, grey and dull” for many. The conclusion that is revealed when consistently scrutinizing Baltic modernism is a growing suspi­ cion about its universal character. How could the modernist architecture be so universal, while also being so personal at the same time? In discussing the various judgments on the heritage of modern­ ist architecture one could also feel the same sus­ picion: how much are such judgments influenced by different forms of nostalgia and how much by a truly critical outlook? If it really is nostalgia – is it possible to reconcile it with critical thinking? And if it really is nostalgia – whose nostalgia is it and nostalgia for what? After an entire generation has emerged since the fall of the Berlin Wall, which basically represented the end of the epoch of mod­ ernism (or at least a part of it), it is interesting to have a look at what kind of challenges await the researchers, curators, audience and society. ENDNOTES 1. Four new sites inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage List, UNESCO World Heritage Center, 17 July 2016, http://whc.unesco.org/en/news/1528 2. Barry D. Wood, “Modernity or Madness? Faux Baroque buildings transform Skopje”, http://www.usatoday.com/ story/travel/destinations/2016/01/13/skopje/78732050/ 3. “Recycling Socialism. It is architect’s job to inspire and explain what other solutions could be made”, interview with Aet Ader by Viktorija Šiaulytė, Modernism: Between Nostalgia and Criticism, edited volume, edited by Marija Drėmaitė and Julija Reklaitė, Vilnius: Vilnius University and Architecture Fund, 2014, p. 175­184, http://www.archfondas. lt/leidiniu/en/node/123 4. John V. Maciuika, “East Block, West View: Architecture and Lithuanian National Identity”, Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review (University of California Press, 1999), Vol. XI, No. 1, p. 24. 5. Imagining the West in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, edited by Gyorgy Peteri, Pittsburgh University Press, 2010, p. 2–3. 6. Modernism: Between Nostalgia and Criticism, edited volume, edited by Marija Drėmaitė and Julija Reklaitė, Vilnius: Vilnius University and Architecture Fund, 2014, p. 11, http://www.archfondas.lt/leidiniu/en/node/123 40 MAŁGORZATA ROZBICKA Poland’s Postwar Architectural Heritage: A Record of Political, Social, and Economic Change Poland’s postwar architecture and urban planning among Poles, it is cultural heritage that should be is a phenomenon that is remarkably diverse both protected in accordance with its artistic, historical, formally and in terms of content. Although Polish and scientific values. architects were never completely isolated from European and world architecture following 1945, 1945–1948 their architectural creativity up to 1989 was strongly Regardless of attitude to systemic transformation, influenced by political, social, and economic the priority task before the Polish population over changes taking place in Poland. the years 1945–1949 was reconstruction after war­ Presented here is the architectural landscape of time destruction. This was especially true of War­ postwar Poland. It provides proof of great diversity saw – 85% rubble. However, its capital function and and cultural value. Still stirring mixed emotions reconstruction were decreed by the new communist WARSAW. POLISH UNITED WORKERS’ PARTY CENTRAL COMMITTEE BUILDING (W. Kłyszewski, J. Mokrzyński, and E. Wierzbicki, 1947–1952). State in 2016. Photo by P. Kobek from the Collection of the National Heritage Board of Poland (hereinafter referred to as Coll. NID). 41 authorities in the winter of 1945 as the “primary task in rebuilding the country”.1 Actually getting this job done necessitated the recruitment of the intelligentsia, especially archi­ tects. For the most part, they did not look favorably upon the government as conferred and protected by the Soviets. Today, it is difficult to fathom just what ultimately caused them to collectively join the cen­ tralized process of reconstruction initialized by the communists. However, it seems that the exception­ ally skillful dosing of communist doctrine in the initial stages of systemic transformation was key.2 In architecture and urban planning, the unique liberalism of the first phase of communist rule guaranteed architects freedom in creativity while limiting the role of political factors to formulating needs and creating an organizational framework. Apart from rebuilding the core of old Warsaw – the Old and New Towns and adjacent streets – that was carried out with a relatively faithful preservation of historical buildings, the architecture of the years 1945–1949 developed in direct relation­ ship to the achievements of interwar Modernism. Depending on subject, designs and erected build­ ings made creative reference to Constructivism – the classical tradition that developed in Poland in the 1930s – and the left­wing accomplishments of the Avant­Garde in social matters.3 Even the first major construction projects of postwar Warsaw saw the successful application of 1930s’ academic Constructivism joining functional perfection with an official feel based on axial sym­ metry, meticulous stone finish, and reinforced con­ crete structure. One example is the State Economic Planning Commission complex (Stanisław Bień­ kuński and Stanisław Rychłowski, 1946–1948). Another is the Polish United Workers’ Party Cen­ tral Committee building (Wacław Kłyszewski, Jerzy Mokrzyński, and Eugeniusz Wierzbicki, 1947–1952). Freedom in creativity also bore fruit in the architecture of public buildings through yet other tendencies. A most interesting architectural phenomenon is the creativity of Marek Leykam – exceptional through its architectural form coupled with the logic of function and the rhythm of rein­ forced concrete structure. Outstanding Warsaw buildings include the Corbusian CDT department store (Zbigniew Ihnatowicz and Jerzy Romański, 1948–1952). The Avant­Garde mainly left its mark on the architecture and urban planning of Warsaw hous­ ing estates. There, the prime thought was the build­ ing of social ties on the basis of the Anglo­Saxon concept of the “Neighborhood Unit” (Żoliborz – Barbara and Stanisław Brukalski, 1946; Mokotów – Zasław Malicki and Stefan Tworkowski, 1946; Koło II – Helena and Szymon Syrkus, 1947–1950). Unfortunately, starting with 1948, respect for the creative independence of the architectural commu­ nity by state ideological and political bodies dete­ riorated as systemic transformation quickened. The authorities gradually took over full control of all aspects of architectural work.4 State nation­ wide design institutions began to emerge. Hous­ ing cooperatives were deprived of their function as investor in 1949. Housing construction encom­ passing investment, design, and construction was almost completely monopolized by the ZOR Work­ ers’ Housing Development Administration.5 1949–1955 Thus, after a brief few years of creative freedom, enthusiasm, and dedication to reconstruction, Polish architecture entered a time of strong ideolo­ gization. The offensive of Socialist Realism was launched by a resolution passed in June 1949 at the National Party Convention of Architects. It decreed that architecture “must become the ideological weapon of the Party.”6 It must be clear and close to the peo­ ple. It must be national in form and socialist in content – a “creative mapping of the ideology and spirit of the times”7 supporting the Six­Year Plan for the Economic Development and Building of Socialism (1950–1956).8 The Design Office Coordination Committee was established in February 1950. Its purpose was the subjugation of architecture to ideology, and to develop criteria for its assessment in terms of the postulates of Socialist Realism.9 Piercing criticism of the achievements of the years 1946–1948 was launched. Major public buildings still under con­ struction were modified in the spirit of socialism.10 Only a few, like the CDT, ranked among “designs manifestly on the loosing architectural side,”11 were completed without significant changes. The impact of ideological and organizational transformations also marked the architecture of housing estates under construction. Rectification 42 WARSAW. MDM MARSZAŁKOWSKA HOUSING DISTRICT (S. Jankowski, J. Knothe, J. Sigalin, and Z. Stępiński, 1951–1952). State in 2016. Photo by P. Kobek. Coll. NID. was the fate of the architectural detail and finish of housing estates such as the Modern Praga I (H. and S. Syrkus, A. Przybylski, and R. Dowgird, 1948–1952) and Muranów South (Bohdan Lachert, 1949–1956), built on the rubble of Warsaw’s Ghetto. Socialist Realism, in its search for “national form” in the past, chose Classical composition and detail as the basis of its development and logic. Expressions of Constructivism were aggressively fought by totalitarian neo­Classicism. Modernist Disurbanism replaced courtyard solutions with vast axial­radial structures while the “penury and bar­ renness” of Constructivism was supplanted by a wealth of stylized detail uniformly introduced onto the façades of government, culture, and apartment buildings. One of the most spectacular applications of the ideology, planning, and architecture of Social­ ist Realism was the MDM Marszałkowska Hous­ ing District (S. Jankowski, J. Knothe, J. Sigalin, and Z. Stępiński, 1951–1952), a monumental hous­ ing complex and parade route on the ruins of War­ saw’s city center with the enormous Parade Square, the site of the Palace of Culture and Science build­ ing (Lew Rudniew, 1952–1955) – “gift of the nations of the USSR” – Polonized Soviet­Classical archi­ tecture applying detail paraphrasing Polish Renais­ sance and neo­Classical forms. Outside of the capital, the most significant example embodying Socialist Realism is the green­ field project of the 60 000 strong city of Nowa Huta and Europe’s then largest steel mill. Erected in stages on the basis of a master plan by Tadeusz Ptaszycki (1950), it assumed construction of over a dozen housing estates of diverse layouts and archi­ tecture within a structure of traffic arteries radiat­ ing from a five­sided central square.12 The gradual retreat from rigorous adherence to the formal and ideological assumptions of Socialist Realism began with its timid criticism during the First National Convention of Architects one month after Stalin’s death.13 43 KATOWICE. SPORTS-ENTERTAINMENT ARENA (architecture: M. Gintowt, M. Krasiński, structural engineering: A. Żórawski, 1960). State in 2015. Photo by M. Rozbicka. The first monumental structure that broke with the canons of Socialist Realism is the Tenth Anni­ versary Stadium seating 70 000. Designed and built utilizing wartime rubble, it was an earthwork­ masonry structure crowned by a conspicuous glazed pavilion (J. Hryniewiecki, M. Leykam, and C. Rajewski, 1954–1955). 1956–1960 The Polish architectural community ultimately cut itself off from the theory and practice of Socialist Realism in March 1956 during the Polish Nation­ wide Architects’ Convention.14 Coming to power in October 1956, Władysław Gomułka ushered a brief period of moderate reform and “thawing.” There was an opening to the West, improved relations with the Roman Catholic Church, and a halt to agricultural collectivization. Architecture and urban planning looked for a new, modern aesthetic and modern structural, material, and planning solutions. A basic problem facing the new Party leader­ ship was housing. A housing policy was d eveloped over the years 1957–1958. It assumed using the pop­ ulation’s resources for housing projects and a big­ ger role for cooperatives15 – certainly p ositive changes. However, there were also new ideas regarding housing construction. Among them was the principle of type standardization announced in 195916 as well as the introduction that same year of design standards17 making dwelling unit floor area dependent on occupancy – a mere nine square meters for every individual. Nevertheless, the post­October “opening” brought several successful residential buildings. Among these is Warsaw’s Sady Żoliborskie I hous­ ing estate (Halina Skibniewska, 1958–1962). Meet­ ing standards it creates a harmonious complex of twenty carefully planed and developed five­ and three­story buildings picturesquely positioned amidst vegetation.18 44 The design freedom of the “thaw” also bore fruit in ambitious designs for public buildings. Unfor­ tunately, they often exceeded domestic contracting potential. They were built in reduced form or not at all – e.g., the novel design for the Eclectic Zach­ ęta exhibition building expansion (Oskar Hansen, Lech Tomaszewski, and Stanisław Zamecznik, 1958). In spite of technological and economic restric­ tions, many ambitious 1956–1960 public buildings designs were eventually built, albeit not until the 1960s or later. Among the most original in form and structural bravery is Warsaw’s Supersam building. It was Poland’s first supermarket and cafeteria (Jerzy Hryniewiecki, Maciej and Ewa Krasiński, Wacław Zalewski, Andrzej Żórawski, and Stanisław Kusia, 1959–1962). Another is the Katowice sports­entertainment arena (architecture: Maciej Gintowt and Maciej Krasiński, structural engineering: Andrzej Żórawski, 1960, construction 1964–1971). The “thaw” also brought with it several build­ ings using modern forms and material­structural concepts. On a wave of improved State–Church relations these included churches such as the Church of the Holy Mother of Polish Emigrants in Władysławowo (Szczepan Baum and Andrzej Kulesza, 1957–1961) and the Church of St. John the Baptist in Nowe Tychy (Józef Kołodziejczyk, Tade­ usz Szczęsny, and Zbigniew Weber, 1957–1958).19 The 1960s After the “thaw’s” Five­Year Plan (1956–1960), the authorities backtracked in the two successive eco­ nomic plans (1961–1965 and 1966–1970) and invested in industry and raw materials. Their decision resulted in a slowing of housing construction, espe­ cially dwelling unit quality and size. As the 1960s started, “post­thaw” enthusiasm began to wan in the architectural community. Cen­ tralization of design processes and multiplication of formal restrictions continued. The govern­ ment introduced type standardization in 195920 and urban and rural building construction guidelines in 1966. The development of nationwide housing con­ struction prefabrication systems became a priority (1966).21 Obviously, pressure to implement prefab­ rication and type standardization limited the free­ dom of designers. Any identifying of the architects with their work was additionally weakened by the cost­cutting leg­ islation of July 196022 and stricter standards defin­ ing net building intensity introduced in 1964. This had the effect of decreasing the area within housing estate limits and increasing the share of long high­ rise buildings.23 Searching for reserves and savings, state author­ ities implemented plans for cheap buildings in 1961.24 One year later a directive introduced a pro­ gram that assumed the lowering of construction costs by 20%. Changes introduced to housing design standards in 1961 also insisted on extreme savings. They forced dwelling units that were as small as possible, with single–sided airing, win­ dowless kitchens, minimal entry halls, and bath­ rooms that required special permission for a bath­ tub, shower, and washbasin.25 An inadequate construction and materials indus­ try and the dependence on “building contractors consistently demanding simplification” had a nega­ tive effect on architectural design, especially hous­ ing design.26 The 1960s was also a period of the supremacy of urban plans, which instead of shaping the cul­ tural landscape often served to “legalize decisions taken counter to the plan,”27 while simultaneously “assigning buildings the role of simple volumes and functions.”28 Ongoing centralization of the design process, cost­cutting, multiplying restrictions, and the pri­ macy of prefabrication, especially large panel con­ struction, fashioned a utilitarian, economical, and standardized architecture springing out of Mod­ ernism and its concept of the social housing estate – Socmodern. The effect was a landscape filled with hundreds of similar block­filled housing estates.29 Nevertheless, in spite of standards that were probably the most restrictive in Europe, thanks to designer stubbornness and creative inventiveness, this same period saw the emergence of housing estates that stood apart from the Socmodern tem­ plate with its five­ and eleven­story standardized rectilinear volumes. In terms of urban and archi­ tectural planning, the most original was the Juliusz Słowacki housing estate in Lublin (architecture: Oskar and Zofia Hansen, structural engineering: Jerzy Dowgiałło, 1960–1963, construction 1964– 1972). This was the first effort to give reality to the novel idea of an open linear and open form system 45 WARSAW. ZA ŻELAZNĄ BRAMĄ HOUSING ESTATE (J. Furman, J. Czyż, J. Józefowicz, A. Skopiński, 1965–1972). State in 1992. Photo: W. Stępień, Coll. NID. presented by Oskar Hansen at the 1959 CIAM Congress.30 A controversial achievements of this period is the Za Żelazną Bramą housing estate located in the center of Warsaw and consisting of nine­ teen “cubby­ hole” sixteen­story buildings (Jan Fu rman, Jerzy Czyż, Jerzy Józefowicz, and Andrzej Skopiński, 1965–1972) – an attempt to actually build Le Corbusier’s vision of dwellings surrounded by vegetation in functionally self­sufficient high­rise buildings applying extreme cost­cutting in the politicized reality of the 1960s.31 On the other hand, the Eastern Wall (Zbigniew Karpiński and Jan Klewin, 1962–1969) in the very center of Warsaw is undoubtedly a success of the 1960s. This late­Modern retail­housing complex based on two parallel circulation routes – vehic­ ular and pedestrian – consists of four department stores, architecturally diverse retail, culture, and office buildings of various height along the pedes­ trian route, all overlooked by three twenty­four­ story towers. The 1970s The economic situation of Poland began to dete­ riorate with the end of the 1960s. Although true that industrial production continued to grow, the living standard of the population remained at an unchanged low level. Instead of adjusting economic expectations, the authorities introduced price hikes. This increase in December 1970 met with protests. After bloody suppression Edward Gierek took the helm of the Party and promised increased consumer good supplies and more dwelling units. This is why the 1970s were a decade of dynamic housing construction based on large panel con­ struction – 80% of housing projects. Prefabrication also meant expansion of production facilities – “house factories.” Sixty­three were established over the years 1971–1975, reaching 160 by 1980.32 46 WARSAW. DEVELOPMENT PLAN FOR URSYNÓW NORTH HOUSING ESTATE (M. Budzyński, J. Szczepanik-Dzikowski, A. Szkop, 1972–1975). Collection of the Department of Polish Architecture, Faculty of Architecture, Warsaw University of Technology. Apart from industrialization of construction technology, a 1974 standard influenced housing estate urban planning and architecture signifi­ cantly. This was mainly due to urban planning guidelines.33 They aimed at integrating residential­ ­retail urban tissue34 and were supplemented by housing standards35 that increased usable floor areas of dwelling units.36 These newly defined technical­construction and legislative conditions coupled with economic growth in the first half of the 1970s spurred work on wide­ranging housing projects. In spite of low construction quality and contractor­dictated restrictions, variations in the volumes, heights, tex­ tures, colors, and detail provided relatively many housing estates that demonstrated individualized planning and architecture. The most spatially and architecturally uncon­ ventional one was Wrocław’s Przyjaźń housing estate (Witold Jerzy Molicki, 1970–1980). Warsaw’s Służew nad Dolinką housing estate, with its inter­ esting detail and skillful insertion into the land­ scape, is also noteworthy (Janusz Nowak, Piotr Sembrat, and Jerzy Kuźmienko, 1974–1979). How­ ever, Warsaw’s Ursynów North housing estate (Marek Budzyński, Jan Szczepanik­Dzikowski, and Andrzej Szkop, 1972–1975) based on sociolog­ ical37 and nature studies, integrated housing, retail and recreational services, and traditional municipal streets and squares,38 was the most original and largest housing complex of this period. Through loans, the 1970s saw a whole series of spatially and architecturally ambitious public build­ ings and facilities. The years 1971–1976 brought new projects, especially in Warsaw – mainly the West­ ern Center region (Jerzy Skrzypczak, 1969–1974) with two skyscrapers and a glazed hall, Europe’s most modern railroad station at that time (Arseni­ usz Romanowicz, 1973–1976). The years 1971–1975 also saw the building of the largest traffic project of the capital. Changes in Party policy with respect to the West in the years 1972–1973 made possible sev­ eral projects by Swedish architects (e.g., Sten Sam­ uelson, Hotel Forum, 1972–1973). State­Church relations were ultimately normal­ ized with the start of the 1970s. This resulted in numerous projects that were not restricted by the rigors of type standardization. Designers molded traditional religious models into the language of contemporary architecture. Among the flagship designs of this period are the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Gorajec (Jan Bogusławski, 1973–1979) and the intriguing pyramidal form of the Church of the Holy Spirit in Tychy (Stanisław Niemczyk, 1976–1983).39 The first symptoms of a worsening economic sit­ uation became visible around 1975. Over the years 1976–1980, national income fell by 7%. Shortages in consumer goods also appeared. Once again the only remedy forwarded by the authorities was price hikes. Once again there was a wave of strikes end­ ing with the signing by the government of an agreement with the protestors on August 31, 1980 and the emergence of the “Solidarity” Independent Trade Union Association. The 1980s The brief period of post­August liberty was over­ shadowed by an atmosphere of confrontation. Sol­ idarity pushed for change. The authorities tried to 47 ELBLĄG. NEW DEVELOPMENTS AT THE OLD TOWN (1985– ). State in 2004. Photo by M. Rozbicka. prevent this.40 The social, political, and economic crisis of the end of the 1970s was exacerbated by the introduction of martial law in December 1981. Organizational paralysis, hampered movement, lack of resources and construction potential were apparent in the drastic fall in construction work and related difficulties. A period of investment stagnation and the breaking of the monopoly of state design offices by independent design studios41 established 1982–1983, it triggered serious discus­ sion in the architectural community. The 14th Con­ gress of the International Union of Architects in Warsaw in May 1981 marked the beginning. Topics included new currents in architecture and ways of overcoming systemic and technical barriers block­ ing architecture, especially housing.42 Postmodern­ ism proved of special interest. It was a current of tolerance, plurality, and sensitivity to the historical, regional, landscape, and social context. It was per­ ceived as a desirable remedy for the type standard­ ization and unification of 1960s and 70s Socmod­ ern.43 With limited investment potential in 1980s Poland, Postmodernism mainly existed as theo­ retical ideas, but did make its mark with several noteworthy buildings. Primarily designers supple­ menting downtown tissue made reference to it by utilizing traditional technologies and reintroducing appropriate scale and meaningful detail. Among major housing projects were the Centrum E hous­ ing estate (Romuald Loegler, 1988–1995),44 out­ standing in its Postmodern forms and colors amidst the Socialist Realism buildings of Nowa Huta, and the Poznań’s Zielone Wzgórza housing estate (J. Buszkiewicz and his team, starting 1982), an urban design based on traditional towns.45 The desire to make reference to local tradition also found expres­ sion around the mid­1980s with reinstated histori­ cal property lines and street networks lost over the course of a complicated history together with their 48 WARSAW. WARSAW UNIVERSITY NEW LIBRARY (M. Budzyński, Z. Badowski, 1994–1999). State in 2000. Photo: W. Stępień, Coll. NID. architectural identity – Elbląg, Kołobrzeg, and Głogów.46 The Church – probably the most creative inves­ tor of that period – also embraced Postmodernism. Designers raised buildings of increasing scale and expressiveness. Among numerous churches erected during the 1980s, the most outstanding was undoubtedly the Postmodern Resurrectionist Con­ gregation Higher Theological Seminary (Dariusz Kozłowski and Wacław Stefański, 1985–1996) and the Church of the Ascension in Warsaw’s Ursynów (M. Budzyński and Zbigniew Badowski, 1982– 1989). Just the latter’s very presence with its modern form based on Polish architectural tradition within a socialist housing estate speaks of the breakdown of formal and program standards forced by the communist authorities.47 The 1990s The democratic breakthrough that occurred in Poland after the first almost free elections in the Eastern Bloc in June 1989 came at a time that was exceptionally difficult both a politically and eco­ nomically. After martial law, international sanc­ tions, years of stagnation and strikes, and inflation running at 700%, Poland was truly bankrupt. Thus, the years 1990–1997 were primarily ones of radical economic and local government reform (1990) as well as … “regaining balance.”48 In architecture it was a time of the final collapse of state mono­ poly in design. Initially, this led to projects for the Church. These were followed by domestic business, including residential and retail projects. Unlike the unified style of Socmodern, designs applied expres­ sive Postmodern meanings in strict relation to sur­ 49 roundings and traditional forms of architecture. This particularly applied to infill buildings like the Wrocław designs of Wojciech Jarząbek (residential building at the corner of Zielińskiego and Swo­ bodnej streets, 1991) or Jacek Lenart in Szczecin (the corner of a tenement quarter on Zgody Square, 1995–1996), built in the centers of cities, hoping to give order to chaos. It was not until the mid­1990s that conditions emerged allowing Polish architects to embrace world architectural and technological trends. The result was the construction of several significant buildings: a new wing for the Poznań Music Acad­ emy (Jerzy Gurawski, 1995–1997) built in the spirit of muted Postmodernism, the new University of Warsaw library saturated with Postmodern refer­ ences combining expressive environmental threads with contemporary technology in a fascinating ENDNOTES 1. Majewski P. (2009). Ideologia i konserwacja. Architektura zabytkowa w Polsce w czasach socrealizmu. Warsaw: TRIO, p. 29; Olszewski A. K. (1992). Architektura polska w latach 1944–1960. In: Polskie życie artystyczne w latach 1945–1960, A. Wojciechowski, ed., Wrocław­Warsaw­Cracow, p. 336. 2. Majewski (2009), p. 30. 3. Miłobędzki A. (1994). Architektura ziem Polski / The A rchitecture of Poland. Cracow: International Culture Center, pp. 116–118. 4. Marciniak P. (2009). Architektura i urbanistyka Poznania w lat ach 1945–1989 na tle doświadczeń europejskich, Poznań: Poznań University of Technology Press, p. 16. 5. Syrkus (1976), pp. 356–357. 6. Marciniak (2009), p. 238. 7. Galiński B. (1953). Architektura Polska 1950–1951, Warsaw: PWT, p. 207. 8. Bierut B. (1949). Sześcioletni plan odbudowy Warszawy, Warsaw. 9. Galiński (1953), pp. 3–5 and 205. 10. Baraniewski W. (1996). Ideologia w architekturze Warszawy okresu realizmu socjalistycznego, Rocznik Historii Sztuki, Vol. XXII. Warsaw: Neriton, p. 246. 11. Galiński (1953), pp. 205 and 206. 12. Beiersdorf Z. and Komorowski W. (2010). Nowa Huta lat pięćdziesiątych. Dziedzictwo – zagrożenia i perspektywy, Zabytki drugiej połowy XX wieku – waloryzacja, ochrona, konserwacja, Warsaw­Berlin: ICOMOS Polska, ICOMOS Deutschland, KOBiK, pp. 17–28. 13. Pierwsza Krajowa Narada Architektów (1953). Architektura, No. 7, p. 172. 14. Wnioski z Ogólnopolskiej Narady Architektów (1956). Architektura, No. 5, p. 122. 15. Compare: Czapelski M. (2012). “Mistery” i inni. O warszaw­ skiej architekturze mieszkaniowej lat 60. i jej uwarunkowa­ niach. In: Ł. Gorczyca and M. Czapelski, eds., Mister Warsza wy. Architektura mieszkaniowa lat 60. XX wieku. Warsaw, pp. ­ way (Marek Budzyński and Zbigniew Badowski with their team, 1994–1999), or the glazed Supreme Court building in Warsaw, steeped with symbolism and plant accents (Marek Budzyński and Zbigniew Badowski with their team, 1996–1999). Simultane­ ously, international capital began its encroachment, especially into cities where it dictated its rules to local government thanks to conditions created by the unfortunate reform of the spatial planning sys­ tem (1994). What has started is the commerciali­ zation of space that is continuing to this very day. Combined with the neoliberal architectural dis­ course it has released a pluralism of styles that has never been seen before, but which is a far cry from the pro­social ethos of the Modernism cultivated in Poland from the interwar period right up to the beginning of the 1990s. 15–16; < http://spoldzielniemieszkaniowe.pl/main/na­rozdro­ zu­1956­1989,177,,.html>, [accessed 2016.05.02]. 16. Directive No. 285 of the Council of Ministers of July 2, 1959 (Polish Monitor No. 70, item 365 and Polish Monitor No. 23, item 109). 17. Design standards for dwelling units and multi-family buildings in cities and housing estates. Directive No. 364 of the Council of Ministers of August 20, 1959 (Polish Monitor No. 81, item 422). 18. Fudala T. (2012). Mieszkanie z instrukcją obsługi. Osiedle Sady Żoliborskie Haliny Skibniewskiej. In: Ł. Gorczyca and M. Czapelski, eds., Mister Warszawy. Architektura mieszkanio­ wa lat 60. XX wieku. Warsaw, pp. 35–55. 19. Zachwatowicz J. (1966). Kościoły w Polsce odbudowane i wybudowane 1945–1965, Warsaw: Ars Christiana. 20. Directive No. 285. 21. Directive No. 126. Compare: Wojtkun G. (2011). Wielka płyta na styku żelaznej kurtyny, Przestrzeń i Forma, No. 15, p. 479. 22. §11, Clause 3 of Directive of the Council of Ministers No. 216 of July 14, 1960 (Polish Monitor 1960, No. 61, item 288). 23. Decree No. 15 of the Chairman of the Building, Urban Plan­ ning, and Architecture Committee of February 21, 1961. Com­ pare: Chmielewski J. M. and Mirecka M. (2007). Modernizacja osiedli mieszkaniowych. Warsaw, pp. 20–21. 24. Directive No. 216 of the Council of Ministers of June 13, 1961 (Polish Monitor of 1961, No. 63, item 269). 25. Directive No. 104 of the Council of Ministers of March 11, 1961 (Polish Monitor of 1961, item 124). 26. Szafer T. P. (1972). Nowa architektura polska. Diariusz lat 1966– 1970. Warsaw: Arkady, p. 7. 27. Szafer (1972), p. 7. 28. As cited in Szafer (1972), p. 7. 29. Miłobędzki (1994) p. 122. 30. Szafer (1972), pp. 15, 17, and 20–21. 50 31. Skolimowska A. (2012). Modulor polski. Historia osiedla Za Żelazną Bramą, In: Ł. Gorczyca and M. Czapelski, eds., Mister Warszawy. Architektura mieszkaniowa lat 60. XX wiek. Warsaw, pp.79–101. 32. Szafer T. P. (1981). Nowa architektura polska. Diariusz lat 1976– 1980. Warsaw: Arkady, p. 5. 33. Directive No. 9 of the Minister of Land Management and Environmental Protection of January 29, 1974 ( Journal of Building of 1974, No. 2, item 2). 34. Korzeniewski W. (1988). Podstawy programowania i projek­ towania zespołów wielorodzinnej zabudowy mieszkaniowej. Warsaw: COIB, p. 6. 35. Directive No. 10 of the Minister of Land Management and Environmental Protection of January 20, 1974 ( Journal of Building Construction of 1974, No. 2, item 3). 36. Compare: Wojtkun (2008), pp. 110–111. 37. Szafer (1988), pp. 199 and 224. 38. Budzyński M. (1975). Ursynów Północny – uwarunkowania, zasady, Architektura, No. 1/2, p. 56. 39. Czuba M. (2010). Architektura sakralna II poł. XX wieku w Polsce – waloryzacja i ochrona prawna. In: B. Szmygin and J. Haspel, eds., Zabytki drugiej połowy XX wieku – waloryzacja, ochrona, konserwacj. Warsaw­Berlin: ICOMOS Polska, ICO­ MOS Deutschland, KOBiDZ, pp. 41–43. 40. Janowski K. B. (2004). Źródła i przebieg zmiany politycznej w Polsce (1980–1989). In: 17th General Convention of Polish Historians [online]. Cracow. [accessed 2016.05.05]. 41. Marciniak (2009), pp. 19–20. 42. Compare: Oświadczenie II Ogólnopolskiej narady architek­ tów na temat architektury mieszkaniowej, Gdańsk (1984). Architektura, No. 2, 1984, pp. 18–19. 43. Tokajuk A. Trwanie czy przemijanie? O postmodernizmie w polskiej powojennej architekturze mieszkaniowej, Czasopismo Techniczne. Architektura, R.108–2011, pp. 428–429. 44. E. Zamorska­Przyłuska, ed., O architekturze Romualda Loeglera. Cracow, p. 177. 45. Marciniak (2009), p. 248. 46. Compare: Lubocka­Hoffmann M. (2004). Miasta historyczne zachodniej i północnej Polski. Zniszczenia i programy odbudowy. Bydgoszcz: Excalibur, pp. 156–162. 47. Budzyński M. (1982). Kościół na Ursynowie Północnym w Warszawie, Architektura, No. 5/6, pp. 62 and 67. 48. Sepioł J. (2015). Architektura polskiej demokracji, Form Follows Freedom, Architektura dla kultury w Polsce 2000+. J. Purchel and J. Sepioł, eds., Cracow: MCK, p. 28. 51 SIRI SK JOLD LEXAU Lost Cultural Heritage: The Aftermath of the Bombing of the Government Quarter in Oslo and the Need for Collective Memory A blow to openness and democracy In the middle of Norwegian holiday time, when Cultural heritage has become a crucial target in con­ a large part of the population was enjoying their flicts. In this paper, I will discuss controversies and free time and long, bright summer nights, the challenges when symbolic buildings of high value as shocking news of a bomb attack to the Government cultural heritage are harmed due to terrorism, but Quarter in the centre of Oslo reached listeners all also by ignorance of their architectural value. The over the world. 8 people were killed, 10 severely value may be as economical or material resource, his­ injured and 30 treated for their injuries. Interroga­ torical significance or architectural quality. At the tions showed that the terrorist blow was meant to same time, contemporary needs ask for buildings harm the social democratic system and its values, adapted to changing needs. My point of departure and what the attacker Anders Behring Breivik will be the bomb attack on the Norwegian govern­ found to be islamist friendly politics of the Labour ment quarter on July 22nd, 2011. Party government. THE H BLOCK OF THE GOVERNMENT QUARTER after the bomb attack on July 22, 2011. Photo: KRIPOS/Scanpix. 52 According to Breivik’s ideology, the attack was meant to harm 1. the H block government building housing the Labour party’s prime minister’s offices 2. the political ideology of the state management 3. random civilians in Oslo 4. future politicians of the Labour party, partici­ pants at a labour party youth camp at Utøya near Oslo (77 young people were killed and 150 were hospitalized due to their injuries). The main government building, the H block that was damaged in the attack, was designed in the 1950s by Gunnar Viksjø (1910–1971), one of the nation’s most prominent architects at the time, to house offices of the state administration. The bomb destroyed the interior of the lowest floors and envi­ ronments of the H block, but left other buildings nearby less harmed. We will have a look into the architectural qualities of the building and its nearby sibling the Y block, and the debate concern­ ing the future fate of this very central city area in Oslo. Questions related to finances, functionality, security, architectural quality, cultural heritage and memorial significance both of the damaged H block, and the adjacent Y block that was not harmed in the attack, were elements of these dis­ cussions. My lecture will discuss the following questions attached to these buildings of high archi­ tectural value and significance as cultural heritage. 1. It is decided that the H block will be preserved, but maybe built higher, and surrounded by new buildings. What kind of memory will it convey? 2. How about its kin, the Y block? Should it be demolished, including its integrated art works of very high value, to give way for new plans of the area? 3. How about the openness created by the architect to give people of the social democratic welfare state direct access to the country’s highest repre­ sentatives, in a time where terrorist attacks have to be considered? 4. Should the area of historical significance be closed off to Oslo’s citizens for security reasons? During political conflicts and war, we are used to the alarming news that buildings and other cultural works are destroyed on purpose. We have witnessed Turkey’s systematic erasure of Greek her­ itage in the occupied territories of Cyprus from the mid­70s and onwards, Serb artillery burning the National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992, Taliban’s destruction of the Buddhas of Bamiyan in Afghanistan in 2001, and DAESH’s recent demolition of heritage in Palmyra or any shrine or monument not being in accordance with their conception of religious practice. It is often the symbolic significance of the buildings that causes such political motivated attacks. Even of less impact than other international examples, the symbolic value of the Government Quarter in Oslo is very strong for Norwegians, which I will return to later. Should the state itself, in a period of peace, destroy its own heritage? Architectural qualities of the Government Quarter The high­rise H block of originally 15 stories where the prime minister’s offices were located, is con­ trasted by the lower, curved Y block of three sto­ ries where the Ministry of Knowledge was located in recent years. The H block was inaugurated in 1958 and the Y block in the same architectural style, by the same architect Erling Viksjø, was completed in 1969. Both buildings are adorned with an inno­ vative concrete/stone surface called “natural con­ crete”, a method invented and patented by the architect and the engineer Sverre Jystad. Before the cement of the façades was cured, the formwork was removed and the surface sand blown to create a durable and beautiful surface where the natural stone appeared as decorative elements in the facade. In this way, Viksjø’s buildings constructed by con­ crete skeletons got facades of natural stone. By using different colours and size of the pebbles, varying patterns and roughness give the surfaces diverse qualities. The sand blowing technique also made it possible to integrate works of art directly into the concrete walls of the façades and on inte­ rior walls. By letting artists use sand blowing as a way of artistic expression, Viksjø wished to integrate art in his architecture. Among profiled contemporary art­ ists, Carl Nesjar (1920–2015) is the one best known for using such methods, and he had through 17 years a close cooperation with Pablo Picasso (1881– 1973). The buildings also have integrated works by Tore Haaland (1918–2006), Odd Tandberg (1924–), Inger Sitter (1929–2015) and Kai Fjell (1907–1989). The area binding the H block, the Y block and 53 THE H BLOCK AND THE Y BLOCK of the Government Quarter. Photo: Trond Joelson, Byggeindustrien. SANDBLOWN NATURAL CONCRETE and artistic work designed by Pablo Picasso and executed by Carl Nesjar. Photo: Teigens fotoatelier/Nasjonalmuseet. 54 ERLING VIKSJØ: The H block of the Government Quarter in Oslo, 1958. Photo: Teigens fotoatelier/ Nasjonalmuseet. DEVELOPMENT OF THE GOVERNMENT QUARTER, sketch by Erling Viksjø, probably 1958. Photo: Andreas Harvik /Nasjonalmuseet. 55 other buildings together, is partly designed to con­ tinue the qualities of the natural concrete facades. Geometrical patterns give vitality to the pedestrian areas, which connected the buildnings, parking lots and garages. The H block was designed through different stages during the period 1940 to 1958. Statens bygge­ og eiendomsdirektorat (The Directorate for Building and Properties in Norway) announced an open competition for the H block Government Building project in 1939, and 49 entries were sub­ mitted. Preconditions were to provide an economic and effective system of ground plans combined with a representative design. In March 1940, the entries Rytme designed by Ove Bang and Øivin Holst Grimsgaard, Vestibyle by Erling Viksjø, U by Nils Holter and Fri by Dagfinn Morseth and Mads Wiel Gedde were awarded as four equal winners (Tostrup: 92, 95–96). Viksjø’s entry shows a rather strict raster system, with window frames with­ drawn from the outer facade grid. In many ways, this makes his proposal stronger, but also heavier than other entries, as Bang’s more transparent glass body. Two further steps in the development of the area were anticipated, but only one was completed. In 1958, Viksjø continued to work on a possible exten­ sion of the Government Quarter, and a drawing probably executed in 1958 shows a second, Y­shaped building complementing the high­rise. Contemporary challenges Now, we will have a closer look at how we plan to deal with these buildings today. The first question raised after the bomb attack in 2011 was whether the H block should be saved or demolished. Rig­ mor Aasrud, Minister of Local Government and Regional Development stated already the day after the bomb attack that it probably would be far too expensive to reconstruct the building, it was prob­ ably too damaged, and further it did not have any architectural value. Then followed a long process of investigations: Was it structural possible to use the H block in the future or was the structure too dam­ aged? How about the human factor? Should trau­ matized employees who had lost their colleges or miraculously avoided a fatal situation in the bomb attack be forced to go back to work in the same building? Later investigations showed that the structure of the building was not severely damaged, and that it could easily be rebuilt as a functional office building with its remaining qualities intact. Experts on architectural history also pointed to the architectural value of the building, and the fact that it was a core example of the Norwegian welfare state’s open form architecture of the post­ war period. On the other hand, the human factor was a challenge. But the buildings have values of their own right. When the bomb attack hit the H block, the Direc­ torate for Cultural Heritage in Norway was already preparing a listing of both the H block and the Y block as part of the National Protection Plan of Buildings owned by the State (Landsverneplan for bygninger i statens eie). It was argued that 1. the H block was for many years one of the largest single buildings in Norway 2. it is urgent to protect the building’s architectural value as one of the most significant buildings of Norwegian after­war modernistic architecture 3. the H block is a monumental building where all functions are connected in one building 4. it represents an ideal of education/public build­ ings for its time. All the same, the bomb attack triggered revised debates on the future development of the Govern­ ment Quarter. Questions were raised related to architectural quality, administrative functionality, material resource value, security challenges and work quality for traumatized employees. In June 2013, the result of the first concept investigation by architects Metier, LPO og OPAK for a pos­ sible future use of the buildings in the Govern­ ment Quarter was published. The commission was to find a long­time solution meeting the necessary demands of security and functionality, and the investigation concluded that it would be rational to demolish and reconstruct the buildings. In October 2013, an additional concept analysis was delivered by the Directorate for Cultural Heritage in Nor­ way. This investigation concluded that both the H block and the Y block have national value and should be preserved. Probably it would also be resource effective to preserve them vs demolish­ ment and reconstruction. In May 2014, Prime Minister Erna Solberg and the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Modernization, Jan Tore Sanner presented the plan for a New Government Quarter where the H block 56 would be preserved, stating: “The H block is the most significant symbol building of the modern Norwegian Welfare State after WW2. The H block is among the best examples of monumental mod­ ernism, and the art works stand in a special posi­ tion among recent Norwegian history of art and architecture” (Statsministerens kontor). So, finally, the H block was saved. The Y block should, how­ ever, be demolished to give space for new buildings, while two of its integrated art works should be pre­ served and moved. Collective Memory Only in the very last years, huge concrete buildings designed and constructed in the first decades after WW2 have been evaluated for possible protection. In many ways, they are too recent to be regarded as cultural heritage in the public and professional opinion. They are experiencing their mid­life crisis, as Siri Hoem puts it in a chronicle (Aftenposten 04.08.2015). If we had the patience to wait another 10–20 years before judging their future, maybe we would appreciate them otherwise. Quite recently, a profiled Norwegian lawyer and former head of the Norwegian Police Security Service, Ellen Holager Andenæs, in the popular Friday evening programme Nytt på Nytt October 9th 2015, sev­ eral times claimed that the H block had no value for people, that it was just ugly. “It’s UGLY. Case closed”. This was in a discussion with Jørn Hol­ mene, head of the Directorate for Cultural Herit­ age in Norway. I suppose that her view represent a substantial part of the Norwegian population’s view of post­war architecture, including bureaucrats who have been or will be working in the building in the future. The buildings of the Government Quarter were initially seen as quite controversial because they repressed a beautiful city area in the 1950s, further because they by many were regarded as “ugly”, ulti­ mately destroyed by an ultra­conservative activist who wished to harm the symbols of the political social democracy and the welfare state. On the other hand, the discussions on the significance of the buildings, both as architectural heritage and as an important memory of the nation’s recent politi­ cal history have had its effect. The decision to pre­ serve the H block as part of a future city renewal of the area has been accepted without much resist­ ance. The problem is that the Y block has to go, UN HEADQUARTERS, New York, designed by Le Corbusier and Oscar Niemeyer (1947–49). Photo: Creative Commons, Geoffreyq, 06.08.2011. according to this plan. This will be a huge loss, seen from an architectural historian’s point of view, as such a composition of building bodies is to be found very few places in the world. A supe­ rior example is the UN Headquarters in New York, consisting of the office tower for the Secretariat designed by Le Corbusier, and the Assembly Hall in a separate, curved building designed by Oscar Niemeyer. The assemblage was erected in 1947–49. In Oslo, the rectangular high­rise block is con­ trasted to the curving façade of the lower Y block in a very similar way to the UN buildings. Another point is that buildings with curving facades over a ground plan of Xs and Ys were used several times for buildings associated with the post­war inter­ national cooperation work among democratic states. Further examples are the Unesco Building in Paris, designed by Marcel Breuer, Pier Luigi Nervi and Bernard Zehrfus and built in 1952–58. Marcel Breuer used this shape for several buildings. Another international example is the Berleymont Building in Brussels, directly inspired by the UN Headquarters, and designed by Lucien de Vestel and Jean Gilson, built 1963–69. The UN buildings were erected at the same time as Viksjø submitted a revised version av his H block design. In 1958, he proposed the Y block as a strongly contrasted building volume, and there is reason to believe 57 that he knew the design of the UN Headquar­ ters, designed by two of the most internationally renowned architects of the time. This assemblage of buildings was erected in Oslo, Norway, but Nor­ wegians wish to remove half of the composition, maybe the most important part, due to what I will call pure historic ignorance. The area around the H block and the Y block was an open, public accessible area where every­ body could walk literally through the lavish build­ ings of the state administration. This was exactly in accordance with Sigfried Giedion, Josep Lluis Sert and Fernand Léger’s thesises of “Nine Points on Monumentality” in their paper published in 1943, and in Giedion’s article “The Need for a New Mon­ umentality” from 1944. Public resources should be used for the obligations of the welfare state to the contemporary society’s living population and their everyday needs, not to costly monuments of the dead. In Norway as anywhere else, concrete, often with a very rough and untreated surface, was a pre­ ferred material to obtain this new kind of monu­ mentality for public buildings. Schools, hospitals, town halls, sport halls and bank buildings were erected in raw concrete with few decorative details except the aesthetic qualities of the concrete itself. Viksjø had such principles more or less in front of him when he designed the Government Quarter, but he enriched them with his innovative use of concrete. Anyway, his planning was in accordance with international, contemporary, politically conscious architectural theory. The new, 2015 plans for the Government Quarter states that the H block will still be the highest building of the area, but this will be obtained by building it even higher than its extension of 1990 by Per Viksjø. Surrounding buildings will also be quite high. So – what kind of public area will this be in the future? Which memories will it convey? That a bomb explosion led to a thorough transfor­ mation of the area? Probably the area will not be very attractive for pedestrians, if they should be allowed to enter. We will lose the openness originally so characteristic of the Norwegian Government Quarter, due to secu­ rity reasons. We could have chosen to preserve the main buildings, the H and Y block, as functional office buildings. We might even recognize their value as material resources not to be thrown away at extra costs, in addition to keep them as monu­ ments of important political ideals for the benefit of society that a terrorist did not manage to destroy. We might even be proud of them. And it is not necessarily a good idea to compress the whole state administration in one place – concerning security. Current plans for the area will destroy the unique composition of two contrasting, but related build­ ings of very high architectural quality. It will trans­ form the Government Quarter into a high­rise business district with high security precautions. And we will completely loose this architectural mirroring of political ideals so characteristic of Scandinavian welfare states in the post­war period. SOURCES Giedion, Sigfried (1944). The Need for a New Monumentality in Zucker, Paul (ed.): New Architecture and City Planning. A Symposium. New York: Philosophical Library. Hoem, Siri (2015). Regjeringskvartalet: En historisk rivetabbe in Aftenposten. Oslo: Schibsted, 04.08.2015. Statsministerens kontor (2014). https://www.regjeringen. no/no/aktuelt/dep/kmd/nett­tv/Nett­TV­Pressekonfer­ anse­om­Regjeringskvartalet/id760974/, read 15.08.2016. Tostrup, Elisabeth (2012). Høye idealer på kronglete tomt. Konkurransen om ny regjeringsbygning i 1939–1940 in Arkitekturårbok 2012. Oslo: Arkitekturmuseet for arkitektur, kunst og design. 58 JĀNIS LEJNIEKS Rebranding the Soviet Regime’s Built Cultural Heritage and the Need for Collective Memory The Soviet regime in Latvia has a long pre­history, as noted by the distinguished historian Stanley G. Payne, “Latvia’s unique contribution to the revo­ lution was to become the first region in which the Bolsheviks created an organized and disciplined armed force, much more reliable than the Red Guard militia. This took the form of volunteer Latvian “Strelkii” (riflemen) regiments, stemming from elite Latvian regiments in the old [Russian imperial] army.”1 The Latvian riflemen were military formations assembled starting 1915 in Latvia in order to defend Baltic territories against the Germans in World War I. Initially, the battalions were formed by vol­ unteers, and “from 1916 by conscription among the Latvian population. A total of about 40 000 troops were drafted into the Latvian Riflemen Division.”2 After the collapse of the Russian empire the Lat­ vian regiments in the Tsarist army were split in politically right and left wings. The first eventually became the core of the military forces of the new Latvian state. The left­minded, which inherited the radical tradition from the rebels in the Revolution of 1905, “showed popular support for Bolshevism. The Red Army arrived in Riga on 3 January 1919, and the first Communist regime outside Russia was set up as the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic.”3 The second time a Communist regime was set up in Latvia was in June 1940, shortly after the Red Army occupied Latvia on the basis of the Hit­ ler­Stalin Pact. Soon the Latvian communists were sent from Russia to establish and strengthen the regime. In June 1941, German forces “liberated” Latvia, but in 1944, when this occupation came to an end, a Soviet regime was set up for the third time after the Red Army “liberated” Latvia again. MONUMENT OF DELIBERATION OF RIGA by Red Army in 1944, arch. E.Vecumnieks, V.Zilgalvis, E.Bāliņš a.o., built in Victory Square in 1985. Photo: Unknown. During the years of the Soviet occupation regime many monuments and buildings devoted to the history of the regime were built. Most of them, including all the statues of Lenin, except for war cemeteries, were destroyed in the early 90s, when a campaign of iconoclasm took place. Nevertheless, some of the most controversial and prominent of these, connected with the native history, survived and became the stumbling block in the non­homo­ genous society of contemporary Latvia. The ideo­ logy of the re­established Latvian state was one aspect of the changes. The “Law on the Protection of Cultural Monu­ ments” of the Republic of Latvia, adopted in 1992, deliberately included the regulation that prohibited to list buildings whose age is less than 50 years. Negativism regarding Soviet Modernism­style buildings was prevalent in the 90s, when, conse­ quently, a lot of them were abandoned or demol­ ished regardless their architectural quality. e-- ~ '://~~~(~-,.~~rt·) ?- ~~r~-r) 59 One of such still threatened artefacts is the Mon­ ument Devoted to the Liberation of Riga in 1944 by the Red Army. It was built in 1985 by Latvian artists, architects and engineers at the place where German war criminals were publicly executed in 1946. The monument was built partly from dona­ tions collected at workplaces. It is the most visible dominant feature on the left bank of Daugava River in the Riga city centre, located on the main East­West axis of city. In 1997, extreme nationalists attempted to blow it up – unsuccessfully, and the state repaired the damage. Later there was a suggestion by Raimonds Slaidiņš, a Latvian­born architect from the USA, to remodel it by adding some elements telling the controversial story about the violence against Lat­ vian people by the Soviet regime, but the proposal was not carried out. The financial aspect in the process of changes started playing a role with the introduction of lib­ eral market economy. Investors contrived to destroy or substantially remodel buildings of the Soviet era, which had become private property. The inter­ est for income coincided with the wide­spread pub­ lic opinion about “worthless Soviet cultural heri­ tage”. For example, cinema buildings became parts of supermarkets or casino chains. The best samples of Soviet Modernism, located in the places with a high estate property value, were demolished to build new buildings with much more density. PROPOSAL TO REMODEL MONUMENT OF DELIBERATION of Riga by Raimonds Slaidinsch (USA), 90s. Re­use of the Soviet­era buildings became another way of dealing with the communist past. The easiest way of re­branding them consisted of removing the symbols of the hated regime, as it was done with the pentagonal star on the top of the building of the Latvian Academy of Sciences, built in the 50s. More controversial are cases when essen­ tial changes are offered. One of such buildings is the Museum of the Red Latvian Riflemen built in 1971, which served as the icon of the regime until 1991. The location of the Museum and memorial statue is the most controversial one in the capital city of Latvia, as it stands at the very core of Old Riga, close to the Town Hall Square with the famous 14th­century Blackheads House. There were inten­ tions to change the area in the late 30s, when Pres­ ident Kārlis Ulmanis planned to remodel the old Hanseatic city into the national capital of Latvian state. The plans were stopped by WWII and Soviet aggression. In June 1941 the core of Old Riga was destroyed by a fire caused by war action. After WWII the remains of buildings were razed, and a large square created, along with numerous plans and projects aimed to revive the place. In the late 60s, when the regime decided to build the museum and memorial devoted to the brave Red Latvian Riflemen, there was no planning document to reconstruct the Blackheads House. The Soviet city planners’ philosophy for the future 60 of Old Town was based on ignoring the historic urban fabric. The authors of the winning design deliberately planned their museum building ignoring the foun­ dations of the Blackheads House. The Memorial sketches were prepared to develop it as a dominant ensemble. Nevertheless, the cultural heritage pro­ tection authorities had other plans in their minds, and they forced the authors to shift the new build­ ing, taking into account the possibility to recon­ struct the Blackheads House in the future as a pastiche. Political support for such intentions came much later, when in the early 90s the enthusiasts of restoring the situation ante bellum got the chance to build copies of the Blackheads House, as well as the Town Hall. After the construction was com­ pleted, the Museum’s building lost its dominant role at the centre of a large square and became a part of perimetral building front of the block. Along the way there were unsuccessful attempts to take a political decision to raze the Museum’s building and remove the statue of the riflemen. Instead of them, a sketch for a hotel building was prepared by the Director of the Riga City Develop­ ment Department, Juris Paegle, but protests of the Latvian architects’ community stopped the pro­ OLD RIGA. WWII damages. Axonometric view, 50s. cess. The clash between the business interests and intents to keep the building for public use were recognizable. Persons who escaped West or were deported dur­ ing WWII established the Occupation Museum Foundation (now: Association) of Latvia and adapted the building of the former Red Latvian Riflemen’s Museum building for the use of the Museum of the Occupation of Latvia. The building belongs to the Latvian state, and in 2006, by a spe­ cial law, it was exclusively dedicated for the use of the Museum of the Occupation of Latvia. The Museum is owned and administered by the Occupation Museum Association of Latvia. Besides maintaining the building, the Latvian state pays an annual subsidy to the Museum to fulfil important state functions, including protocol visits by high state guests. However, the subsidy currently covers only about 1/4 of the actual costs of running the Museum. In 2001 the “world­renowned Latvian­American architect Gunnar Birkerts generously designed as a gift the project for reconstruction and expansion of the Museum building. The Museum has entitled this project ‘The Building for the Future’ [Nākotnes Nams]”.4 The addition will have much improved facilities for visitors, museum staff and a 61 MEMORIAL OF RED LATVIAN RIFLEMEN in Old Riga, built in 1971, arch. Dz. Driba, G.Lūsis- Grīnbergs, now Museum of Occupation at the Town hall square. View from St. Peter’s church. Photo: Unknown, magazine Māksla. TOWN HALL SQUARE, Museum of Occupation behind the Black- heads house, reconstructed in 1999. View from St. Peter’s church. Photo: Jānis Lejnieks. modern interactive exposition. Birkerts describes a detailed plan of the whole block was approved by his design metaphorically as the progression from the City Council in 2010. The design by Gunnar the dark past, to the bright present and enlightened Birkerts was on the way toward realization in future. 2015 when a group of Latvian architects protested A preliminary design was approved by the City against the long­approved project. There are several Building Board in 2008. A public hearing was held, reasons for the protest. 62 ADDITION TO MUSEUM OF OCCUPATION, design by Gunnar Birkerts (USA), 2001. The influential Social Democratic Party “Concord” (“Saskaņa”), ruling Riga City, has not recognized the fact, that Latvia was occupied in 1940 by the Soviet Union under the provisions of the 1939 Hit­ ler–Stalin Pact with Nazi Germany. As follows, the development of the Museum of the Occupation close to the Town hall building is in conflict with the political platform of the ruling party of Riga City Council. Another reason can be the jealousy of local architects. Gunnar Birkerts was earlier commis­ sioned to design the Latvian National Library without a competition. The failure of the star archi­ tect to invite the author of the original Museum building, G. Lūsis­Grīnbergs, to take part (another author, arch. Dz. Driba had passed away) in the design process played a negative role as well. The Latvian society nowadays is split in its attitude toward its own history. The line of demarcation does not lie between nationalities but different­minded people, since the last­minute pro­ test against the long­approved Birkerts project is signed by the academician of Latvian Academy of Sciences, Professor of Architecture Jānis Krastiņš, and some prominent architects, such as Zaiga Gaile and Andis Sīlis. Zaiga Gaile proclaims that she and her associates want to reconstruct the Occupation Museum – the black sarcophagus that houses the permanent exhi­ bition. Instead of building the white addition to the Museum they propose to invest the rest of the allo­ cated financing (ca. EUR 7 500 000) to remodel the former KGB building to house the Museum’s other functions. “I talked with the PM and others, and everyone agrees – if there are numerous empty buildings in Riga, there is no need to extend the museum. Let’s not destroy our past”.5 The question is raised about the past. The past is in presence everywhere where the Soviet regime built any monument. On the main street in Riga a Lenin statue was unveiled in 1950; it was pulled down in 1991. The neutral background of this place indicates that before WWII there was a refresh­ ment stand in this place. In 2002, a group of busi­ ness people announced a competition for a statue to commemorate the leader of the anti­Nazi resist­ ance organization “Latvian Central Council” dur­ ing WWII, Konstantīns Čakste. 63 After two years of public debate the winning proposal by Ojārs Feldbergs, as well the second one by Gļebs Panteļejevs, was rejected by city and state officials. Poor management of branding policy was the reason why the proposal did not pass. The bad “aura” of the place was the main argument for public opinion makers along with the generally unknown personality of Čakste, the son of the first president of Latvia, who died in 1945 in a Nazi con­ centration camp and whose role was not known during Soviet occupation. There are a few things that all sites will need to consider when they are branding themselves: at first “The effort must include a very broad cross­section of place stakeholders and, secondly, it must employ a consensus­building process.”6 This can be verified by the case of the planned but not yet realized development of the Museum of the Occupation, as not all the stakeholders in Latvia are in favor of it. The Riga City Architect and the Building Board have refused to approve the design by Gunnar Birkerts, motivating his refusal by the claim that “the addition to Museum of the Occupation fails to restore the structure of the medieval Old town (building lines, facades, local traditions, traditional materials).” The arguments are based on the build­ ing code of Riga, created on the basis of ICOMOS recommendations, since Riga Historical Centre has been the UNESCO World Heritage Site from 1997. Right­wing parties, leading the government, reacted soon. Since the Museum of the Occupation operates under the aegis of the Ministry of Culture, the Parliament plans to make amendments in the Law of the Museum of the Occupation to grant to the building the status of an “object of national interest” and to enable the Ministry of Environ­ mental Protection and Regional Planning to issue a building permit. If passed, this amendment would effectively bypass the City Building Board. While waiting for the building process to proceed, the Museum has been housed in temporary quarters for nearly four years, where its exhibition attracts only 1/4 of the more than 100 000 annual visitors that came to the old building. Income from visitors has declined dramatically. The Museum’s financial reserves are dwindling, and further delays will defray them to the point of no return. The Memorial of the Red Latvian Riflemen in Old Riga still bears the iconic brand of Soviet Modernism. Along with the political interpreta­ tion of the regulations regarding the preservation of the World Heritage Site of historic Riga, this fact frustrates intentions to re­brand the building to serve its stated purpose to research and present all aspects of the occupation of Latvia in the period of 1940–1991 that is deemed especially important now­ adays in hybrid­war time. WWII has not yet ended at the very core of Old Riga, and the debate on the expansion of the Museum building in the Parliament this autumn will not be end of this story. There is not enough space for two controversial, as well as powerful icons on one site: the Memorial of Red Latvian Riflemen and the Museum of the Occupation of Latvia. The Latvian Institute, working on the promotion of Latvia’s positive international recognition, stresses, that “branding must strengthen the most popular elements of the brand. It also must widen the brand in spheres which potentially could pro­ mote the state and make it more recognizable. The rise of Latvia’s reputation is a long­term challenge. However, the state has one worldwide recognized brand that is more popular than the state itself – Riga.”7 The capital of the state has become the battle­ field of radically different opinions regarding the rebranding of the Soviet regime’s built cultural her­ itage. It is not clear which part of history should serve better for the identity of the nation and should be preserved: the heroic story of the Latvian riflemen, or the sad story of those deported and exiled Latvians, whose fate accuses the Red part of the Latvian riflemen. The conflict between Latvian architects reveals the political background of the decision not yet taken. ENDNOTES 1. Stanley G. Payne, Civil War in Europe, 1905–1949, p. 40, Cambridge University Press, 2012. 2. Frederic P. Miller, Agnes F. Vandome, John McBrewster, Iron guard, p.16, VDM Publishing, 2010. 3. Stanley G. Payne, Civil War in Europe, 1905–1949, p. 48, Cambridge University Press, 2012. 4. http://www.latvia.eu/news/museum­occupation­latvia­cele­ brates­20th­anniversary 5. http://www.lsm.lv/en/article/societ/society/architect­occupa­ tion­museum­plan­is­flawed.a138759/ 6. https://www.brandingstrategyinsider.com/2014/07/place­ branding­guide.html 7. http://www.li.lv/en/nation­branding 64 HÅKAN HÖKERBERG Difficult Heritage: Various Approaches to Twentieth-Century Totalitarian Architecture Architecture is an efficient instrument to manifest and spread the political agenda of a nation; there­ fore it is often prospering in totalitarian regimes. This explains why architecture from twentieth­cen­ tury dictatorships is richly represented in the Euro­ pean urban landscape. It is sometimes defined as totalitarian (or rhetoric) architecture, but this defini­ tion has to be used with some caution. It may imply that certain architecture has an inherent ideological nature and may consequently lead to the conclusion that certain architectural styles are associable with dictatorship. Totalitarian regimes often have a pre­ dilection for certain architectural styles but their employment is not limited to such regimes. They can also be found in democratic states. Although we must dismiss the idea of specific totalitarian architectural styles, it is indisputable the case that certain qualities and building elements can distribute specific political meanings and messages. Furthermore, symbols and inscrip­ tions on buildings and monuments left behind by totalitarian regimes often leave no doubt of their ideological intentions. This paper will focus on offi­ cial buildings and sites that express such explicit connotations. They constitute a controversial heri­ tage and their assimilation to democratic society entails a multitude of difficulties. These challenges are met with a wide spectrum of strategies, rang­ ing from neglect or demolition to conservation and protection. These varying approaches are usu­ ally related to historiography, prevailing images of national identity, or the specific identity to which the post­totalitarian nation aspires. The past in the present The idea of history as an objective discipline, unaf­ fected by temporary ideological and political trends is no longer valid; it is interacting with present polit­ ical and cultural circumstances. This interaction between the past and the present enhances the com­ plexity of historic knowledge but it does also imply some limitations; ‘hindsight paradoxically limits our ability to understand the past by giving us greater knowledge than people of the time could have had’ (Lowenthal 1993:216–217). Our reconstruction of the past makes it more coherent than it actually was. ‘In order to create a community’s required his­ tory and destiny, which in turn can be used to form the representation of the nation, the nation requires a usable past’ (Misztal 2003:17). An operational use of history allows for an interpretation of history that serves specific interests, for example to high­ light some epoques while others are ignored or glossed over as a parenthesis in history. To design a usable past provides the possibility to establish a desired identity and self­legitimation. The display of ideologically difficult heritage can also contrib­ ute to the creation of a usable past, where different approaches represent the significance that is given to the heritage. Its conservation can turn into a witness to an accepted oppressive past and encourage reconcil­ iation. In other cases, conservation is favoured by supporters of a revisionist agenda who endeavour to use it as a chauvinistic and nostalgic manifestation of a glorious past. Demolition is often the solution when the legacy is too painful to be of any utility to present agents. The postmodern conception of history has made its distinction to memory more diffuse. Similarly to history, memory is the representation of the past in the present. We are constantly revising our mem­ ories to suit our current identities (Gillis 1994:3). Personal memories of past events diminish over 65 time and become transformed to collective memo­ ries – a process that facilitates heritagisation of con­ troversial sites and buildings. No one can be held accountable anymore, as for example at Auschwitz. Not only memory but also forgetfulness are fun­ damental elements when nations seek to estab­ lish their representation in the past – as the French philosopher Ernest Renan declared already in 1882 is his discourse ‘Qu’est-ce qu’une nation? ’; he states that ‘getting its history wrong is crucial for the cre­ ation of a nation’ (Renan 1882). Obviously forget­ ting (or mental suppression) is not an entirely neg­ ative phenomenon; memory gaps can contribute to national stability and democratic consolidation: ‘to remember everything could bring a threat to national cohesion and self­image’ (Misztal 2003:17). History is the prerequisite for heritage, but the two serve quite different purposes. ‘Heritage diverges from history not in being biased but in its attitude toward bias’ (Lowenthal 1998:122). Heri­ tage leaves out far more than history, and the polit­ ical impact is more evident in heritage than in his­ tory; heritage is the product of contemporary political and scientific circumstances and it is con­ tinuously redefined in changing political, cultural and social contexts. Heritage is usually associated with positive qual­ ities such as historical, aesthetic and ethical values, but existing social and political conflicts based on different interpretations of history that are reflected in a physical object do not disappear simply because these objects become classified or listed as herit­ age. Heritage has the capacity to cause discord – an inherent quality that has to be recognised and accepted as it contributes to tell a more ‘truthful’ history and mirrors the complex nature of the dis­ puted heritage (Dolff­Bonekämper 2008). Various Approaches The architectural heritage from twentieth­century totalitarian regimes is a materialisation of the national history. Its physical condition and display are reflections of how historiography, the use of history and collective memory have been coordi­ nated to achieve a usable – and suitable – past. The various approaches to this controversial heritage represent applied history; they justify the official history and identity that the nation wishes to prom­ ulgate, even if the above­mentioned methodologi­ cal imperfections affect the representation. FORO ITALICO, the obelisk. Photo: Håkan Hökerberg. The following inventory on different approaches to dissonant heritage is mainly focused on Italy. This is not to imply that there is no evidence from other post­totalitarian nations but Italy pre­ serves much more objects and a greater variety of responses to them. Conservation Foro Italico (former Foro Mussolini) is a large sports complex in Rome, inaugurated in 1932. It was the first large­scale building project by the Fascist regime and it was built to bring not only physical but also ideological education to the younger gen­ eration. The sports ground is largely intact and still emblazoned with highly charged fascist symbols and inscriptions. A marble obelisk at the entrance to the complex has the inscription ‘MUSSOLINI DUX OPERA NAZIONALE BALILLA’ that can be seen from a 66 FORO ITALICO, the mosaics. Photo: Håkan Hökerberg. THE FORMER CASA DEL FASCIO, Pomezia, today a police station. Photo: Håkan Hökerberg. 67 great distance. In post­war Italy, left­wing political groups have asked for the demolition of the obelisk several times but its existence has never been under serious threat. When it was restored in 2007, the municipal conservation authorities declared that the obelisk was national heritage and therefore the inscription must be preserved. Consequently, the obelisk continues to immortalise ‘Mussolini Dux’, attracting the worship of neo­fascist groups who view it as a shrine to the Duce. A street leading from the obelisk to the stadiums was inaugurated one year after the declaration of the Italian Empire, and was named Viale dell ’Im­ pero (today Viale del Foro Italico). Eleven massive marble blocks are placed on each side of the street, carrying inscriptions that commemorate important dates in Italy’s fascist history. The pavement of the street is decorated with mosaics in black and white. Even though there are no physical representations of Mussolini, he is present in every component of the iconographic programme of the mosaics. The official Italian evaluation of Foro Italico as heritage recognises only the aesthetic qualities of the complex, while the ideological and historic signifi­ cance of the site is ignored; the result is a normalisa­ tion and trivialisation, a depoliticised and false narra­ tive of an entirely political project (Arthurs 2010:124). Adapted re-use An enormous number of fascist public institutions were built all over Italy during the twenty years of the Regime; all of which became redundant after the war. Most of them were in a good physical state, and demolitions motivated by purely ideological rea­ sons were out of the question due to the precarious post­war Italian economy and also the shortage of intact buildings that could meet the requirements of the new democratic state. A pragmatic solution was reached: many fascist official buildings were converted to police stations, local government offices etc. and their politically charged history was disre­ garded. Readaptation to institutions informed by democratic ideals can in itself disarm a building’s political messages. In a sense, such appropriation of buildings associated with the fascist regime can be regarded as a symbol of conquest, a manifestation of the superiority of the democratic society. But the smooth transformation of fascist institutions to democratic Italy can also be viewed as a symptom of a reluctance to confront the nation’s dark history. ‘Desacralisation’ The Monument to Victory (Monumento alla Vitto­ ria) in Bolzano was inaugurated in 1928. Officially raised as a memorial to Italian soldiers who fell in the First World War but most of all, it was a trib­ ute to Fascism and a symbol of the fascist appro­ priation of the First World War legacy. In 2014, a permanent exhibition was opened in the monu­ ment’s crypt: (‘BZ ’18–’45 One Monument – One City – Two Dictatorships’) with the aim to disarm the aggressive ideological connotations of the struc­ ture and to replace it with a new message of peace and reconciliation: to ‘desacralise a fascist relic’ (Leogrande 2014). Desacralisation is a means to contextualise politically charged buildings: by exposing the detested ideology that they represent they are stripped of their original ‘sacred’ character. Neglect Neglect can have the character of a compromise, combining recognition of an object as heritage that requires preservation with deliberate neglect of its maintenance. This turns the monument into a dis­ play of the distance felt to a previous, collapsed political system and downplays its historical sig­ nificance. Neglect can also prevent a ‘sacralisation’, the process by which a monument or site becomes a shrine for political groups with totalitarian agendas. Although the former Nazi Party Rally Grounds in Nuremberg were severely bombed during the war, much of them still remain. These buildings and spaces constitute a challenge to heritage authorities ‘because they have virtually no credible meanings or uses in a democratic society, except for the reflection of political horror’ (Benton 2010:135). Some parts have been demolished, while the sym­ bolically significant Zeppelin Building has delib­ erately been left in a state of disrepair as a prof­ anation, a ‘demythification’, of the structure (Macdonald 2009). Mutilation The tension between, on the one hand, allowing objects laden with strong associations to ‘bad’ regimes to remain part of the nation’s heritage and, on the other, eagerness to demonstrate condemna­ tion of said regime, sometimes leads to a combina­ tion of preservation and destruction. An example is the practice called ‘military castration’, which in 68 THE MONUMENT TO VICTORY, Bolzano. Photo: Håkan Hökerberg. MUTILATED FASCES, Direzione Generale delle Entrate, Milan. Photo: Håkan Hökerberg. 69 Italy takes the form of removing the blade of axes from the Lictoral fasces, to deprive it of its most aggressive element while preserving the mutilated symbol as heritage. Such ‘castrated’ fasces can be found on masses of buildings and monuments in the Italian urban landscapes – and their original design often remains easily readable. (Benton 1999:218, 2010:156) Demolition Time has a particular relevance for monuments as they usually have one single function: to commu­ nicate or propagate a message related to individ­ uals, groups or historic events. When we become entirely oblivious of their original history and causes of erection, they have failed their purpose; the intended connotations of the monuments are lost (Connerton 2009:34). The ‘one­dimensional’ character of rhetoric monuments raised by totalitar­ ian regimes makes them sensitive to political par­ adigm shifts. They are frequently objects of icono­ clasm and vandalism because of their ideological nature as well as their public accessibility (Gam­ boni 1997:67). During the first decade after the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe, the destruc­ tions of statues and memorials of communist lead­ ers and ideologists became almost an epidemic; Russia has been called the land of empty pedestals. To demolish controversial monuments might seem the simplest solution, but that it can also be a very provocative one is illustrated by the destruc­ tion of the Lenin statue in Berlin. This 20 m. high statue was raised in 1970 in former East Berlin to celebrate the centennial of Lenin’s birthday. Soon after the German reunification the local govern­ ment decided to tear it down, as it was not seen as convergent with the new democratic federal state. However, the opposition against its removal was massive as the statue was regarded as an important symbol of GDR history. Many resented what they felt as a forced adaptation to a united Germany dominated by the West Germany (Ladd 1998:196­ 199). Demolition of entire buildings solely for ideo­ logical reasons is less common. In contrast to one­dimensionally rhetoric monuments, buildings are weaker carriers of meaning and are more easily adapted to new political circumstances as they have several functions, not only political but also more operational. That said, a recent and much disputed exception is the dismantling of the Palast der Republik in former East Berlin (Ladd 1998:59­70; Wise 1998:114­120). Amnesia Collective amnesia can have significant conse­ quences for the preservation and perception of con­ troversial heritage. The main question is what causes it. Is collective amnesia an effect of national efforts to ‘censor’ modern history? Does the offi­ cially sanctioned historiography have the capacity to erase collective memory? As we have seen in the examples from Berlin, destruction of statues and monuments may cause furious polemics, which has led to the appearance of a less drastic approach whereby statues are removed from their original prominent locations in the city centre and re­erected in more remote places. The practice is particularly common in Eastern Europe, where the production of statues and memorials dedicated by leading communists was intense during the years of dictatorship. The Memento Park in Budapest, a ’statue park’ with 42 statues and monuments from the communist era, was opened in 1993. Even if statue parks are less radical solutions than demoli­ tions, such removal of monuments from their orig­ inal location deprives them of their political and historical context, and they become mere artefacts, associated with kitsch and nostalgia. Final remarks Any attempts at formulating the most appropriate approach to ideologically difficult heritage must be avoided; the varying levels of political significance, explicit iconography and aggressive rhetoric make it necessary to decide on the best approach to each individual heritage from its own specific circum­ stances. Physical preservation is obviously prefera­ ble as it is fundamental to the understanding of the historical and political conditions that brought the heritage into being. However, the nature and state of preservation can vary: conservation, re­use, des­ acralisation, neglect or mutilation – according to how the heritage is perceived and used in the pre­ vailing political climate. It is a towering challenge to ex­totalitarian states to display a negative and oppressive past while at the same time expresses its distance to it. The ability to be reconciled with a difficult his­ tory and work for the recognition of its physical 70 remains as heritage is an important manifestation of the solidity and legitimacy of a modern demo­ cratic government. In the words of Benton: ‘…the remains of the works of tyrants and oppressors may reassure later generations of the healthy survival of their own culture’ (Benton 2010:131). REFERENCES Arthurs, J. W 2010. ”Fascism as ’heritage’ in contemporary Italy.” In Italy Today: The Sick Man of Europe, edited by Mammone, A., Veltri, G. London: Routledge, 114–128.  Benton, T. 1999. ”From the Arengario to the Lictor’s Axe: Memories of Italian Fascism.” In Material Memories: Design and Evocation, edited by Kwint, M., Breward C. and Aynsley J. Oxford: Berg, 199–218. Benton, T. 2010. ”Heritage and changes of regime.” In Under­ standing Heritage and Memory, edited by Benton. T. Manches­ ter University Press in association with The Open University, UK, 126–163. Connerton, P. 2009. How Modernity Forgets. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dolff­Bonekämper, G. 2008. ”Sites of Memory and Sites of Discord. Historic monuments as a medium for discuss­ ing conflict in Europe.” In The Heritage Reader, edited by Fairclough, G., Harrison, R., Jameson, J. H. Jr. and Schofield J. London, New York: Routledge, 134–138. Gamboni, D. 1997. The Destruction of Art. Iconoclasm and Vandal­ ism since the French Revolution. London: Reaktion Books. Gillis, J.R. 1994. Commemorations. The Politics of National Identity, Princeton: Princeton University Press. Ladd, B. 1998. The Ghosts of Berlin. Confronting German History in the Urban Landscape. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Leogrande. A. 2014. “La redenzione elettronica di un relitto fascista.”. In pagina 99we, sabato 6 dicembre 2014, 29. Lowenthal, D. 1993. The Past is a Foreign Country, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Lowenthal, D. 1998. Possessed by the Past. The Heritage Crusade and the Spoils of History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Macdonald, S. 2009. Difficult Heritage. Negotiating the Nazi Past in Nuremberg and Beyond, London, New York: Routledge. Misztal, B. A. 2003. Theories of Social Remembering, Maidenhead, Philadelphia: Open University Press. Renan, E. 1882. Qu’est-ce qu’une nation? Conférence à la Sorbonne le 11 mars 1882. Wise, M. Z. 1998. Capital Dilemma: Germany’s Search for a New Architecture of Democracy, New York: Princeton Architectural Press. 71 Session II: Demolition, preservation or adaptive re-use? Contemporary challenges for Postwar 20th Century Built Cultural Heritage 72 73 WESSEL DE JONGE Heritage for the Masses. About Modern Icons & Everyday Modernism, Historic Value & a Sustainable Future The theme of post­war modernist heritage can best be understood by reflecting on the roots of modern architecture and the concept of 20th century heri­ tage as such, and how it developed over the last decades. Today’s venue, this remarkable Audito­ rium Maximum, is an outstanding example of post­ war Modern Movement architecture, designed for the Kiel University by the award­winning modern architect Wilhelm Neveling, and built in 1965–1969. No doubt in 2008, its designation as a landmark – or Denkmal as you’d say in German – marked a new phase in the conservation of architectural her­ itage in Germany and perhaps the Baltics Region at large, addressing the built inheritance of a period as recent as the late 1960s. Yet it is not only the very designation of such recent heritage that calls for new and innovative conservation policies, but just as well its nature and character. Conservation policies Since in most NW European countries the urgency for conservation policies emerged around the turn of the previous century, the field of work for her­ itage professionals has widened its scope in an unprecedented way. The early benchmarks of archi­ tectural heritage conservation concerned the resto­ ration of historic mansions, neglected castles and ruinous churches – a limited quantity of ‘ancient’ buildings that were eventually appreciated by the public at large. The Netherlands was no exception. A first National Department for Conservation was founded in 1918, followed in 1960 by the country’s first Architectural Heritage Act. A fifty­year cut­ off date was to ensure sufficient distance­in­time to properly assess the historic value of such an object. Moreover, it was decided that structures built after 1850 were not eligible for listing in the national reg­ ister anyway. But around 1980 things started to shift. By that time the cut­off date did no longer prevent the inclusion of the works of H.P. Berlage, the expres­ sionist Amsterdam School and ‘De Stijl’, nor the early works of the Modern Movement, as these had all reached an age of fifty years or more. Despite the fact that an integrated policy on 20th century heritage was still lacking, and the 1850 time restric­ tion was still sustained, some early examples were randomly designated, in case there was an urgency to do so. An example may be the so­called White Villa’s in Rotterdam that were listed in 1980 when developments in the area threatened their survival. Today this ensemble includes the famous 1933 Son­ neveld Museum House (restored in 2001), and the wonderful Chabot Museum for expressionist art on the other corner. New challenges Around that time the first pioneering restoration projects were taken up in other European countries, like the 1937 Asilo Infantile Sant’ Elia in Como – a kindergarten designed by Giuseppe Terragni that was restored in the mid­1980s by his nephew Emilio – and the row housing by J.J.P. Oud in the Weißen­ hofsiedlung in Stuttgart, refurbished around 1985 according to the social housing regulations of that time – a fate that other Werkbund Estates, like the 1929 WUWA Estate of Breslau, today Wrocław in Poland, initially seemed to have escaped due to lack of funding under the socialist system. As a result of these early efforts, conservation professionals started to realise that the eventual nomination and listing of recent architectural heritage would pose completely new challenges. 74 First of all, many building of the modern era were constructed by using new and often industri­ ally prefabricated building materials like steel, glass and concrete, the decay and repair of which was still a blanc spot in conservation practice. Many modern buildings were not designed to withstand the ravages of time, despite buildings like Herbert Johanson’s 1939 fire station in Tallinn and other examples of Estonian ‘Lime Stone Modernism’ proving the opposite. Hence, we are often faced with structures that were not intended to last long, which presents a challenge when it comes to the authenticity of materials when taking up their con­ servation and repair. Secondly, there was a challenge in terms of quan­ tity. A 1939 cartoon depicts the Swedish Secretary for housing Nils Melander as a farmer operating a harvester producing rigid rows of hay bales, repre­ senting the results of the social housing industry in Sweden. An aerial view of the 1929–31 Westhausen Siedlung in Frankfurt, designed by Ernst May and his teams shows how real this picture actually was. These prototypes for mass housing paved the way for the production of millions of standardised hous­ ing units after the War. Some of these schemes have remarkable quality, like Tapiola in Helsinki, but due to the standardisation and repetition many other housing efforts met criticism. The amount of buildings constructed in the 20th century outnumbers all that has been built in all previous ages together. When looking at the post­ war period, in the Netherlands more than 75% of all our building stock has been constructed since the Second Wold War. In many countries in the Baltic region these figures may even be higher – for sure they are in Finland. As a result, the series of 20th century buildings initially expected to be nominated for listing, may have easily jammed the entire system of designation and funding. New selection instruments had to be developed, and hard choices were to be made in order not to lose it all – the credo was ‘Choose or Lose’. Moreover, where the architectural legacy from the old days typically celebrates the palaces of the noble, the churches of the clergy and the town halls and other icons of civic pride, the bench­ marks of the Modern Movement mostly involve ordinary buildings that were designed to create a better life for the masses, such as healthy housing and schools, hygienic and day­lit workplaces and health­care facilities – that is: ordinary buildings rather than icons, and all of that in large quantities. Even if many older landmarks can indeed be maintained as a museum site or tourist destination, the sheer number of the then expected 20th century landmarks implied that most of them could only be safeguarded by lending them a second lease of life in an economically viable and sustainable way, by adaptive re­use for new functional programs. This last point in particular is one of the corner­ stones of the present national architectural conser­ vation policy in our country, which is represented by the slogan: ‘Conservation through Development’ – a policy that is quite different from those in most surrounding countries, which tend to be more con­ servative. Yet some buildings are being regarded as so unique, that an integrated and careful conservation is required even when that would compromise their proper use – as we did in case of the 1928 ‘Zonnes­ traal’ Sanatorium in Hilversum. However, to my mind such a choice must remain an exception to the rule. So, making the proper choices is therefore essential. I’ll come back to that later but it is clear that understanding the true cultural heritage value of an object is of prime importance before such a decision can actually be made. Spiritual economy In order to understand the cultural and architec­ tural historic value of post­war modern architecture we may briefly go back to the roots of the Modern Movement shortly after the First World War. A research project at the Delft Faculty of Archi­ tecture in the 1980s, published by prof. Hubert­ Jan Henket and myself in 1990, unravelled how strongly and diversely the architectural concepts of the Modern Movement are actually rooted in the socio­cultural and technological developments of the Industrial Revolution. The industrialization of Western society caused an unprecedented process of urbanisation and a change of lifestyle – to suit the spirit and the realities of the Machine Age. Modern Times triggered a demand for new and specific building types, such as factories, power stations, office blocks, educational and healthcare facilities, and infrastructural buildings for railways and telecommunication. The functional programs for buildings became increasingly diverse and par­ ticular. And – as any designer knows – the more r -_ -"--=-1 ' ' . • ,J I 75 THE 1928 ‘ZONNESTRAAL’ SANATORIUM after restoration in 2003, showing custom-made replacement glazing and the re-equipped boiler house. Photo: Michel Kievits/Sybolt Voeten. EVENING VIEW OF ‘ZONNESTRAAL’ SANATORIUM after restoration in 2003. The lower floors are now in use for health care facilities, the upper floor serves as a conference centre. Photo: Michel Kievits/Sybolt Voeten. 76 specific a design solution is, the more short­lived it is likely to be as well. Vanguard architects in the 1920’s acknowledged a direct link between the design, the technical lifespan of a building and user requirements over time. As the time span for any such a particular use shortened as well, time and transitoriness ultimately became important issues in the architectural discourse. Taken to the extreme, this leads either to a tran­ sitory architecture or an adaptable one. The conse­ quent translation of these ideas into practice pro­ duced some remarkable examples of Modern Movement architecture, of which both the ‘Zon­ nestraal’ Sanatorium and the contemporary Van Nelle Factory in Rotterdam are stunning examples in the Netherlands, for both of which I’ve had the pleasure to be involved in their preservation as an architect later on. Ruled by the principle of utmost functionality, for both buildings a rigorous distinction was fol­ lowed out between load bearing structures and infills to allow for maximum functional flexibil­ ity. Light and transparent materials in the facade were to ensure the unhampered access of daylight and fresh air. Based on scientific research, archi­ tects took advantage of the specific qualities of materials to construct as light as possible, with a minimum of material used. Related to the idea of varied lifespans was the introduction of prefabri­ cation for building components, allowing the easy replacement of deteriorated parts, as well as future adaptation to respond to functional change. The Dutch Modern Movement architect Jan (Johannes) Duiker (1890–1935) labelled this approach ‘spiritual economy’ that, as he wrote in 1932, ‘leads to the ultimate construction, depending on the applied material, and develops towards the immaterial, the spiritual.1 In their search for opti­ mal constructions, buildings were designed with an extreme sensitivity concerning building physics. Functionalism and rationalism With ‘Zonnestraal’, designed between 1926 and 1928, Duiker with his associate Bernard Bijvoet (1889–1979) produced a first and arguably most direct response to a short­lived functional program in his professional life. Duiker advocated an archi­ tecture that would be the result of reason rather than style. He promoted the idea that whenever a building’s purpose had to change, the form would seize its right to exist and the building must be either adapted or demolished altogether. In doing so, he interpreted buildings as utilities with a lim­ ited lifespan by definition and – in the case of the sanatorium – even as ‘disposables’. Based on a solid belief in Science and Progress, the sanatorium buildings were indeed established in the conviction that tuberculosis would be exter­ minated within thirty years. The materials and con­ structions adopted for its construction were appar­ ently chosen to last just for that period. In doing so, he managed to subtly balance user requirements and technical lifespan with the limited budget of the client, creating structures of breathtaking beauty and great fragility at the same time. Hence, in such cases, we are faced with the con­ servation of structures that were intended to be transitory. And indeed, ‘Zonnestraal’ lost its san­ atorium function – after 29 years. It was trans­ formed into a general hospital in 1957 and finally abandoned in the 1980s. It is clear that the conser­ vation of such buildings poses great challenges in both conceptual and material terms as the idea of transitoriness must be understood as part of the original design intention. The sanatorium buildings seem to evoke a strik­ ing demonstration of Adolf Behne’s original defini­ tion of ‘functionalism’ of 1923, as opposed to ‘ration­ alism’. Behne (1885–1949) published his ideas later in his ground breaking publication ‘Der Moderne Zweckbau’ of 1926. He defined functional planning to depart from the program and to involve the care­ ful design of individual spaces for each particular use, with specific dimensions and performance char­ acteristics, organically producing a tailor­made suit. Indeed, in ‘Zonnestraal’s main building each room has particular dimensions, and even the height of the spandrel varies according to the individual use of the space concerned. It is self­evident that the specificity of this architectural solution went hand in hand with a short functional life expectancy. The Van Nelle Factory, designed between 1925 and 1928 by Leen van der Vlugt (1894–1936) and Jan Brinkman (1902–1949), on the other hand complies with Behne’s definition of ‘rationalism’, providing large quantities of generic space to accommodate a use that would greatly vary over time – typical of production processes. 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