The Heinz Galinski School
Zvi Hecker
Berlin, Germany
The design unfolds its petals to form "a village for children".
Arriving in front of the school in the suburban Berlin
neighborhood, you do not see what is going on inside; the building
does not reveal itself immediately. The design, based on the
sunflower, unfolds its petals to form "a village for
children."

Photo: arcspace

Photo: arcspace
The school is a city within a city. Its streets meet at squares and the squares become courtyards. The walls of the schoolhouse also build walkways, passages, and cul de sacs. The outside of the school is also the inside of the city, because the school is the city./Zvi Hecker
I was very lucky Zvi Hecker took the time to show me around. It was a joyful experience being led into one of Hecker's colored pencil drawings where a curving "snake" intercepts with the sunflower theme. The petals form the classrooms; the curving snake connects and conceals them at the same time...you move through a landscape of walls and roofs, alleys and corners. It is always about light and how the light penetrates the building; direct light, reflected light, diffused light.

Drawing courtesy Zvi
Hecker
The sunflower is a metaphor, not in some abstract geometry, but
because of the way the building absorbs the light and projects it
inside. There are no parallel walls, the sunflower is actually
catching the sun...it turns with the sun the school absorbs the
light.

Photo: arcspace

Photo: arcspace

Photo: arcspace

Photo: arcspace
The spaces between the walls form the "canyons," the stairways are
the "mountains," the windows frame views or open up to balconies
and roof terraces. One never comes directly to an empty space, but
arrives slowly. There is a hierarchy of space; it is closed, but
never really closed. And there are endless hiding places for
children.
"All future revolutions begin here you always see children hiding and talking about what nasty things they will do soon", Hecker explains with a smile.

Photo: arcspace

Photo: arcspace
Hecker was at the site every day during construction. Although
they were designing and changing things to the very end, they still
managed to stay within the budget. The materials are ordinary;
painted stucco (36 centimeter hollow walls), simple concrete,
corrugated aluminum, asphalt sheets, and standard windows and
skylights. In some places the concrete ceiling has what looks like
an interesting yellow 'design' from the nails rusting in the rain
while the concrete was being cured. A wall left unfinished has
calculations and dates written on the exposed brick traces of the
people that worked on the building. "Children should know it is
hard work", Hecker says.
At the end of our visit, a bell rang and the corridors were suddenly filled with children laughing and running. We followed them through the slightly sloping snake like corridors out into the "village" square.
Zvi Hecker's Jewish Community School in Berlin must be considered one of the major works in our time for its thought provoking energy that makes us think deep about many things related to life and architecture, not least about the meaning of knowledge, expulsion, place, and death./John Hejduk
All Jewish institutions in Berlin are heavily policed. To get to see the Heinz Galinski School is a long process; groups must write in advance for a date, then apply for a permit from security...then wait two weeks for security to get the permit.
Facts about The Heinz Galinski School
Total Area:
16,404 m2
Constructed area ca. 8,000 m2
Architect:
Zvi Hecker
Contact Architect:
Prof. Inken Baller
Construction Firm:
Pegel and Sohn BmbH and Co.
Client:
Judische Gemeinde zu Berlin
Last updated: January 21, 2013
See also
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BookcaseArchitecture Tours L.A
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BookcaseCraig Ellwood
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BookcaseAsymptote: FLUX
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