Ideological employers are complex. While
normal companies may not believe everything they preach to the public,
companies with true concerns see this differently. And when the left-leaning
newspaper “taz” needs a new office building, this presents an especially
difficult architectural challenge.
A proven architectural design method among
branded products is “storytelling”. Spaces should convey what the product and
company stand for. No one actually cares that the story is usually just made
up. Employees know it, customers suspect (but would prefer to be lied to about
their skin creams). But things get more complicated in cases like those of the
Catholic church, or the “taz”. Both employees and customers (that is the
believers or the newspaper readers) trust the substance of the story and have
an allergic reaction to lies and inconsistencies. The Catholics have a written
foundation that has been in place for 2000 years. By contrast, the ideological
left/green leaning setting that has flourished for 40 years at “taz” is both
heterogeneous and belligerent, and its beliefs are ever-changing. The paper’s
architectural selfportrayal is a tough nut that had to be cracked when it
decided to find room for around 250 employees in a new location owned by the
publication.
Showcase project
Leaving Kreuzberg’s biotope was difficult
to imagine. This is why they constructed a remarkable new building on the
abandoned space of a flower wholesaler by the end of 2018, just a few steps
away from the old location and in view of its frenemy, the “Bild” newspaper.
After all, “taz” isn’t just any old company. Under ever more difficult
journalistic conditions, it is a media showcase project of admirable
independence, one that readers and followers believe in. It’s only natural that
the method of church building was suited for designing the “taz” building,
considering the analogies. Just as traditional Christian semantics are over the
top in a house of God, drawing on common symbols familiar to believers, E2A
Piet Eckert und Wim Eckert Architekten trusted the taz’ obvious ability to
“interpret” the draft by using their trusted imagery as signifiers. The
chronically underfinanced “taz” media project carried by almost 19,000 partners
definitely does not have money to waste. This is the reason net-like statics
were selected, requiring as few components as possible whose surfaces do just
fine without finishing. Instead of posh offices, the atmosphere is more ‘rough
workshop’. Bold efficiency is written all over the building.
A Berlin of stone? Not if the new “taz”
publishing house can help it.
Iconographic
Described by the architects as a
“hierarchy-free system,” the statics consist of elements “where all parts have
to deliver the same performance and only achieve stability together”. The
founding generation of the “taz” couldn’t have put it better themselves – back
then, everyone was paid the same salary, from the office messenger to the
editor in chief. And the sophisticated, iconographic facade was simply a
reminder of early Soviet constructivism. But it’s a bit lavish for the smokers’
balcony. Inside, the red floor dominates as the sole colour. It’s justifiable
to ask whether blue, black or brown were even taken into consideration. The
custom-developed cafeteria furniture labelled with the “taz” paw print is
vaguely reminiscent of Bauhaus forms, and those looking to secure themselves a
souvenir after visiting the press are welcome at the “taz” memorabilia shop.
(No, it’s not a subsidiary of Manufactum!) This shop peddles ideological
keepsakes that reflect the founding principles of the “taz” community as much
as the entire office building does.
Surprising: Shrines reminiscing of deceased
editors are spread across the meeting room.
The raw support structure is visible
everywhere in the building.
The panorama office offers space for
events, as well as for yoga and table tennis matches.
The public canteen feeds more than just the
editors at lunchtime.
The canteen can be divided into different
rooms. “taz” events also take place here.
Shelves separate the open offices into
different workspaces
Schörghuber expertise:
Acoustic-rated and composite timber doors
The fact that the “taz” doesn’t have much
to go around but still wants to stand for a certain level of quality is
reflected in its publishing house. No pageantry, no swank – the newspaper requested
an open workshop. Though there’s lots of free space, doors were still a must.
However, they had to match the architectural concept, which is based on the
rawness of a workshop: exposed, unfinished concrete. Many of the doors and
steel frames are coated in various matching grey colours depending on their
function. The T90 firerated door, for example, is darker than the doors without
function. The acoustic-rated doors and composite timber doors featuring a
twomillimetre-thick aluminium cover also have a grey tint. Several of the doors
are painted in different colours on the hinge and opposite hinge sides – some
in a surprising Traffic blue. All the doors have concealed hinges and closers,
locks with low-noise latch and a premium coating. The only exception: Two
composite timber doors have a timber frame and VX hinges as well as an HPL
surface coating.
The building has an elegant appeal despite
its workshop character. The simple Schörghuber doors play a part.
The subtle grey of the doors matches the
raw concrete walls
Several doors are painted in a bold blue on
one side.
Location: Friedrichstraße 21, Berlin, DE
Schörghuber products: T90 fire-rated door,
acoustic-rated doors Rw,P = 37 dB, composite timber doors, timber lining
frames without decorative rebate
Hörmann products: 2-part steel profile
frames with bracket clamp fastening for retrofitting