M17 Building

M17 Building
© Simon Menges

M17 Building

Zanderroth

ARCHITECTS
Zanderroth

CLIENT
Baugemeinschaft Magazinstraße GmbH & Co. KG

ARCHITECTS TEAM
Christian Roth, Sascha Zander, Anne Muller-Reitz, Anne Schubert, Elisabeth Schwarz, Nils Schülke, Jana Klingelhöfer, Tilman Heiring, Tilman Müngersdorf, Pia Schreckenbach, Dimitri Hess, Alina Störzinger, Isabel Fischer

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
friedburg & Co. Landschaftsarchitekten

PROJECT DEVELOPMENT
SmartHoming GmbH

PROJECT DEVELOPMENT TEAM
Sascha Zander, Claudia Schlüter, Kirka Fietzek, Laura Dietsch, Carmen Klören, Yifan Zhang

LOAD-BEARING STRUCTURE
knippershelbig GmbH

BUILDING TECHNOLOGY
i.b.s. Ingenieurbüro Scheibler

PHOTOGRAPHS
Simon Menges

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Berlin, Germany

CATEGORY
Mixed Use Architecture, Commercial Architecture, Residential

Situated between Alexanderplatz and Schillingstrasse, between East German Plattenbauten and the Kino International, and between Karl-Marx-Allee and a historic residential quarter, Magazinstrasse is a product of Berlin’s urban history.

M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges

Catercorner to the authoritarian grid used for planning a socialist capital, the street juxtaposes seemingly irreconcilable historical buildings from Berlin’s Gründerzeit era against Soviet prefab.

In this context, m17 is both a facilitator and conciliator, repairing the urban fabric.

It is an avant-corps at the end of a block, a residential building with a commercial ground floor.

M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges

It hews to the historical street line with one perforated stone facade in the Berlin tradition while offering a bridge to the landmark-protected Plattenbauten with its radically modern frontal facade.

It is an attempt to continue building at a site of negation.

Lightweight concrete is the material of its stone facade. One wall, one material.

M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges

The concrete is insulating and load-bearing; nothing is hung or clad in front of it.

The stone solidity functions as both relief and insulation, while the timber-frame windows offer light, warmth, and visibility—or not if desired.

Solar shades enable lower energy costs in winter, and the storage capacity of the mass-wall construction ensures a pleasant indoor climate in transitional seasons.

M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges

Floorplans follow the urban design: living rooms face the frontal facade, while smaller rooms run along the perforated facade.

M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges


M17 Building
© Simon Menges
M17 Building
© Simon Menges


M17 Building
Ground Floor Plan
M17 Building
5th Floor Plan


M17 Building
Axonometric - Facade Corner
M17 Building
Regular Floor Plan
M17 Building
Site Plan