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Starting with the Linear Pottery culture circular enclosures and long houses, the biggest buildings of their time, were erected in Germany, from around 5.000 BC. The Unetice culture erected large burial mound like the Leubingen tumulus and the graves in Helmsdorf and Bornhöck.
Berlin Modernism Housing Estates (Germany) Show map of Germany Berlin Modernism Housing Estates ( German : Siedlungen der Berliner Moderne ) is a World Heritage Site designated in 2008, comprising six separate subsidized housing estates in Berlin .
The Haus am Horn is a domestic house in Weimar, Germany, designed by Georg Muche. It was built for the Bauhaus Werkschau (English: Work show ) exhibition which ran from July to September 1923. It was the first building based on Bauhaus design principles, which revolutionized 20th century architectural and aesthetic thinking and practice.
The house has 269 rooms and occupies 8,100 m 2 (87,000 sq ft). It is situated in a 28-hectare (69-acre) park that overlooks the River Ruhr and the Baldeneysee [].. The main complex consists of the three-storied Wohnhaus ('residence') – topped by a belvedere, which originally contained the air conditioning ducts – and a three-storied Logierhaus ('lodging house').
Heliotrope in Freiburg. The Heliotrope is an environmentally friendly housing project by German architect Rolf Disch.There are three such buildings in Germany. The first experimental version was built in 1994 as the architect's home in Freiburg im Breisgau, while the other two were used as exhibition buildings for the Hansgrohe company in Offenburg and a dentist's lab in Hilpoltstein in Bavaria.
The house is located at Graugasse 8 in the south of the town towards the Rhine. Today the building is surrounded by vineyards. Today the building is surrounded by vineyards. It is separated from the river since the Bundesstraße 42 (federal highway 42) was built in the 1950s.
Historic house museums in Germany (2 C, 109 P) M. Manor houses in Germany (21 P) O. Official residences in Germany (1 C, 5 P) P. Palaces in Germany (17 C, 5 P) V.
The Middle German house first emerged in the Middle Ages as a type of farmhouse built either using timber framing or stone. It is an 'all-in-one' house (Einhaus) with living quarters and livestock stalls under one roof. This rural type of farmstead still forms part of the scene in many villages in the central and southern areas of Germany.