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The Sony Center

Berlin's City Within a City on Potsdamer Platz

By clarsonimus, published Mar 22, 2006
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Mega-projects don't always live up to what they are supposed to be. They might appear compelling from a distance but can disappoint you when you meet them "face to face". This cannot be said about Berlin's Sony Center on Potsdamer Platz, however. If anything, this fascinating group of structures has surpassed even the greatest of expectations.

It wasn't very long after the fall of the Berlin Wall that Sony began making plans for building its European Headquarters at Potsdamer Platz. A modern center was to be built upon the old, historical center of Berlin, so to speak. A "new modern" center, to be exact, if you prefer to use a term often attributed to the style of the center's architect, Helmut Jahn.

New Modernist has been defined as a style in which the use of new environmental technology predominates, new materials and methods of fabrication are used, and above all else, a redefinition of urban places takes place. This is certainly what happened at Potsdamer Platz with the Sony Center. But regardless which term you choose to use, this place is now a must-see destination for any visitor to "new" Berlin.

The "original" Potsdamer Platz was one of the busiest junctions in Europe. It was a synonym for fast pace city life in the 1920s and has been referred to by some as being the Times Square of Berlin. It was badly damaged during World War II however, and became a desolate no man's land during the Cold War years - the Berlin Wall i.e. the American, British and Soviet sectors cut right through the middle here and wooden observation posts along the West-Berlin side provided a rather morbid view to the "death strip" in the East.

After the German reunification and the Berlin Wall's disappearance, Potsdamer Platz then became the biggest building site in Europe. And it was during this period, roughly between 1993 and 1998, that a completely new quarter came into existence. The Sony Center, inaugurated in 2000, is viewed by many to have become this quarter's new center of gravity.

Takeaways
  • The �original� Potsdamer Platz was one of the busiest junctions in Europe.
  • Potsdamer Platz was a no man�s land during the Cold War.
  • A spoke-like elliptical umbrella covers the Sony Center�s Forum.
Did You Know?
The Forum is the public space around which the rest of the center was built.
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