In 2015, the last excusion before leaving Berlin took us to the Olympic Village of the 1936 Games - a fortunate choice! A yr later, it was sold to an investor specialised on developing historic sites. In 2019, construction began to create a new residential quarter.

A 🧵 walk ...
2/
The Olympic Village 1936 is located 18km west of Berlin. It housed 3,600 male athletes of 40 nations in 136 houses (161 buildings in total) and came with track & training fields, a gym & swimming pool, dining halls, surgeries & a hospital, a Finnish sauna, & a forest lake.
3/

Designed by Werner March, who also drew up the plans for the Olympic Stadium, it was built in less than 2 years, with 161 buildings, 6.5km of roads, on an area of 500,000m² (about 70 football pitches).
4/

During World War II it was used by the German military, from 1945 until 1992 by the Soviet Army, and then left to decay until in 2005 DKB foundation stepped in & developed & managed it as a historic site.

Let's have a look and a wander ... with pictures from 1936 and 2015.
5/

Enter the Village via the track field, in the background the swimming pool. Along the side, the first of 136 bungalow-style team quarters. Of a few, only the foundations remain, others were much decayed, one was restored to recreate Jesse Owens quarters.
6/

Every team building, named after German towns & cities, provided double-rooms for the athletes, central heating, showers, toilets, a coin-operated telephone and a common room, always located at the south side of the building, with large glass doors leading out to a terrace.
7/

On to the swimming hall, with fully retractable, electric glass windows (a sensation at the time), shower, changing & massage rooms and outside a bath to clean your feet before entering.

(As the building was unsafe, the pictures were taken through the windows.)
7/

A 1936 postcard shows the inside & windows.
8/

The largest and most prominent building, the "Speisesaal der Nationen" (dining hall for all nations) provided a room for each team with the kitchens located around the inner court. The top floor offered a view of the Olympic Stadium.
9/

It was designed with war use in mind [1936 !], and indeed served as a military hospital during WWII (hence the balconies, so patients could be wheeled out to get some fresh air).
10/

Below, the menu.

Footnote: Only few of the Olympic teams were allowed alcohol: the Italians and French were permitted wine, the Belgians and Dutch beer, of course. 😉
11/

Moving over 1,000 trees during construction, a forest, Finnish sauna and forest lake were created. After an English newspaper commented that all that was missing in such an idyllic spot were storks, the organisers had some captured and brought over from Berlin Zoo.
12/

And lastly, the "Birkenring" (ring of birches), an open rondell set into the ground, where the local marching band played every morning.
13/

When the Red Army moved in after 1945, they added housing for soldiers, and a Russian café. Up to 5,000 soldiers were here stationed at a time. (Footnote: The troops participated in the suppression of the East German workers' uprising on 17 June 1953.)
14/

On to today ...

In 2016, plans were drawn up to convert the dining hall & surrounding area into apartments and townhouses. As the area & buildings were heritage protected, building restrictions applied. Construction began in 2019, to be completed at the end of this year.
15/

Marketed as G.O.L.D. Garden City Olympic Village 1936 (Gartenstadt Olympisches Dorf), the dining hall building will house 115 flats, maisonettes & penthouses & communal facilities (sauna, roof terrace, lounge, courtyard w/ yoga lawn & boule course).
terraplan.de/aktuelle-marke…
16/

Around it, using/replacing existing structures, townhouses & an outer ring of apartment buildings w/ flats of various sizes, some w/ care services for elderly or dementia patients. A playground, sports path, Thai chi lawn & extensive lawns & a forest.
gold1936.berlin/gold/gartensta…
17/

Here some examples of what the architects have in mind for the dining hall apartments.

source: gold1936.berlin/gold/gartensta…, where you also find apartmemt layouts)
18/END

So there you are. A historic site, long forgotten, put to new use. Newspaper reports say most of the apartments have been successfully sold.

From Olympic Village to Garden City - a new lease of life.
Add.

Thank you all for persevering through this admittedly long thread and your kind and generous replies!

It took a bit of time to put all this together and I am so pleased so many of you found it interesting!

Thank you! x

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with TheBossRoss 🇪🇺 🧶 ❄ 📷 6x💉

TheBossRoss 🇪🇺 🧶 ❄ 📷 6x💉 Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @BettinaSRoss1

Jul 25
🧵 Cøvid-conscious people: Pls see that reports on waves/outbreaks make no difference bcs most are no longer afraid of it. They think you get it & get over it. The news blackout on its overall, long-term, delayed damage is so complete, even new research on it doesn't get through.
2/ Denial & trivialisation are the perfect mix for those who want to return to pre-2019. That's why they're so fully & completely accepted. People don't now believe the data, research, threat bcs they don't *want* to & no fact will be strong enough to offset that feeling.
3/ On Côvid, we're walking the Brexit path: emotion / belief remain stronger until people are (ready to) see & admit the damage.
Read 9 tweets
Jul 20
It's just so important to see things from a different angle.

So here is how an IT helpdesk experienced the #Crowdstrike outage. 🧵

Please, read this even if you no interest in IT or know nothing about it. It doesn't matter. It's about appreciation for those who keep us going. Image
Image
Image
Read 15 tweets
Sep 6, 2023
🧵

Unglaubliche Szenen in der Apotheke. Ich muss mich erst mal setzen. Wo fang ich an?
2/ Mit 2 Rezepten für Antibiotika & post-KrebsOP Enzyme in die Apotheke. Tür weit auf (immer eine Erleichterung), 3 Apothekerinnen & Kunden, alle ohne Maske. Als ein Schalter frei wird, gehe ich 😷 rein.

Neben mir ein älteres Ehepaar. Beide Fatigue, Halsschmerzen, Magenprobleme.
3/ Er so schwach, dass er sich am Schalter abstützt bis die Frau faucht "Haben Sie denn keinen Stuhl für ihn?". Es wird ihm einer gebracht. Mir wird langsam mulmig.

Die Apothekerin ist freundlich, aber sehr zurückhaltend. Sie fragt die Symptome ab & schlägt Wick MediNait vor.
Read 20 tweets
May 30, 2023
Continuing on with my lose thread of threads about migration (see yesterday: family migration), let's talk about skilled migration.

I think there's a bit of confusion & still quite a bit of underappreciation going on there.

Where to start?
2/ Twice in the last few weeks the car we rely on (we really do) was stranded due to unavailable spare parts. A rear light, a magnetic valve - these aren't rare parts to break. And still, neither the maker (in various countries) nor any online shop was able to help.
3/ I quizzed the maker today on why it was such a problem. They said, after COVID & initial disruption after the outbreak of war against Ukraine there's 3 reasons: shortage of lorry/transport drivers, closure of spare part production sites across Europe, Chinese production delays
Read 12 tweets
May 29, 2023
🧵Migration also means spouses, fiancé(e)s, (adopted/step) children, & parents. All these people joining or accompanying loved ones. They might not bring an immediate economic benefit. They do, however, bring great enthusiasm for their new home & they make or preserve a family.
2/As a former Australian family migration officer, I assure you they also go through rigorous testing. Is the relationship genuine? Can they support themselves? Are they without criminal conviction? Are they healthy? What are their plans, their funds, their language knowledge?
3/ They spend thousands (& I mean, thousands) on the application, certified documents, translations, doctor's appointments, they send photo albums & videos & stacks of bills of living together, uncertain what it will take for a stranger to accept their relationship as 'genuine'.
Read 10 tweets
May 28, 2023
🧵I remember early in the pandemic when all were to stay at home, my mum suggested I could take a walk by the river. Now, that all were indoors, it would be safe. I replied, yes, but what if everyone does that? Ignores the rules designed to keep everything fair and everyone safe.
2/ Solidarity & consideration are cornerstones of every society. You can't police everyone all the time. (Even if you could, what kind of community would that be?) Our systems can't work when people opt out when they feel like it, don't care about being caught or about others.
3/ Paying one's taxes is another example. Our societies fund services for all from them. Streets & schools, public transport & playgrounds, hospitals & bin collection, police, public administration, libraries, theatres. We don't always use all. We pool together for everyone.
Read 6 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(