Authors: Roger Moorhouse
carrying out his task. Almost overnight, Speer had become one of
the most important men in the Third Reich.
Thus empowered, Speer pressed on with the job of redesigning Berlin.
Though the plans would develop and be finessed over the coming
months and years, a project of works – complete in all its essentials –
was presented to the public only a year after Speer’s appointment, on
28 January 1938. The reaction within Germany was predictably enthu-
siastic, with newspapers carrying detailed explanations of the plans.
Der
Angriff
stated that the designs were ‘truly monumental . . . far exceeding all expectations’.12 The
Völkischer Beobachter
proclaimed grandly that
‘from this desert of stone, shall emerge the capital of a thousand-year
Reich’.13 The foreign press, though less effusive, nonetheless concurred.
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berlin at war
The
New York Times
described the project as ‘perhaps the most ambi-
tious planning scheme of the modern era’14, while
The Times
noted
that the scheme promised ‘to turn a substantial area of Berlin into an
excavation [
sic
] for 10 years to come’.15
Speer’s plans certainly did not want for ambition. In accordance with
Hitler’s original designs, they centred on a grand axis, which was to run
from north to south for around five miles, linking the city’s two new
rail termini. This grand new boulevard would begin at the South Station,
which would serve as one of the primary interchanges between local
commuter services and regional rail traffic approaching from the south.
Though it demonstrated uncharacteristic flashes of modernism in its
conception, with its framework of steel and copper sheeting visible
through a partially glazed frontage, the South Station at least conformed
to type in its scale. At over 1,000 feet wide, it comfortably surpassed New
York’s Grand Central Station.16
By design, the visitor stepping out of the South Station would be
dazzled by the vista that opened up before him. He would find himself
on an enormous plaza one kilometre in length and over 300 metres
wide. In the distance to the north, the epicentre of Nazi power, the
Great Hall, would be visible. The plaza itself would be lined by trees
and a two-lane thoroughfare, while at its heart a ceremonial drive
would be laid out, flanked with manicured gardens – or, as was later
proposed, captured weaponry.17 To either side, elegant, four- or five-
storey, neo-classical buildings would frame the plaza; hotels, restaurants,
a swimming-pool complex, and the ‘KdF block’ – a site to provide
entertainment for German workers.
After proceeding to the northern end of the plaza, the visitor would
encounter one of the key features of the project – the
Triumphbogen
.
This enormous Romanesque arch was essentially a gigantic version of
the Arc de Triomphe, which – at over 100 metres high – would have
dwarfed its Parisian counterpart. Square in profile, it was topped with
an ornate balustrade and an equine statue, while its 80-metre arches
would have housed a network of elaborate cloisters at ground level.
According to Speer, the
Triumphbogen
was ‘the heart of [Hitler’s] plan’.
It was, he wrote, ‘the classic example of the architectural fantasies
[Hitler] had worked out in his lost sketchbook of the 1920s’.18 Like its
Allied equivalent, the Menin Gate at Ypres, it was intended to serve as
a memor ial to the fallen of the First World War. Decorated with
brutality made stone
107
seventy-five bas-reliefs, it was to bear the names of the nearly two million
Germans who had died in that conflict.19 It was specifically in prepara-
tion for this massive edifice that the ‘mushroom’ had been constructed
in 1941, to test the load-bearing capability of the Berlin soil.
Leaving the arch, the visitor would follow the axis north, through
the administrative heart of the new capital. This area would be home
to many of the most important offices of the German state, including
the headquarters of the SS, and the ministries of Justice, Propaganda,
Foreign Affairs, Economics and the Interior. In order to counteract
the potential lifelessness of such a bureaucratic quarter, Speer reserved
a majority of the sites on the street for private buildings. Also, along-
side the ministries, he planned for
a luxurious movie house for premieres, another cinema for the masses
accommodating two thousand persons, a new opera house, three
theatres, a new concert hall, a building for congresses, the so-called
House of the Nations, a hotel of twenty-one stories, variety theatres,
mass and luxury restaurants . . . There were to be quiet interior court-
yards with colonnades and small luxury shops set apart from the noise
of the street and inviting strollers.20
Continuing north for around three miles, through this curious mix
of grey officialdom and brightly coloured hedonism, our visitor would
arrive at the Circus. Over 200 metres in diameter, the Circus was fore-
seen, in essence, as a large roundabout marking the intersection of
Potsdamer Strasse with a new North-South Axis. Its focus would be
an elegant fountain, with a central sculpture of Apollo mounted on
a stepped dais, surrounded by water fountains in a wider circular pool.
Skirting the outer edge of the fountain would be a further six bronze
figures, all by the noted Nazi sculptor Arno Breker. Surrounded by a
ring of six-storey, neo-classical buildings, including a casino and a
cinema, the Circus was intended to serve as the entertainment hub
of the new district. However, it would have been overshadowed –
quite literally – by a number of nearby edifices, whose purpose and
significance were far from entertaining.
Firstly, to the west, in an enormous block bounded by the Tiergarten
to the north and the Landwehrkanal to the south, the supreme head-
quarters of the German Armed Forces was to feature a large tower
108
berlin at war
looming over a central parade ground. To the north, meanwhile, the
monolithic Soldiers’ Hall was to be constructed. Though its precise
purpose was never explicitly stated, Speer suggested that the Hall
would serve in part as a military museum and in part as an ossuary
for Germany’s fallen, containing a crypt for the tombs of the country’s
field marshals. Its design, devised by the prominent architect Wilhelm
Kreis, represented the purest Nazi neo-classicism. Flanked by two
single-storey colonnades, with bas-reliefs of martial scenes and equine
statues, the front entrance of the Hall was a mass of vertical twin
columns rising over three storeys to support a flat stone roof.21
North from the Soldiers’ Hall, the boulevard continued for another
750 metres, through the comparative peace and tranquillity of the
Tiergarten, the former hunting forest of the Hohenzollerns, before
arriving at the East-West Axis – the first stage of the project, which
had been completed for Hitler’s birthday in 1939. Beyond lay the polit-
ical heart of the new capital. Two identical buildings, the Army High
Command and the new Reich Chancellery, would form an imposing
entrance. But the visitor’s eyes would inevitably be drawn to the
massive domed building beyond. The Great Hall, inspired by the
Pantheon in Rome, would be the largest building in the world. Standing
over 1,000 feet tall, topped with an enormous copper-clad dome, it
was designed to hold up to 180,000 of the Party faithful. The square
over which it towered was similarly immodest. Paved with granite,
Adolf Hitler Platz encompassed over 50 hectares and was intended to
be large enough to hold a million people. On its eastern side, the
square would incorporate the old Reichstag building – the former icon
of the German capital, now reduced to insignificance by the sheer
scale of the buildings planned to surround it.
Beyond the Great Hall, the line of the development, which previ-
ously had run along a north-south axis, shifted some 30° to the west
to match the orientation of the existing streets and to incorporate the
now redundant railway sidings. Here a grand rectangular lake would
be built, one kilometre in length and containing crystal-clear water,
rather than the polluted flows of the nearby Spree. On its western
and eastern edges, the lake would by bounded by further huge build-
ings, including the Berlin Town Hall, the city Police headquarters and
the Navy High Command. All of them would be constructed in the
stark, relentless symmetry of Nazi neo-classicism, or what Albert Speer
brutality made stone
109
called ‘our Empire Style’.22 Finally, to the north of the lake, beyond
two 100-metre stone obelisks set in manicured gardens, the visitor
would arrive at the North Station – the second new rail terminus, just
as grand in scale as its counterpart seven kilometres to the south.
Though Hitler’s interest in the Germania project was restricted
almost exclusively to the dramatic main thoroughfare described above,
Speer incorporated those glamorous headline plans into a wider, more
thoroughgoing reorganisation of Berlin’s infrastructure. Firstly, and
most importantly, the rail network was to be overhauled. In fact, the
entire project was actually predicated on this one aspect, as much of
the land required for the North-South Axis was to be reclaimed from
the redevelopment of railway sidings approaching the Lehrter Station
to the north, and the Potsdamer and Anhalter Stations to the south.
In the revised plans, these three stations, which handled much of the
capital’s local and national traffic, were to disappear and be replaced
by the two new termini. In addition, the other existing rail termini
were to be downgraded or removed entirely, while the two new stations
would be linked by a circular line which would skirt the city centre.23
The capital’s roads, too, were to be redrawn. The two new boule-
vards – the North-South Axis along which the majority of the new
building was planned, and the East-West Axis already completed in 1939
– were seen by Speer as the centrepiece of a radical redevelopment.
Where it had previously grown organically in a fairly haphazard fashion,
Berlin was now to be rationalised by the addition of a series of four
concentric ring roads, intersecting with the two radial axes. The inner-
most ring road would encircle the city centre and the Tiergarten, while
the outermost one was envisaged as sweeping around the entire metro-
politan area of the capital.24
One of Speer’s overarching intentions was to clear the city centre
slums and provide modern housing stock in the suburbs.25 To this end,
the
Südstadt
, or ‘South Town’, was designed to house over 200,000
Berliners and provide work for around 100,000. It was to be located just
inside the outer ring road, strung for around 15 kilometres along the
southern reaches of the extended North-South Axis, with a series of
monolithic apartment blocks alternating with smaller developments
of villas and family houses. Nearby, a military academy was planned, as
well as the headquarters of the Waffen-SS, a Reich Archive, numerous
industrial concerns and one of Berlin’s new airports.26
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berlin at war
The planning was not restricted to stone and concrete, however.
Though Berlin already had plenty of parks – such as the Tiergarten,
Humboldthain, Friedrichshain and Grunewald – it was nonetheless to
be further provided with green spaces for the amusement and recreation
of its inhabitants, and also to define the city’s suburbs and districts.
With this in mind, one planning document of the time anticipated that
no Berliner should have more than fifteen minutes’ walk to reach a park,
a forest or a public garden.27
Furthermore, the very nature of those proposed green spaces was
subjected to the closest scrutiny. Speer instructed a leading horticulturist
to draw up a list of shrubs and trees, outlining which of them were
suitable for planting at the roadside, on river banks or in marshy ground.28
Beyond the city limits, he even had large numbers of deciduous trees
planted to restore the original eighteenth-century flora of the region.29
The entire plan was extraordinarily ambitious. Given carte blanche
and an almost unlimited budget, Speer had designed a city that was
intended to become the very centrepiece of the civilised world – a
city whose scope and scale would bear comparison with the likes of
Rome. When Speer’s father, himself an architect, saw the plans, he
summed up the thoughts of many of his contemporaries succinctly:
‘you’ve all gone completely crazy’.30
Certainly, there was a substantial dose of arrogance and megalomania
in Speer’s plans. The enormous scale of the designs – ‘incomparably
monumental’31 as Goebbels put it – neatly expressed the puffed-up, self-
aggrandising misanthropy of Nazism. It is notable, for instance, that