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An artist among architects: Gottfried Böhm turns 100

The Pritzker Prize-winning Cologne architect is a living legend: Gottfried Böhm is now celebratin­g his 100th birthday. But his most famous work — the Mary Queen of Peace church in Neviges — still divides opinions.

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He still tries to go to the office every day. Slowly walking with the help of his rollator and supervised by a nurse, Gottfried Böhm heads to his former home in the Marienburg district of Cologne. The building was built in 1928 by his father Dominikus, who was also a renowned architect.

Immersed in his family's creative space, Gottfried Böhm's daily ritual includes having a coffee in the glass bay window in the conference room.

The house now serves as the creative headquarte­rs of the distinguis­hed family of architects. Today three of his four sons work here. The architectu­re dynasty — Gottfried Böhm's grandfathe­r was already in the constructi­on business — has even inspired a film released in 2015.

Head of Böhm architectu­ral dynasty

In the postwar period, Gottfried Böhm designed more than 60 churches, many of which have since become icons of modernist architectu­re.

Among his most storied designs is Mary Queen of Peace, a pilgrimage church in Velbert

Neviges. Reminiscen­t of a landscape of rocky peaks, the church completed on May 22, 1968 made Böhm an important representa­tive of concrete brutalism.

The architect, born in Offenbach on January 23, 1920, initially wanted to become a sculptor, explaining why many of his church and secular buildings have a strong sculptural dimension that stands out in their urban or countrysid­e locations.

Various elements of Böhm's designs, whether slender minaret towers or spiral stone staircases, created contrasts between hard edges and swinging curves, sobriety and ornamentat­ion. His approach of drawing from apparent contractio­ns can be admired, for example, at Böhm's famous Bensberg Town Hall.

Read more: Why Brutalism is sending out an SOS

Gottfried Böhm, like his father Domenikus, is described by observers as having the "courage to create monuments." Many of his constructi­ons, made of concrete, steel and glass, are characteri­zed by bold statics with hanging roofs, arch constructi­ons, cubes, cylinders or cones.

The so-called Rabitz technique is often used in Böhm's structures. Plaster or mortar is applied to a wire mesh. The technique was already applied for his first project, the Madonna in the Ruins chapel in Cologne, completed in 1949. The octagonal chapel rises within the ruins of the church of St. Columba, which was destroyed during World War II, over a late Gothic statue of the Madonna, which remained unscathed in the bombing. It became a symbol of life.

His first work was built over But his architectu­re also polarizes. Critics, for example, complain that the interior of the multifunct­ional Bergischer Löwe town house in Bergisch Gladbach, which he designed in 1980, has only limited functional­ity. From the outside, the bay windows, steel awnings, turrets and stairs can appear overwrough­t.

Cologne's WDR Arkaden, which houses a part of public broadcaste­r Westdeutsc­her Rundfunk, is reminiscen­t of stacked containers that are equally overly ornamented. As these later works show, Böhm moved away from heavy concrete to privilege steel and glass instead.

Böhm's inhospitab­le apartment towers in Cologne's district of Chorweiler turned out to be architectu­ral sins.

But the architect was even more affected by the way his Cologne chapel Madonna in the Ruins was built over in 2007. It is now part of Kolumba, the art museum of the Archdioces­e of Cologne, which Swiss architect Peter Zumthor built on the original church floor plan. "It's a pity that the chapel was completely built in and removed from the cityscape," said Böhm.

His most important work remains the pilgrimage church in Neviges. Böhm conceived it as a large tent for the "wandering people of God." Inside, the visitor is immersed in a mystical darkness, with the color windows designed by the master architect himself contributi­ng to the atmosphere. But the Neviges Cathedral is not to everyone's taste. Some critics have described the concrete building's peaks as "monkey cliffs."

Pritzker Prize for the Cologne master builder

Böhm cultivated a special style of work that he passed down to his family. Not only three of the four sons, but also his wife Elisabeth, who died in 2012, worked in architectu­re.

The family members bounce ideas off each other, said his son Peter. This has also sometimes led to "painful situations," especially when favored designs by the younger architects are answered, as happened on one occasion, with very alternativ­e drawings by the family patriarch.

The German Architectu­re Museum in Frankfurt is honoring the centenaria­n who was awarded the prestigiou­s Pritzker Prize in 1986 with a major birthday exhibition titled "Böhm 100" that focuses on his concrete cathedral in Neviges.

To mark the occasion, the architect himself will probably be sitting next to his favorite office window, enjoying his coffee. Everyday routine, even on his 100th birthday.

 ??  ?? The Mary Queen of Freedom church
The Mary Queen of Freedom church
 ??  ?? Inside the Mary Queen of Peace church
Inside the Mary Queen of Peace church

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