| period | description |
|---|---|
| 1928–1932 | planning and construction period |
A first gynaecological clinic was established around 1878-83 after plans of the architects Martin Gropius and Heino schmieden along the brick route. In the period 1927-33 the buildings were replaced including older parts after plans of the Prussian above ground construction administration under Martin Kiessling, (the construction supervision lay in the hands of the building advice walter Wolff), by new buildings. The riparian zone was arranged new and the south situation for gardens and patient halls was used. Wolffs gynaecological clinic, an elongated, dreigeschossiger building of fineries with flat roof and strong break by the increased Mitteltrakt, was implemented in the form of the new sachlichkeit. The jumping back increased center section, input area, was originally shifted around 1955 in the course by construction measures (western cultivation of a short wing). The eastern end of the Gebaeudetraktes is semicircular closed and carries, a neglected vitreous attic carried by supports. The buildings are used today of the Charité (German rheumatism research center Berlin, Max-Planck-Institut for infection biology) and by the medical faculty of the Humboldt university. They stand under monument protection.

Administrative building of the former University Women Hospital at Tucholskystraße No. 2 in Berlin-Mitte. It was built 1880-1883 to a design by the architects Martin Gropius and Heino Schmieden. Other buildings on the lot between Tucholskystraße, Ziegelstraße, and Monbijoustraße were built 1892-1893 and 1927-1933. The whole complex has been designated a historic landmark.
April 17, 2010
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