viernes, 3 de abril de 2015

Rome


The Arch of Constantine was completed in 315 to commemorate the victory of Constantine at the Milvian Bridge in 312. However, most of the sculpture was reused from earlier monuments and it has also been suggested that the arch was merely reworked. It is also possible that it was originally commissioned by Constantine's rival Maxentius. The sculpture from Constantine's time include the frieze above the lateral arches and the column base and spandrel reliefs. The head of the emperor in the round reliefs originally depicted Hadrian but was reworked to resemble Constantine. The arch is similar in style to the Arch of Septimius Severus, which was built over 100 years earlier.


The Temple of Saturn was rebuilt between 360 and 380AD after a fire destroyed the previous building from 42BC. Most of the building material was reused from the previous temple or from other buildings. One of the few new architectural details were the Ionic capitals, which were carved in white marble for the rebuilding. Several of the columns were made by fixing together various broken pieces, which can still be seen in the bracing around the shafts. The original temple may have been built as early as 497BC.


Originally built as a mausoleum to Emperor Hadrian in the second century AD, the structure may have been fortified as early as the fourth century. The name Castel Sant Angelo refers to a vision by Pope Gregory the Great, which was associated with the end of the plague in 509. The 18th-century bronze statue of Archangel Micheal is a reference to this vision. The bridge was originally built during the same period as the mausoleum. The statues were designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in the 17th century.


The Church of San Basilio al foro di Augusto was originally built in the 9th century as a small oratory, making use of the existing apse of the temple of Mars Ultor and the wall of the Augustan forum. The ancient structures had probably been left as ruins after an earthquake in the fifth century. The church was rebuilt and dedicated to St John by the Knights Hospitaller in the 13th century and rebuilt again for Dominican nuns in the 16th century and renamed Santissima Annunziata. The church was demolished in 1932 to make way for the Via dei Fori Imperiali, leaving only the entrance and windows that had been pierced through the forum wall.


Palazzo della Cancelleria was built for Cardinal Raffaele Riario and was supposedly financed with winnings from one night of card games. Construction began in 1487-88 and was completed in 1513. Records were presumably lost in the sack of Rome in 1527 and the architect is unknown. Several names have been suggested, including Francesco di Giorgio Martini, Baccio Pontelli, Andrea Bregno and Donato Bramante, and several were probably involved due to the long period of construction.  
The fifth century church of San Lorenzo in Damaso was incorporated within the palatial facade, while the entrance portal was added in the 16th century by Domenico Fontana. It became the seat of the Apostolic Chancery in 1517 when Riario was forced to relinquish the palace to the papacy in the face of charges of conspiracy to murder the pope. The travertine stone used in the facade is said to have been taken from the ruins of the Theatre of Pompey. 


Bramante is unlikely to have been involved in the design of the facade of the Cancelleria, as he is not thought to have arrived in Rome before 1499. However, he may have had a hand in the design of the courtyard. The Egyptian granite columns were originally built for the Theatre of Pompey but had already been reused for San Lorenzo in Damaso.   


The Bramante cloister besides the church of Santa Maria della Pace was built in 1500-04. It was Bramante's first recorded work in Rome, on commission from cardinal Oliviero Carafa. The church was built on the site of a previous church called Sant'Andrea de Aquarizariis in 1482. The architect is unknown but was possibly Baccio Pontelli. Other suggestions include Meo del Caprino, Francesco di Giorgio Martini and Leon Battista Alberti. The dome was probably designed by Antonio Sangallo the younger and built in 1525. The church was almost completely redesigned and given a new facade in 1656-67 by Pietro da Cortona.   


Construction of Palazzo Farnese began in 1515 to a design by the architect Antonio da Sangallo the younger. Work was stopped by the sack of Rome in 1527 but expanded significantly after 1534 when cardinal Alessandro Farnese was elected pope. Michelangelo modified the original design with a less orthodox treatment of the top storey. Michelangelo also proposed to link the palace with a bridge across the Tiber to the Villa Farnesina. Work was continued by Jacopo da Vignola and completed by Giacomo della Porta in 1589. 


Palazzo Senatorio was originally built in the 13th century but the facade was entirely rebuilt according to a design by Michelangelo made in the 1530s. The work was carried out after his death by Giacomo della Porta and Girolamo Rainaldi in 1578-82. At the same time, a new bell tower was designed by Martino Longhi the Elder after the previous medieval tower had been struck by lightening. The pre-renaissance facade included a multi-storey loggia but this was later walled in to strengthen the building, while towers were added in the late middle ages and early renaissance.
The equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius was moved from the Lateran to its present position in 1538. The current statue is a replica and the original is kept inside the Capitoline museum. 


Palazzo dei Conservatori was built in the 16th century as the seat of the city's magistrates. The original facade had a portico on the ground floor and guelf-cross windows on the first floor. The facade was redesigned according Michelangelo's plans in 1561-84, with the exception of the central window on the first floor, which was altered by Giacomo della Porta to fit the distribution of space within. A new building was created opposite with an identical facade in 1603-54, which came to be known as Palazzo Nuovo. This work was carried out under the supervision of father and son Girolamo and Carlo Rainaldi  


The Lateran Palace as it now appears was built in 1586-89 to a design by Domenico Fontana for Pope Sixtus V. The design was continued when the palace was extended in 1735 under Pope Clement XII. The original palace existed in Roman times and was gifted by Emperor Constantine to the bishop of Rome in the early 4th century. The palace remained the principal seat of the popes for the next 1000 years and was extended in the 8th century, rebuilt after a fire in the 10th century and embellished under pope Innocent III in the 12th century. The place suffered two great fires in the 14th century and the popes eventually moved to the Vatican at the end of the Avignon papacy and the schism. The obelisk is the largest standing Egyptian obelisk in the world and was erected at its site in 1588, 50 years after the statue of Marcus Aurelius had been relocated to the Capitol hill. The obelisk was originally brought to Rome in the 4th century and placed at the Circus Maximus.


Construction of the church of Santa Maria di Loreto al Foro Traiano was originally begun in 1507, but the dome was only finished by architect Jacopo del Duca in 1596. The adjacent church of Santissimo Nome di Maria al Foro Traiano was built in 1736-41 by French architect Antoine Derizet. It replaced an older church that was demolished in 1748. The churches stand opposite Trajan's column, completed in 113.  


Santa Maria in Vallicella, also known as Chiesa Nuova, was built in 1575-1606 as the principal church of the Oratorians. The initial architect was Matteo di Citta di Castello, followed by Martino Longhi the Elder. The facade modelled on the Gesu was designed by Fausto Rughesi. The buildings opposite the church were pulled down in the 1880s to create a new thoroughfare. 


Palazzo del Quirinale began as a summer retreat built for pope Gregory XIII and was completed in 1585 to a design by architect Ottaviano Mascarino. The pope's death in the same year prevented the second building phase, which was intended to enlarge the structure into a great palace. However, work resumed under the next pope, Sixtus V, who hired the architect Domenico Fontana. The palace was completed under pope Paul V, initially by the hand of the architect Flaminio Ponzi and after his death by the architect Carlo Maderno. Further works were completed by Bernini in 1657-59, Alessandro Specchi in 1722-24 and Ferdinando Fuga in 1730-32.


Palazzo Barberini was built in 1627-33, initially to a design by the architect Carlo Maderno, who was tasked with enlarging a pre-existing building from 1549 known as Palazzo Sforza. When Maderno died in 1629, the project was taken over by Bernini. Maderno had been assisted by his nephew Francesco Borromini who continued to work on the project under Bernini's supervision. Some key features of the design such as the false-perspective windows are attributed to Borromini.   


Palazzo Montecitorio was originally designed by Bernini during the reign of pope Gregory XV as a residence for the Ludovisi family. Work was interrupted when the pope died in 1623 and was only resumed when Innocent X became pope in 1644. Carlo Maderno modified Bernini's design and added  the bell gable. An excavated obelisk was installed in front of the palace in 1789. The building had been designated for public functions upon its completion in the mid 17th-century and was selected as the seat of the Chamber of Deputies of the Italian parliament after 1870. The building was entirely rebuilt internally in 1900-1910 to designs by architect Ernesto Basile and a new section was built at the rear.    


The current baroque facade of Palazzo Madama is from the 1650s to a design by Cigolo and Paolo Maruccelli. The building was originally commissioned in the late 15the century by the Medici family and was completed in 1505. It was built on top of the ancient ruins of the baths of Nero. The building has been in use by the Italian senate since 1871.


In 1665, an Egyptian obelisk was discovered in the garden of the Dominican cloister of Santa Maria sopra Minerva. It was surmounted on a statue of an elephant sculpted by Bernini for the purpose and was unveiled in 1667 in front of the church. 
Santa Maria sopra Minerva was built in 1280-1453 on the model of Santa Maria Novella in Florence. The facade was only completed in 1725. Baroque additions were removed during restoration in 1848-55 under the direction of Girolamo Bianchedi and the interior was decorated in neo-gothic. Opposite the church stands Palazzo Severoli, a building originating in the 14th century but entirely rebuilt in 1878. It houses an academy that trains priests to serve as diplomats for the Vatican state.    


Palazzo della Consulta was built in 1732-37 by the architect Ferdinando Fuga to house the secretariat of the Sacra Congregazione della Consulta, which was the main state council of the papal states. It has served many different uses in the intervening years and has been the seat of the Constitutional Court of Italy since 1955. It was commissioned under pope Clement XII. The statues on the fountain were placed on the Piazza del Quirinale in 1588, the obelisk followed in 1786, while the granite basin was added in 1818. The statues are Roman replicas of Greek originals and stood at the entrance to the baths of Constantine. The obelisk is Egyptian and was one of two obelisks at the entrance of the mausoleum of Augustus. 


The inner facade of Porta del Popolo was originally designed by Bernini for the occasion of the arrival of Queen Cristinia of Sweden in 1665. At this time, the gate only had a single arch flanked by square bastions. The bastions were demolished in 1879 and two lateral archways were created in 1887 to facilitate traffic and Bernini's design was modified accordingly. The same treatment was given to the outer facade, which had been created in 1562-65 by Nanni di Baccio Bigio with possible involvement from Michelangelo who had passed on the assignment due to his old age. The four columns flanking the central arch were taken from old St. Peter's. The gate is part of the city walls that were created in the late third century. The buildings on either side of the gate were designed by Giuseppe Valadier in 1811-22. The police station on the left was given a dome to match the dome of the Cybo chapel of Santa Maria del Popolo while Valadier wrapped a building around the church to maintain symmetry. Valadier used the same design but without the section with domes on the opposite side of the square.


Corso Vittorio Emanuele II is a wide thoroughfare created by a resolution of 1886, connecting the Vatican to Piazza del Gesu, via Ponte Vittorio Emanuele II, which was designed in 1886 but only inaugurated in 1911. It largely follows the trace of the Via Papalis, the processional route used by the popes from the Vatican to the Lateran. 
Some of the buildings on the right survived the construction of the new street. This includes the Collegio Calasanzio, built in 1746 by the architect Tomasso De Marchis, Palazzo Ruggeri, originally built by architect Giacomo della Porta in 1588 but redesigned in the early 17th century, and Palazzo Celsi Viscardi, built in 1678 by architect Giovanni Antonio de Rossi. The buildings on the opposite side of what was previously a much narrower road were pulled down and replaced with new buildings. One of the buildings that were demolished was called Palazzo Amadei. Via del Plebiscito continues on the left of the church to Piazza Venezia.


The Altare della Patria or Vittorio Emanuele II monument was designed in 1885 by Giuseppe Saconni as a monument to the unification of Italy. The structure, which involved a collaborative effort  by various sculptors, was inaugurated in 1911 for the international exhibition commemorating 50 years of Italian unification but it was only fully completed in 1925. A whole medieval neighbourhood was cleared to make way for the monument, including a Franciscan friary, Pope Paul III's tower and the arch of San Marco.


Corso del Rinascimento was built in the 1930s and separates the districts of Parione and Sant' Eustachio. According to the plan of 1931, the street was intended to continue via Campo dei Fiori and past Palazzo Farnese and Spada to Ponte Sisto to link with Trastevere, but only the section between Piazza delle Cinque Lune and Piazza di Sant'Andrea della Valle was completed.  The work to remove the streets of Via del Pino, Pinacolo and della Sapienza began in 1936. Buildings from the 17th and 18th centuries were destroyed, some were reconstructed under the direction of architect Arnaldo Foschini and engineer Salvatore Rebecchini. The apse and transept of San Giacomo degli Spagnoli was demolished in 1938, the main entrance had been moved to Piazza Navona during a renovation in the 19th century, but this was reversed by Foschini and a loggia was added to the facade.  

sábado, 28 de febrero de 2015

China

BEIJING


The Forbidden City was built in 1406-20 and served as the main imperial palace for the Ming and Qing dynasties for almost 500 years. The complex consists of around 980 buildings and is 961 metres from north to south and 753 metres from east to west. 

TIANJIN


St Joseph Cathedral was built in 1913-16 in the French concession area, using brick imported from France. It was the tallest building in Tianjin for around 80 years. The three towers were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution but was rebuilt in the 1980s. It is also known as Lao Xilai Catholic Church.


The Tianjin Tower, also known as Jin Tower or Tianjin World Financial Centre, is a 337-metre office skyscraper. It was built in 2007-11 to a design by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill. At the foot of the skyscraper can be seen a bridge across Haihe river. This was built in 2003-04 to a design by Deng Wenzhong. 

HANGZHOU


A laughing Buddha statue at the Feilang Feng grottoes at Lingyin temple. According to legend, the mountain into which the carvings were made flew from India to Hangzhou as demonstration of the power of Buddhist teachings. Most of it was created in the 10th century when the Lingyin monastery was at its peak. The monastery was originally founded in 328 and has been rebuilt many times. The current buildings are modern restorations of late Qing buildings. The temple includes an 800-year old Buddha statue as well as the largest wooden Buddha statue in China.  

QINGDAO


The governor's mansion was built in 1905-07 as the official residence of the German governor-general of Jiao'ao, referring to Jiaozhou bay. The area became German territory on a 99-year lease in 1898 though the Germans had shown interest in the area since 1860. It was taken over by the Japanese after WWI. The governor was reportedly fired due to the high cost of his mansion.


St Micheal's Cathedral was built by a German catholic missionary society called Divine Word Missionaries, which had been present in Shandong since 1882. A mission hall and chapel was completed in 1902 and there were originally plans for a gothic style church but this was disrupted by the German surrender of Qingdao in 1914. The project was picked up again in 1928 and building was completed in 1934. 


The Qingdao Protestant church was built in 1908-1910 to a design by architect Curt Rothkegel as Qingdao's parish church. It has previously been called the International church or the Qingdao Gospel Church. 


Construction of the 140-metre Qingdao Custom House began in 1992, according to information by skyscraperpage. The little building on the right is a restaurant.


There are few tall buildings in the oldest part of Qingdao, mostly situated around Zhongshan road. This includes the 213-metre Parkson plaza completed in 1998 (left). The other buildings appear to be a complex of bank buildings and a government building. 


Signal Hill in one of the 10 major hill parks in Qingdao and is named after a signalling station from the German colonial period. An observation pavilion offers 360 degree views of the city.

TAI SHAN


Tai Shan is the eastern of the of the sacred mountains recognised in Chinese culture as the five great mountains, destinations of pilgrimage and ritual sites of imperial worship. The mountains are mostly associated with Taoism and Buddhism, while two other separate groups of mountains are known as the four sacred mountains of buddhism and the four sacred mountains of taoism. Tai Shan has been a place of worship for at least 3000 years. The tallest peak is the Jade Emperor Peak. The largest temple complex in the area is located at the foot of the mountain in the city of Tai'an. The complex is built on the pattern of an imperial palace and is only one of three such remaining in China, the other being the Forbidden City in Beijing and the Confucius temple in Qufu. Another temple complex, near the top of the mountain, is the Azure Clouds Temple.  

DATONG


The Hanging temple of Xuankongsi was originally built over 1500 years ago. According to legend, the structure was built by one single monk. Successive repairs and extensions have resulted in the temple as it stands today. It is built on a cliff face 75 metres above the bottom of a canyon basin and is located near Heng Shan, one of the five sacred mountains of China. It is the only remaining temple to unite the three religions of Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism.

SHANGHAI


The HSBC building on the Bund was built in 1921-23 to a design by architects Palmer & Turner. It was the Shanghai headquarters of HSBC until 1955. The bank was first established in Shanghai in 1865 and moved to the former Foreign Club in 1874. The bank purchased some of the neighboring properties in 1912 before redevelopment began around 10 year later. Palmer & Turner also designed the Yokohama Specie Building, the Yangtze Insurance Building and Bank of China Building, which are also all on the Bund.

The tower on the left was completed in 2002 to a design by John Portman and Associates. Its distinctive crown is in a shape of a lotus flower.


Tomorrow Square was built in 1997-2004 to a design by John Portman and Associates. The architectural firm was one of the first American companies to establish a China office in Hong Kong in 1979. A Shanghai branch was set up in 1993, by which time the Shanghai Centre had been completed in 1986-1990. At 165 metres, the central of the complex was the tallest in Shanghai at completion. Tomorrow Square reaches 285 metres and twists 45 degrees from the 37th floor to mark a change of function from flats to hotel. The lower section was originally intended for office space.


The Jin Mao Tower (420.5m) was the tallest building in China from 1999 to 2008, when it was surpassed by the nearby Shanghai World Financial Tower (492m). The latter held the title until the Shanghai Tower was completed in 2015, and taller skyscrapers have since been completed in Shenzhen, Guangzhou and Tianjin. Jin Mao was designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill; while the Shanghai World Financial Centre is by Kohn Pedersen Fox.




miércoles, 25 de febrero de 2015

Rheims


Construction of Rheims cathedral began shortly after the previous cathedral was destroyed in a fire in 1210. The chancel was completed and used for services in 1241 while the nave was completed in 1299. The west front was completed in several stages, resulting in differing styles for some of the sculpture. The upper part was finished in the 14th century, but in keeping with the previous concept. The cathedral was used for coronations of French kings. 

domingo, 22 de febrero de 2015

Oxford


Christ Church Cathedral in Oxford was built in 1160-1200, originally as the church of St Frideswide's Priory. There were plans to replace the priory with a college in 1522-29 but this was stopped in 1532 when the crown took over the property. It became the cathedral of Oxford in 1546 when the diocese was transferred from Osney Abbey after only four years. The diocese of Oxford was created in 1542 and previously belonged to the diocese of Lincoln. Christ Church has been said to be the smallest cathedral in England.


The Sheldonian Theatre was designed by Christopher Wren and built in 1664-68. The building was originally intended to be used for graduation and degree ceremonies but is today also used for music concerts and lectures. On the right can be seen the Old Ashmolean museum built in 1683 and Exeter College built in 1833-34 and 1856-59 by H.J. Underwood in the first stage of building and George Gilbert Scott in the second. The oldest part of this college is Palmer's tower from 1492. 


The Clarendon building (right) was built in 1711-15 to a design by Nicholas Hawksmoor. It was commissioned to house the Oxford University Press, previously located in the basement of the Sheldonian Theatre. In the back can bee seen the Old Indian Institute building, completed in two stages in 1884 and 1896. The institute was created to educate aspiring civil servants of the British Raj. The architect was Basil Champneys. The gable on the right belongs to an extension of Hertford College.


Radcliffe Camera was designed by James Gibbs and built as a library in 1737-49. In the back can be seen the Bodleian library on the left and All Souls College on the right. The Bodleian has its origins from the 14th century, though most of the existing building is from the 17th, including the tower of the five orders completed in 1613-19. The oldest parts of All Souls was built in the middle ages, though much of it was designed in neo-gothic style by Nicholas Hawksmoor and built in 1714-34. 


The new Ashmolean Museum was built in 1841-45 to a design by architect Charles Cockerell.


The building on the corner of Beaumont and St Giles Street, housing the Taylor Institution, was also designed by Cockerell and built in 1845-48. An extension in Bath stone was completed in two stages in the 1930s.


The oldest parts of Balliol College are dated to 1431 but the front on Broad street was designed by Alfred Waterhouse and built in 1867-68. The college chapel was designed by William Butterfield in 1857.  

sábado, 14 de febrero de 2015

Cologne and Dusseldorf

COLOGNE

St. Andreas is one of the 12 romanesque churches in Cologne. It was originally consecrated in 974 and rebuilt in the 12th century. The gothic choir and chapel were added in the following century.


Gross Sankt Martin was originally built between 1150 to 1250, after a fire destroyed the previous abbey.  Restorations were undertaken during the 19th-century and rebuilding took place after WWII, as the tower and nave had burnt to the ground in 1942. The exterior had been restored by 1965 while the interior was completed in 1985. Most of the buildings on Fischmarkt were built in "historical style" after the war destroyed 90% of the buildings there.


Construction of the cathedral of Cologne was begun in 1248. The eastern arm was completed in 1322  and sealed off from the rest of the construction site so it could be used for services while work continued. Construction came to a halt in 1473 and work only resumed in earnest in 1842. Surviving plans and drawing were used and the cathedral was finally completed in 1880.


The tower of the Cologne city hall was built in 1407-14 on a commission from the city's guilds. The rest of the building dates from 1330, having replaced a previous building from 1135.


The renaissance loggia (Rathauslaube) of Cologne city hall was built in 1569-73 to a design by Wilhelm Vernukken and replaced a previous loggia on the same location. The building on the left is known as Spanischer Bau. This was originally built in Dutch renaissance style in 1608-15 but was entirely rebuilt in 1953 due to war damage. 


The Jesuit church of St Maria Himmelfart was built in 1618-89 to a design by architect Cristoph Wamser. It is the biggest church in Cologne apart from the cathedral and may have incorporated parts of an earlier medieval structure. The rebuilding of the church after WWII destruction was completed in the 1980s.


The head office of the archbishop of the archdiocese of Cologne is located in this building, which seems to have been part of the monastery complex of St Maria Himmelfahrt.


Dom-Hotel was built in 1893 to a design by architects Heinrich Joseph Kayser and Karl von Grossheim. The hotel opened already in 1857 and the current building is the third Dom-Hotel on this site. The principal facade is on Roncalliplatz. The building suffered severe damage during WWII but was restored in the 1950s.


The building at the address Unter Fettenhennen 11 was restored to its original design in 1966 by architect Friedrich Wilhelm Kramer.


The Hohenzollern bridge was built in 1907-11 by engineers Fritz Beer and Friedrich Dirksen. It replaced the previous cathedral bridge from 1859. The new bridge was originally intended for rail and motor traffic but has only been used for rail and pedestrians since it was rebuilt after WWII.


DUSSELDORF

St Lambertus is possibly the oldest building in Dusseldorf. It was originally built as a chapel in the 700s by Anglo-Saxon monks, and replaced by a church in the 1200s. Further extensions and changes from romanesque to gothic were completed in 1394. Storms and a nearby explosion caused damaged in the 17th century and tower was rebuilt in 1815. It was rebuilt again after WWII in imitation of the previous leaning tower. In front of the the church stands the Schlossturm, the only remaining part of the city palace. This was originally built in 1260 and developed into a renaissance-baroque palace in the 17th to 18th centuries but was destroyed by fire in 1872. On the corner of Burgplatz is the old Arts and Crafts school built in 1883 by architect Eberhard Westhofen. The modern section is from the 1980s.


The catholic church of Saint Maximilian, usually referred to as Maxkirche, was built in 1735-37, replacing a previous Franciscan church from 1666-68.

The building that now houses the justice ministry of North Rhine-Westphalia was built in 1866-70 by architect Carl Ferdinand Busse. The high-rise in the back was built in 1960-64 and given a redesign in 2000 by Ingenhoven architects.


Johanniskirche was built in 1875-81 to a design by architects Walter Kyllmann and Adolf Heyden. The decision to build had been taken in 1859 and a site was found in 1874.


Rothes Haus in Josephinenstrasse is one of the rare 19th-century buildings to survive WWII. It was built in 1887-88 by architect J. Gorres.


Haus der Universität on Schadowplatz was originally built in 1896-97 for the Niederrheinischen Bank to a design by architects Heinrich Kayser and Karl von Grossheim. As the architects were based in Berlin, the actual work was carried out under local architect Max Wohler. The ground floor was built for offices while the upper floors were flats for the two bank managers.


The Rhine promenade was originally built around 1900 by moving the embankments and creating two levels with the lower level used for shipping. After WWII, there were plans to turn the promenade into a road for cars but a tunnel was built in the 1990s instead and the promenade was redesigned. The buildings in this section was mostly built around 1910.


Steigenberger Parkhotel was built in 1901-02 to a design by architects Heinrich Kayser, Karl von Grossheim and Max Wohler. It was completed in time for the Industry and trade fair in Dusseldorf in 1902. The north and south wings were extended by Max Wohler in 1912. The hotel was rebuilt after WWII without the original mansard roof and dome. On the left is a modern extension to the Galeria Kaufhof Dusseldorf. This was originally built for the department store Leonhard Tietz in 1909 by architect Joseph Maria Olbrich. 


Neuer Zollhoff is a building complex in the Media Harbour designed by architect Frank O. Gehry and completed in 1998. The three buildings are clad in white plaster, brick and stainless steel respectively. 


The western section of Schadowstrasse is a pedestrian street and one of the leading shopping destinations in the city. Landmarks include Schadow Arkaden designed by architect Walter Brune in 1994 and the Peek & Cloppenburg flagship store designed by Richard Meier in 2001. 


The office complex KoBogen was completed in 2013 to a design by the architect Daniel Libeskind. The high-rise in the back is the Dreischeibenhaus from 1957-60 by architects Hentrich and Petschnigg. The park on the left, Hofgarten, is regarded as Germany's first public park.