SHARE
COPY LINK

DESIGN

Calls grow for national design museum

Despite the worldwide acclaim German-designed products receive, there's no national museum for design. But that could soon change.

Calls grow for national design museum
photo:DPA

Germany is renowned for great design: from Bauhaus to Dieter Rams’ work for Braun, it has helped shape the country both economically and visually. So it’s perhaps surprising that there is no central museum to showcase one of Germany’s most impressive export industries.

But the National German Design Council has started a campaign to rectify the omission. A foundation has been formed, plans are being drawn up and a somewhat controversial proposal has been made. They want to see a future German Design Museum right in the heart of Berlin. And they want it on the same spot where the the city’s destroyed royal palace is supposed to be built on the centrally located Schlossplatz.

The privately owned Vitra Design museum in Baden-Württemberg currently hosts temporary exhibitions, while regional applied arts museums cover parts of German design, but there is nothing comprehensive. The proposed museum would serve as a central hub for all things representing quintessentially Teutonic design.

The Design Council, founded in 1953, has around 170 members whose expertise cover a wide variety of fields ranging from design itself, to economics. From it, the German Design Museum Foundation was created as a platform for experts in design to collect and discuss ideas for the new museum.

Several prominent figures from Germany’s creative scene are already on the foundation board. And in the spring there will be a symposium to discuss a more concrete plan, as the project is still in the brainstorming stage.

The editor in chief of arts magazine “Monopol”, Holger Liebs, has made an impassioned plea on the foundation website, calling for a centre that “will exhibit design as a whole, not just pieces that have already gained international fame.”

Berlin-based artist and author Rafael Horzon added to the debate. “Up until now, design whether it is blueprints, sketches or models, hasn’t been paid much attention in the museum world,” he said recently.

“However, it plays a part in every level of society,” he said. “From the cars that we drive daily and the tables and chairs we sit at, to the televisions and computers that we look at every day.”

He also outlined his belief in the power of good design to change society, something, he feels, art fails to do. “It is not art that belongs in a museum, it is design,” he claimed.

It was Horzon who initially floated the idea of the museum being built on Schlossplatz in Berlin, instead of the controversial city’s palace which he feels “no-one really wants.”

Horzon has also been working on ideas for the appearance of the museum since July, his current one being a glass sphere 500 metres in diameter.

“Obviously the museum would display the legacy and importance of German design throughout history,” Horzon said.

“However it should demonstrate contemporary talent as well, and move away from the preconception that design is just raw steel furniture and sketches of cups.”

DPA/The Local/jcw

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

BERLIN

Why Berlin deserves its ranking as the ‘third happiest city’ in the world

A handful of German cities ranked among the world's 'happiest' according to a recent index, but Berlin took the top spot at third in the world. We asked some long-term residents about the best (and worst) parts of living in Germany's notorious capital.

Why Berlin deserves its ranking as the 'third happiest city' in the world

Berlin was rated the third happiest city in the world according to the “Happy City Index 2024”.

Other particularly happy cities in Germany are Munich and Cologne, which also qualified for the index’s “Gold” standard.

Leipzig also ranked among the top 100 happiest cities. Düsseldorf, Stuttgart, Hamburg, and Frankfurt all ranked in the top 250.

According to the Institute of Quality of Life, the Happy City Index ranks cities across the world according to “thousands of indicators…that directly relate to the quality of life and the sense of happiness” of city residents.

Cities in the index are given a score in five categories: citizens, governance, environment, economy and mobility. The citizens category, for example, looks at a city’s education system, its level of social inclusion and library resources.

Berlin received its highest scores in the citizens and economy categories, followed by mobility.

The city with the highest overall score was Aarhus, Denmark followed by Zurich, Switzerland.

In light of Berlin’s high score for happiness, The Local takes a look at what makes Germany’s capital a great place to live, as well as some things that residents often complain about.

A capital of accessible mobility

One thing that a lot of Berlin residents appreciate is how easy the city is to navigate without a car. 

Thanks to an interconnected network of trains, trams and buses, you can get anywhere on public transportation – and often in roughly the same amount of time it would take to drive. 

Berlin’s 190 kilometre tram network happens to be among the oldest in the world.

A tram drives past the famous ‘World Clock’ in Berlin. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christophe Gateau
 

Additionally, the city has a fair amount of bicycle infrastructure. It’s no Danish city, but there are enough bike lanes to make commuting across the city by bike an appealing option when weather allows.

Whether by train, bike or foot, visitors and residents alike tend to find that Berlin is a nice city for just wandering around.

Paul Sullivan, founder of Slow Travel Berlin who has lived in Berlin for 16 years, told The Local that as a “committed urban hiker”, he finds the city “incredibly laid-back and accessible, fascinating and full of interesting people”.

For urban hiking in particular, Sullivan added that it helps that the city is pleasingly flat.

Affordable living (despite rising costs)

In the Happy City Index, Berlin’s second highest score was in the economy category – which feels a bit ironic for a city long known for being “poor but sexy”.

But despite wages in Berlin being notoriously low compared to other major German cities, the city remains affordable overall. 

Asked what he likes about living in Berlin, content creator and tour guide Jonny Whitlam, told The Local, “The best part is the relative affordability.”

“Despite rising rents and groceries in recent years, average German wages are higher than many European neighbours, but cost of living isn’t significantly more, meaning that living, eating, and saving are a distinct possibility and attraction,” he added.

Affordable mobility is a factor here too, with Berlin residents being able to access all of the city’s public transportation for €49 per month with the Deutschlandtiket. Starting in July, residents could even opt for a local €29 Berlin-abo ticket instead.

Of course, as Whitlam mentioned, rising rents and living costs have delivered some blows to Berlin’s affordability in recent years.

Berlin has become the second most expensive German city to rent in, and rents continue to rise rapidly in the city despite rental price protections in place.

READ ALSO: Why are Berlin rents soaring by 20 percent when there’s a rent brake?

For now, however, Berlin rents are still cheap compared to many other big European cities. According to Statista, average rents in Berlin in 2023 were still well below those in Amsterdam, Lisbon, Rome, Paris, and Munich.

A playground full of culture and history

Mobility and affordability make Berlin a great place to stay for those who reside here, but arguably what draws newcomers to the city is its culture.

For Whitlam, Berlin’s “hedonistic bent” is among the city’s draws. Residents and visitors alike often find a taste of that hedonistic culture at one of the city’s many world-renowned techno clubs.

READ ALSO: Berlin’s techno scene added to UNESCO World Heritage list

Queue for Berghain club

Hundreds of people queue outside Berghain, Berlin’s most famous techno club. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christophe Gateau

Whitlam notes that Berlin’s rich and well-documented history also makes the city ripe for exploration. Between “Prussian, Imperial, Third Reich, or Cold War locations…you’re never far from something historically interesting and deeply significant,” he said. 

For Sullivan, Berlin offers a “sense that life can be lived differently…a willingness to embrace the alternative and quirky”. 

For some, an alternative life might mean attending FKK (nudist) events or sex-positive parties and for others it might mean growing vegetables in a community garden or living on a boat in the Spree.

Whatever it is you are into, you can probably find a community of people who share your interests in Berlin.

It’s not all wine and roses

There are many reasons why Berlin has earned its place on the Happy City Index, but it demands to be said that there are plenty of things that local residents take issue with. 

“I find it amusing that Berlin has landed in the ‘happiest cities’ category given the heavy weight of its history, the way Berliners have a reputation for routine grumpiness, and that residents complain endlessly about the long, miserable winters,” said Sullivan, putting his finger on a couple common complaints.

Beside grumpy locals and bad weather, the other most common complaint is having to deal with bureaucratic nightmare scenarios.

“Bureaucracy, and the glacial pace of it, is one of the worst things about living in Berlin,” said Whitlam.  

He added: “I have sat before government officials that have asked me to come back with this or that piece of paper, and then been amazed that I have scanned it and saved it in the cloud…This reticence towards technology isn’t just annoying, it will leave this country left in the dust as everyone else moves forward.”

Thankfully, for Berlin residents, after you’ve spent some time doing battle with bureaucracy, you can go for a walk through the park, and have a modestly priced drink by the Spree.

SHOW COMMENTS