North of the city of Dresden near the tiny village of
Klotzsche the first official garden city in Germany was built from 1909 onwards.
In actual fact the first real Garden City was built by the Krupp Housing
Department, but this was a company initiative and not a project backed by the
German Garden City Association. The location on the Heller brook fell under the
jurisdiction of the villages of Klotzsche and Rähnitz. The fields on the
sloping terrain were bought by businessman Karl Schmidt. The garden city
(actually rather a garden village) Hellerau was developed together the Dresdner
Werkstätten für Handwerkskunst, set up by Schmidt. This factory later became
the collectively run Deutscher
Werkstätten.
The idea(l) was to create a planned community that
could grow organically from the initiatives of the community. Community
building was an important impetus to creating this rather isolated satellite.
Many of the early garden villages in Germany are closely associated with
progressive thinking and the social reform movement (Lebensreform). The factory and workshops are located at the bottom
of the slope along a pre-existing road linking Dresden and Moritzburg.
The garden village of Hellerau was built next to the
furniture factory of the Deutscher Werkstätten (1). The cultural hub of the
Festspielhaus (2) is located to the north. On the west side the cemetery (3) is
located. The functional central focus is the Market Square (M) with shops
around is and on the corner the Gaststätte (G). Other amenities are a kids
playgrounds (k), a public park (p) and football pitches (f) next to the well
pool.
The layout of the garden village of Hellerau follows
the underlying landscape with a series of curvilinear streets going up the
slope. A pool was created at a natural well. The centre of the garden village
is a market laid out on Sitte-esque principles of artistic urban design. There
are three distinct spatial sections. Several well-known architects worked on
the buildings in Hellerau, including Richard Riemerschmid, Heinrich Tessenow,
Hermann Muthesius, Kurt Frick, George Metzendorf, Wilhelm Kreis and Bruno Paul.
The buildings were designed in a German vernacular style, with cream rendered
walls or wood planking, red tile roofs and window shutters. Buildings are
generally one storey, normally with an attic with bedrooms. Around the market
and near the old village of Klotzsche buildings are higher, up to 3 storeys.
The factory is -in part- also higher, the same goes for the former water tower.
The garden village was designed as an organic unit
with a clear centre around the market. Spatially and stylistically this garden
village can be divided into three sections: the central section (a) with a mix
of apartments, terraced housing and (semi)detached houses; the western section
(b) with (semi)detached cottages, partly constructed in wood; and a northern
section (c) with terraced housing. Especially section a shows Unwinesque design
devices (in yellow and red).
Hellerau was built as a unit of living, working,
culture and education, and attracted many cultural visionaries from all over
Europe. Among them were many architects and teatchers and creative types
including Émile-Jaques Dalcroze (composer) and Mary Wigman (choreographer).
Annual festivals were organised here. For this a large festival hall was built
on the edge of Hellerau (the Festspielhalle
Hellerau). Hellerau was a centre for creativity, experiment and expressive
dance until 1933 when regime change meant an end to the progressive community
here.
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