Brothers Ansgar and Benedikt Schulz are among the most successful architects in Germany. Their designs are regarded as sophisticated, their constructions optimized and economical, their spatial concepts custom-made yet flexible. Their architecture is of timeless beauty and free of formal gimmickry, firmly rooted in the modernist tradition shaped by Mies van der Rohe.
What is the secret of this unpretentious, human-centered architecture? Architecture critic Falk Jaeger focuses on the ideas, architectural stance, and social positioning of the two architects, which he conveys to readers in pointed and engaging texts.
Falk Jaeger
contemporary modernism architectural theory essence of architecture categories of architecture reference to location Leipzig architectural semantics construction Baukultur St. Trinitatis Catholic Parish Church Raspberry Palace Erlangen Chemnitz-South Police Station Cloud Laboratory Extension of the North Rhine-Westphalia State Parliament German Embassy Vienna