Posted on 12/7/2018
Architect Philipp Mohr, who was raised in West Germany, was always drawn to the Bauhaus aesthetic even when in the late 1990s many of these modernist buildings were in decay. ‘At that time, I felt like an archeologist, discovering true modernism for the first time,’ says Mohr, who shares his time between his practices in Brooklyn, New York, and Berlin.
When Mohr, who fortuitously studied at the Bauhaus School in Germany’s Weimar, was looking to buy an apartment in Berlin, he discovered one of the Le Corbusier apartments in the Unite d’Habitation building. ‘I visited this building for the first time in 1989 as a teenager,’ he says. A stone’s throw from the 1936 Olympic stadium and adjacent to the Grunewald forest reserv...