Paul Scheerbart

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  but steadily completely transforming life on the surface of the earth.

  The changes brought about by the steam train have not been so

  significant and far-reaching as those which glass and iron construc-

  tion is bound to produce. The crucial factor in this is undoubtably

  reinforced concrete.

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  Reinforced concrete and the architecture of fences

  Reinforced concrete can be a few centimeters thick, and is very con-

  venient to use for fences. If it is treated artistically, with enamel and

  glass mosaic or embellished with niello ornamentation, areas with

  such concrete boundary fences can easily be converted into places

  of recreation.

  In the architecture of fences reinforced concrete has a great part

  to play.

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  Terraces

  In higher glass buildings, where there are several storeys, the terrace-

  form is beyond question a necessity, for otherwise the glazed surfaces

  do not touch the sunlit air but can only fulfil their purpose at night

  and not by day. These terrace-form storeys will naturally oust the

  tedious façade-architecture of brick houses.

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  View-points

  One imagines the view-points, from which nowadays we can survey

  a town or landscape. These view-points will show us quite different

  pictures, when glass architecture has become general and all vehicles

  (even the flying ones) reveal the full possibilities of coloured glass.

  One must simply try to make such view-points clear to visualise. It is

  not easy, but the imagination soon adapts itself in the end to giving

  more than isolated details.

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  Glass in factory buildings

  To have a comprehensive picture of the glass architecture world, it is

  essential also to think of factory buildings in glass. There will be no

  question of immediately destroying brick structures everywhere, but

  at first the brick will be faced with glass materials and glazes — and

  glass garden pavilions will be put on the roofs, etc.

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  Market halls entirely of glass and iron

  It is well known that market halls are already being built entirely of

  glass and iron. Missing only are the double walls and ornamental

  colour. It is not fanciful, however, to assume that both these will

  come soon. A total architecture of glass and iron cannot be far off.

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  Churches and temples

  In Europe the larger church buildings are very well planned and

  executed as a result of the unnatural concentration of people in

  larger towns. Whether it will be possible in this field to impose a

  purely glass and iron architecture in individual cases by rejecting

  brick, I do not know. But I do know well that the greater cheapness

  of glass and iron building must help towards success; we shall only

  have this greater cheapness when a larger number of firms are in

  competition — and for that we must wait. The free churches of America

  may well be the first to build glass temples, thus making a good step

  forward for glass architecture in the religious sphere.

  It ought to be stressed here that the whole of glass architecture

  stems from the Gothic cathedrals. Without them it would be unthink-

  able; the Gothic cathedral is the prelude.

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  Club and sports buildings

  Club and sports buildings are today being erected in large numbers.

  As these are almost always the concern of well-to-do societies, glass

  architects would do well to pay closer attention to them; the advan-

  tages of glass architecture for rooms mainly used for social occasions

  are obvious.

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  Militarism and brick architecture

  So often only the obnoxious side of militarism is alluded to; but there

  is also a good one. It consists in the fact that, with the significant

  advent of the ‘dirigible’ aerial torpedo, it inevitably draws attention

  to the dangers of brick architecture; if a brick church tower is struck

  low down by a torpedo, it will in every case collapse, kill many people

  and reduce an entire group of buildings to rubble.

  If, therefore, militarism evolves logically, it is bound to bring our

  brick culture into disrepute; this is its good side, and one constantly

  emphasized, especially by those tired of living as ‘brick-dwellers’. A

  glass tower, when it is supported by more than four metal piers, will

  not be destroyed by an aerial torpedo; a few iron members will be

  bent, and a number of glass panels will have holes or cracks, but

  such damage is simple to repair.

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  Parliament buildings

  What has just been said about glass towers applies also to parliament

  buildings built entirely of steel and glass. In wartime these, too, are

  much more resistant to damage than the old parliament building of

  brick faced with sandstone. To many this claim will seem very para-

  doxical, but it is quite logical. Dynamite can only damage a glass

  house partially; in relation to the whole it is fairly harmless. It needs

  a hailstorm of dynamite bombs to destroy a larger building made of

  glass and iron.

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  Restaurants, cafés, hotels and sanatoria

  It seem to me to beyond question that restaurants, cafes and hotels

  will be the first to show an interest in glass architecture, in order to

  attract a larger public, who always have plenty to spend on anything

  new. Sanatoria also will want glass buildings; the influence of splen-

  did glass architecture on the nerves is indisputable.

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  Transportable buildings

  Transportable glass buildings can be produced as well. They are

  particularly suitable for exhibition purposes. Transportable buildings

  of this type are not easy to make.

  But one must not forget that, in a new movement, the most difficult

  step is often the first.

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  The future inventor, and the materials

  which could compete with glass

  To earn a lot of money by inventions is not exactly easy. All the

  same, as I am bound to concede at once, the number of inventors

  grows daily; while many inventors lose all their goods and chattels

  and achieve nothing, the others are not deterred. Despite everything,

  however, the amply provided inventor is, in the long run, a very rare

  exception. Failure has its humorous side, and, so long as this is so,

  things are not so bad. But that is by the way. Nevertheless, it cannot

  be doubted that inventors — for their number, as we have said, is

  constantly growing — could or should have a great future.

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  The timelessness of ornamental glass and glass mosaic

  Meanwhile, since we do not yet have the better, we must put up with

  the good, and this good is glass and ornamental glass mounted in

  lead, glass mosaic, and enamel. These glorious materials have not

  been outmoded by time; they have survived hundreds and thousands

  of years. It is regrettable that they have not been pr
otected from

  infamous hands, but tough granite, which was used to face Egyptian

  pyramids, has fared no better, and has also been stolen.

  But this is no place for lamentations; our hope is that glass archi-

  tecture will also improve mankind in ethical respects. It seems to

  me that this is a principal merit of lustrous, colourful, mystical and

  noble glass walls. This quality appears to me not just an illusion,

  but something very real; the man who sees the splendours of glass

  every day cannot have ignoble hands.

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  Exhibition buildings in America and Europe

  In the past twenty years we in Europe have frequently heard fabu-

  lous tales of American glass buildings. In part, these have certainly

  been only the idle fancies of reporters, but there may well be a

  grain of truth in them. Tiffany plays a great part in America, and the

  Americans are very well disposed to glass things. It would be very

  interesting to know what is planned in glass for the World Exhibition

  of 1915 in San Francisco.

  In my opinion the exhibition buildings in America must differ con-

  siderably from those in Europe. The American bridge constructions

  at Niagara Fal s are at all events so magnificent that an exhibition

  hall, if it is built of iron and glass, should also reveal impressive

  dimensions. Whether it will be double-walled with coloured decora-

  tion, we do not yet know.

  America is also the chief country for impressive giant buildings;

  the Pan-American Railroad, which is intended to protect the North

  and South against military attacks from East and West, is at present

  probably the greatest engineering work on earth.

  A hope lies here that America might also tackle the greatest

  architectural work on earth. May it be composed of iron with glass

  of every colour.

  Europe is too conservative and slow.

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  Experimental site for glass architecture

  Glass-painters never fix the glass pieces with lead, without first test-

  ing the effect experimentally. This is done with all new designs. The

  full effect cannot be appreciated in the imagination. For the same

  reason, experiment is also essential for glass buildings. We need an

  experimental site for the purpose. It would be advisable for such a

  site to be provided by private enterprise rather than by the state. The

  latter brings in its official architects, who unhappily are rarely artists

  and are incapable of becoming so overnight.

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  A permanent exhibition of glass architecture

  A glass architecture exhibition would have to be linked to the exper-

  imental site, and it would have to be permanent. Glass architecture

  can only be effectively promoted if every new idea can be exhibited

  at the same time, and all those interested can constantly order or

  buy on the spot whatever is best or newest.

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  The crystal room illuminated by translucent floors

  At the exhibition, particular attention would have to be given to the

  lighting tests. We do not yet know, for example, what the effect would

  be of a room lit by translucent floors. One could discuss lights for

  ever, but things like flooring, and many other ideas, would have to

  be tested. In my view a Glass Building Association would have to

  make capital available for the site and exhibition. If the interest were

  general, the association would soon be formed.

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  Metal filigree with enamel inlay hung

  in front of crude reinforced concrete

  Many experiments could be imagined; the choice is almost unlimited.

  Particular thought must be given to overcoming the crudeness of

  reinforced concrete: filigree ornament with enamel inlay is perhaps

  worth considering. It would look like a piece of jewelry, on a large

  scale. Much of glass architecture concerns the jeweler, and jewels

  should be transposed from necks and arms on to walls. For the time

  being, ladies are not going to allow this because they are afraid of

  losing their share of adornment. It is one of the most unpleasant

  things about many new movements, that the first thing everybody

  asks is: can it be harmful to me? The old fear of competition is in all

  things a far from pleasant phenomenon, even in art. The oil-colour

  manufacturers are undoubtedly opponents of glass-painting, because

  they cannot make anything out of it.

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  The aeronaut’s house with airship models on the roof

  Let’s turn to something pleasanter! In my opinion, air-navigation will

  be eager to build an aeronaut’s house in the restaurant garden of the

  exhibition, with airship models projecting little mobile lights fixed

  to the domed roof. This would be a variant of the Seeschifferhaus

  at Bremen. To immortalise aircraft models in this way would be of

  great interest to the aeronautical profession, and would lie very close

  to its heart.

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  Soft lighting

  It must be repeated that efforts should not be directed towards achiev-

  ing greater brightness in lighting, for we have got that already. We

  should think all the time of the softening of light in choosing colours.

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  Twilight effects

  Incidentally, we should consider introducing light behind coloured

  glass panels into a few corners, even in bright sunshine. It produces

  wonderful twilight effects during the dusk and dawn hours. A great

  many lighting experiments will, of course, be necessary.

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  Lighthouses and shipping

  When new lighthouses have to be built, the glass architect must see

  to it that in the immediate future glass architecture is adopted on a

  large scale. Since lighthouses generally stand on high eminences,

  it is undoubtedly cheaper than designs in brick, where the frightful

  labour of lifting such material to the site disqualifies them. Building

  will unquestionably be cheaper with the simple equipment needed

  for carrying up metal and glass. This must be repeatedly emphasized.

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  Airports as glass palaces

  For the building of airports, also, glass-iron construction has much

  to recommend it; airports must be visible and identifiable from far

  off and this is best achieved by coloured ornamental glass. This will

  reach its full effect at night, when the entire building is crowned by

  a diadem of projected lights, delighting not only the aeronauts, but

  also people who have no airship at their bidding.

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  Light nights, when glass architecture comes

  It seems easy to say that something is indescribable, but of those light

  nights which glass architecture must bring us, there is nothing else

  left for us to say except that they are truly indescribable. One thinks

  of the lights shining from all the glass towers and in every aircraft,

  and one thinks of these lights in all their many colours. One thinks

  of the railway trains all gaily lighted, and one adds the factories in

  which at night, too, the light shines thr
ough coloured panes. Then

  one thinks of the great palaces and cathedrals of glass and the villas

  of glass, and of the town-like structures, on solid land and in the

  water — often in movement — and of ever more water in ever different

  colours. On Venus and Mars they will stare in wonder and no longer

  recognize the surface of the earth.

  Perhaps men will live more by night than by day. Astronomers will

  erect their observatories in quiet mountain ravines and on peaks,

  because the huge sea of coloured light may disturb the study of the

  heavens.

  This is not a modern concept — the great Gothic master-builders

  thought of it first. We must not forget that.

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  The brilliant (diamond) effect in architecture

  Brilliants are treasured on the hands and neck, but in architecture

  the diamond effect is by no means prized. I suggest that this only

  happens because the brilliant is too small and architecture is too big.

  Large glass brilliants, however, can be produced of pumpkin size,

  without becoming too expensive. Wil architecture despise the bril iant

  effect, when glass can be seen everywhere in large quantities? That

  seems to me unlikely. It is no argument against coloured glass that

  primitive people and small children are enraptured by it.

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  Three-dimensional and two-dimensional

  ornament in architecture

  In the Alhambra, we mostly find three-dimensional ornament, but of

  perishable plaster-work. Glass architecture can also use such orna-

  ment, but of imperishable glass materials. The most delicate blown

  decoration is made of glass, even of frosted and filigree glass. This

  kind of plastic art for the ornamental glass wal should admittedly

  only be considered for formal rooms; there it is entirely feasible

  and not merely a figment of the imagination. Venice is no longer

  the pinnacle of glass culture, although it has contributed much that

  often obliges one to return to it later. I do not recommend copies,

  but it certainly seems to me that the splendours of Venetian glass,

  as reflected in particular by the palaces of Isola Bella, are valuable

  sources of inspiration. One often forgets that present-day Italy, with-

  out glass, real y has very little attraction.

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  The transformation of fireworks

  When there is more glass everywhere, fireworks will be transformed;

  thousands of reflection effects will be possible. But this chapter must

 

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