Masterpiece Story: Opéra Garnier
When we talk about the beautiful sights of Paris, many first think of the obvious ones—the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre Museum, and the Notre-Dame...
Nikolina Konjevod 26 September 2025
20 June 2025 min Read
As the Bauhaus reimagined design for a changing world, its vision took shape not just in workshops, but through redefining walls and windows. Let’s trace five architectural landmarks—from German factories to Tel Aviv’s sunlit streets and Manhattan’s skyline—that embody the movement’s daring spirit. Each of these Bauhaus buildings tells the story of the new architecture: functional, beautiful, and profoundly modern.
The Bauhaus wasn’t just a school. It was a radical experiment, a movement, a vision that fused art, craft, and industry in a way the world had never seen before. Founded in 1919 in Weimar, Germany, by architect Walter Gropius, the Staatliches Bauhaus emerged during a time of post-war reckoning and industrial upheaval. The Industrial Revolution had reshaped the urban landscape with steel skeletons and glass skins. Yet, as machines began to dominate production, many feared a decline in artistic quality and human touch. Entered Bauhaus.
Gropius and his contemporaries set out to unify form and function, marrying aesthetics with mass production. Drawing on the teachings of architect Hermann Muthesius and the philosophies of the Deutscher Werkbund, Bauhaus foregrounded standardization without sacrificing beauty. It welcomed artists, architects, and craftsmen into one inclusive fold, where everything from weaving to building followed the same design ethos. Similar ideals, namely the harmony between structure and abstraction, were shared by the De Stijl movement in the Netherlands around the same time.
The Bauhaus teaching model was revolutionary in itself. The curriculum began with a foundation course that emphasized the principles of color, form, and material developed by Johannes Itten. From there, students advanced into specialized workshops led by masters of both form and craft. These masters included artists such as Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, Lyonel Feininger, and Josef Albers, alongside architects like Hannes Meyer (who succeeded Gropius as director) and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. The school dismantled the hierarchy between artist and artisan, encouraging experimentation, collaboration, and a holistic approach to design education.
With a blueprint of buildings that could be assembled with the precision and simplicity of a well-composed symphony, the Bauhaus considered the ideal architecture to be harmonious, efficient, and beautifully constructed. These five iconic structures capture this ideal in its entirety.
Walter Gropius, Adolf Meyer, Fagus Factory, 1911–1913, Alfeld, Germany. Photograph by Carsten Janssen via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0 de).
The role of the walls becomes restricted to that of mere screens stretched between the upright columns of the framework to keep out rain, cold, and noise.
Walter Gropius, The New Architecture and the Bauhaus, London 1937, p. 22–23.
Before Bauhaus had a name, its spirit took shape in the Fagus Factory. Commissioned by industrialist Carl Benscheidt, this shoe last factory was a revelation. Gropius and Meyer stripped away ornamental traditions and instead embraced glass and steel. The factory’s curtain walls, uninterrupted by load-bearing columns, created a sense of lightness and transparency.
Walter Gropius, Adolf Meyer, Fagus Factory, 1911–1913, Alfeld, Germany. Photograph by Traveler100 via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0),
Here, the building didn’t hide the process within—it celebrated it. It was modern, it was honest, and it laid the groundwork for Bauhaus ideals: functional design elevated by aesthetic clarity.
Walter Gropius, Bauhaus Dessau, 1925–1926, Dessau, Germany. Photograph by Lelikron via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0).
When the Bauhaus school moved from Weimar to Dessau, Gropius seized the opportunity to manifest his ideas in brick and mortar. The resulting Bauhaus building is arguably the architectural face of the movement. With asymmetrical blocks for workshops, dormitories, and administrative offices, the building functions like a machine: each part doing its job efficiently. Most revolutionary, though, was its extensive use of glass.
Walter Gropius, Bauhaus Dessau, the workshops wing, 1925–1926, Dessau, Germany. Photograph via Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
The sweeping glass curtain wall of the workshop wing seemed to float, dematerializing the façade and bathing interiors in light. It was architecture as ideology: transparent, utilitarian, and modular.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Lilly Reich, Barcelona Pavilion, 1928–1929, Barcelona, Spain. Photograph by Ashley Pomeroy via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 3.0).
Originally designed for the 1929 International Exposition, the Barcelona Pavilion was meant to represent the modern spirit of Germany. Mies van der Rohe, the last director of the Bauhaus, partnered with designer Lilly Reich to create this minimalist masterpiece. Constructed from glass, steel, and a luxurious palette of marble, onyx, and travertine, the Pavilion was less a building than a spatial experience. Planes float rather than define. Space flows rather than divides.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Lilly Reich, Barcelona Pavilion, 1928–1929, Barcelona, Spain. 1929. Photograph by MartinD via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0).
The iconic Barcelona Chair, designed for the Pavilion, epitomizes the union of art and industry, luxury and logic.
Dizengoff Square, 1934–1938, Tel Aviv, Israel. Photograph via Wikimedia Commons (public domain).
When political turmoil of the 1930s forced many Bauhaus-trained architects to flee Nazi Germany, a group of them (including Arieh Sharon and Dov Karmi) found refuge in Tel Aviv. There, they reimagined the city in white. Over 4,000 buildings, characterized by flat roofs, ribbon windows, and curved balconies, rose in a style adapted to the Mediterranean climate. This White City remains the world’s largest collection of Bauhaus architecture.
Pinchas Bijonsky, Reisfeld House, 1935, Tel Aviv, Israel. AFP/Thomas Coex.
Stripped of ornament and steeped in their social milieux, these buildings provided affordable, functional housing in a growing urban center, fulfilling Gropius’ dream of modernism for the masses.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Philip Johnson, Seagram Building, 1954–1958, New York City, NY, USA. Photograph by Ken OHYAMA via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0).
In the heart of Manhattan, the Seagram Building is a towering legacy of the Bauhaus. Though decades had passed since its founding, the movement’s core values lived on in Mies van der Rohe’s design. The building’s bronze-tinted curtain wall and exposed steel frame practice elegance and restraint.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Philip Johnson, The Seagram Building, 1954–1958, New York City, NY, USA. Photograph by Patrick Nouhailler via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0).
Situated in a vast plaza far from the street, it revolutionized corporate architecture. It is not merely a skyscraper; it is the distilled essence of Bauhaus modernism—less is more, form follows function, and beauty resides in precision.
From a German shoe last factory to the gleaming skyline of New York, Bauhaus architecture redefined the way we build and inhabit space. These five buildings, each a testament to form, function, and forward-thinking, prove that the Bauhaus isn’t just a style. It is a philosophy—one that continues to shape our world today.
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