Schwimmhalle Finckensteinallee

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LocationBerlin-Lichterfelde,
Finckensteinallee 73
Coordinates52°25′55″N 13°17′52″E / 52.431876°N 13.297780°E / 52.431876; 13.297780
Completed1937/1938
ArchitectsKarl Reichle,
Karl Badberger,
Wilhelm Weigandt
Schwimmhalle Finckensteinallee
Schwimmhalle Finckensteinallee
Schwimmhalle Finckensteinallee is located in Berlin
Schwimmhalle Finckensteinallee
Location within Berlin
General information
LocationBerlin-Lichterfelde,
Finckensteinallee 73
Coordinates52°25′55″N 13°17′52″E / 52.431876°N 13.297780°E / 52.431876; 13.297780
Completed1937/1938
Design and construction
ArchitectsKarl Reichle,
Karl Badberger,
Wilhelm Weigandt

The Schwimmhalle Finckensteinallee, an indoor swimming pool in Berlin's Finckensteinallee was completed in 1938 as a training facility for the SS regiment Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler. An outstanding example of architecture from the National Socialist era, it was used by the American military from 1945 to 1994. Due to its historical and architectural significance, the building received listed building protection in 2001. After being comprehensively restored between 2008 and 2014, its doors were opened to the public in August 2014, since which the pool has been used by schools and clubs and for sports events. The pool is located in the Lichterfelde district of Berlin.

The indoor pool was built on land belonging to the former Prussian Central Cadet School (at Finckensteinallee 63–97) as part of its expansion for use by the SS regiment Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler. In keeping with the importance accorded to swimming for the training of SS recruits, from the outset, the building was conceived as an expensive architectural showpiece. The pool was designed by the secret state councillor Karl Reichle in cooperation with undersecretary Karl Badberger, both of the Third Reich's Ministry of Finance.[1][2][3]

Once completed, the pool complex ranked among the largest and most modern in Europe. The pool itself was 50 metres long and 25 metres wide. With a depth of between 2.5 and 4.8 metres, it was equipped with a 10-metre-high diving platform. One special design feature was the skylight which spanned the entire ceiling above the pool. The building has two entrance portals, each flanked by a pair of larger-than-life statues of archetypal National Socialist style idealising the sexes.[4]

While the barracks in Finckensteinallee suffered major bomb damage during the Second World War, the swimming pool itself suffered only minor roof damage. In 1945 the site was taken over by the American military. Renamed Andrews barracks, it was enlarged into a military headquarters for the American Sector in West Berlin. After prolonged disuse, the swimming pool was pressed back into service in 1954. Prior to this, the technical facilities were updated and modifications made to the hall's interior. In the early 1970s, the swimming hall's glass roof was replaced by a solid lead roof, its transparent ceiling being replaced by an opaque acoustic layer. At the same time, the hall's fenestration was drastically simplified.[4]

Following the departure of the US military in 1994, the pool was once again opened to the public, but was forced to close for frequent repairs due to structural defects.

Between 2008 and 2014, the complex underwent comprehensive restoration, jointly funded by the Berlin Senate and EU, which together provided around 13 million Euros from the Senate's then Pool Restoration Programme and EU's Environmental Relief Programme (UEP II). Architect Nils Meyer of Veauthier Meyer Architekten, Berlin, led the concept and design for the project, with project management being undertaken by Tobias Reckert. The historically important elements of the building (façades, entrance areas, stairways, basic structures and historical surfaces) were preserved. The central swimming hall was returned to its original appearance, and functional areas brought up to date both technically and stylistically. The pool's complicated technical equipment was modernised. While the original dimensions of the pool were maintained in terms of length and width, its variable depth was replaced by a uniform depth of just two metres. With the ten-metre-high (33-foot) diving platform being rendered obsolete as a result, it was pulled down after extensive disputation, since stripped of its original function, its preservation would have been possible.[5][4][6]

The indoor swimming pool in Finckensteinallee opened its doors to the public as a sports venue on 1 September 2014.[5] Those regularly using the facilities include both the Steglitz [7][8] and Zehlendorf Swimming Clubs.

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