Size: 180,000 s.f.
Completion: 2005
Located at the junction of Leipziger Platz and Postdamer Platz where a portion of the Berlin Wall still stands, the new Canadian Embassy is one of several initiatives in the city’s third wave of reconstruction. The design participates in the reconstruction of the original octagonal wall of Leipziger Platz, and conforms to the stringent planning and design guidelines set out by the District Office of Central Berlin which dictated a stone exterior with punched windows, and 22 metre setbacks.
Specifically, a public route, the Canada Passage, slices through the site, linking Leipziger Platz to Eberstrasse, and, symbolically, east and west. Unusual for embassies in general, and specifically in the post-9/11 climate, the passage embodies Canada’s commitment to democracy. It features a 15 metre high, copper-clad conical form, Timber Hall, which contains multi-use spaces for public and cultural functions. The interior is lined with Douglas Fir and features an sky-lit oculus from which is suspended a metal and glass compass ring that changes according to the rhythm and strength of the sun.
The winning submission in a national design competition, the design expresses elements of Canada's identity which conforming to Berlin’s stringent design guidelines. In addition to housing the Canadian mission and the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, the ten-storey structure also provides commercial offices and residential space.
The embassy’s material palette represents several regions of Canada and provides a rich dynamic of interior and exterior spaces for diplomatic, business and cultural activities. On axis with the main entrance in the central bay of the Leipziger Platz façade is the Timber Hall. This decahedral room, which is wrapped by a gently ascending circular stair, is the focus of the design and informs both interior and exterior spaces.
On the ground floor, an exhibition room can be opened up either entirely or selectively to this central space, allowing it to accommodate a variety of large events or devote itself exclusively and securely to diplomatic functions. Above, the Timber Hall, which is open to the sky via a lightly framed glazed skylight system, includes a state-of-the-art conference facility and first-class conference room. Its exterior is copper; the treads and risers of the grand curved stairway are constructed of Ontario limestone. The building exterior is faced with Tyndall limestone from Manitoba. On the south side of the site, a water element creates an unexpected urban oasis.
For virtual tour go to http://www.kanada.de/tour/EN_DSL/EN_DSL.html
Site
South of the Brandenburg Gate and Reichstag at Eberstrasse and Leipziger Platz, Berlin, Germany
Client
Government of Canada
Construction Cost
$75.0 million
KPMB Team
Bruce Kuwabara (partner-in-charge), Luigi LaRocca (senior associate), Andrew Dyke (associate-in-charge), Bill Colaco, Deni Di Filippo, Brian Graham, Simon Haus, Robert Kastelic, Riki Nishimura, Shadi Rahbaran, Bruno Weber
Consultants
Rave Architekten (local architect - Berlin), GSE Ingen.-Gesellschaft mbH Saar, Enselett und Partner (structural), Happold Ingenieurbüro GmbH (mechanical and electrical), Vogel Architects (office interiors), Cornelia Hahn Oberlander (landscape), Suzanne Powadiuk Designs (lighting), Vermeulens Cost Consultants (cost)
- 2005 Group Best Practices Award, Real Property Institute of Canada



