Hans Poelzig (30 April 1869 – 14 June 1936) was a Germanarchitect, painter, and set designer whose work exemplified the organic and crystalline forms of Expressionist architecture.[1] Born in Berlin, he studied architecture at the Technische Hochschule there from 1889 to 1894 before rising to prominence as director of the Akademie für Kunst und Kunstgewerbe in Breslau from 1903 to 1916.[1]Poelzig's early designs featured undulating, nature-inspired shapes, as seen in the 1911 water tower in Posen with its tentacle-like supports and the stalactite-adorned interior of the Grosses Schauspielhaus theater in Berlin, completed in 1919, which became a landmark of Expressionist spatial drama.[1] He extended his influence into film through set designs for Paul Wegener's The Golem: How He Came into the World in 1920, blending architecture with theatrical fantasy.[1] In his later career, Poelzig shifted toward more functional modernism, producing major commissions such as the IG Farben administrative building in Frankfurt (1930) and the Haus des Rundfunks broadcasting house in Berlin (1929–1930), though his innovative approach led to his dismissal from official positions by the National Socialist regime in 1934.[1][2]As a teacher and leader in organizations like the Deutscher Werkbund, Poelzig advocated for the integration of art, craft, and industry, shaping a generation of architects during Germany's turbulent interwar period despite the era's ideological constraints on modernist experimentation.[1][2]
Early Life and Education
Birth and Family Background
Hans Poelzig was born on April 30, 1869, in Berlin, Prussia (now Germany).[1][3]He was the son of Countess Clara Henrietta Maria Poelzig, a member of the Thuringian noble Hanstein family associated with the Pölzig estate, and George Acland Ames, an English merchant whom she had married prior to Poelzig's birth; Ames, however, refused to acknowledge paternity, leading Poelzig to adopt his mother's surname from her noblelineage rather than Ames'.[4][5] Poelzig was reportedly the sixth child of this union, though the disputed parentage and subsequent separation of his parents— who met for the last time in Berlin shortly after his birth—meant he was raised primarily by his maternal relatives amid the social constraints of illegitimate or unacknowledged noble birth in 19th-century Prussia.[6] Limited records exist on his immediate siblings or extended family dynamics, but his noble maternal heritage provided a cultural backdrop contrasting with the architectural pragmatism he later pursued.[5]
Academic Training
Poelzig completed his secondary education at the Victoria Gymnasium in Potsdam, obtaining his Abitur, before pursuing higher studies in architecture.[6] From 1889 to 1894, he attended the Technische Hochschule Charlottenburg in Berlin, where he studied under the Gothic Revival architect Karl Schäfer.[1] This technical university emphasized engineering principles alongside artistic design, providing Poelzig with a comprehensive grounding in structural and aesthetic aspects of building.[1]
Professional Career
Early Architectural Practice and Expressionist Foundations
Following his architectural training in Berlin-Charlottenburg from 1889 to 1894, Poelzig relocated to Breslau (now Wrocław) in 1899, where he began his professional practice while joining the faculty of the Akademie für Kunst und Kunstgewerbe as a professor of style.[1] In 1903, he assumed directorship of the institution, a position he held until 1916, fostering collaborations between fine arts, crafts, and architecture that informed his early designs and anticipated later modernist pedagogical models.[1] This dual role enabled initial commissions, including a house for the Breslau Art and Crafts Exhibition in 1904 and his own residence near Breslau in 1906, both emphasizing functional integration with emerging stylistic experimentation beyond Jugendstil conventions.[1]Poelzig's practice expanded in the mid-1900s with industrial and residential projects showcasing material-driven forms, such as the Werdermühle factory in Breslau (1906–1908), which employed brick and steel to create robust, site-responsive structures.[1] By 1909–1910, he completed the Zwirners House in Löwenberg (now Lwówek Śląski), incorporating rational spatial planning and subtle ornamental restraint.[1] Public infrastructure followed, including the Oberschlesienturm water tower in Posen (now Poznań) in 1911, a cylindrical brick tower rising to approximately 40 meters, designed for utility while exploring vertical massing and exposed materials.[1]The 1911–1912 chemical factory in Luban (now Luboń) represented a pivotal industrialcommission, comprising a lead chamber, kiln house, storage facilities, and administration buildings executed in brick masonry with metal interiors to withstand corrosive vapors.[7] Its Neo-Gothic inflections, varied window geometries (semicircular in load-bearing walls, lintel-free squares elsewhere), and layered volumes exemplified Brick Expressionism, prioritizing expressive tectonics over decoration and earning acclaim in contemporary journals as a model for functional yet sculptural factory design.[7] An accompanying office building on Junkernstrasse in Breslau (1912) further demonstrated this approach, using glass, steel, and brick for plastic, volumetric effects.[1]These prewar endeavors established Poelzig's Expressionist foundations through a commitment to material authenticity and organic plasticity, departing from historicist rigidity toward dynamic forms that evoked emotional intensity and structural honesty—principles rooted in his advocacy for Materialstillehre (doctrine of material style) as early as 1899.[1] By integrating industrial pragmatism with proto-Expressionist motifs, such as jagged silhouettes and textural brickwork, Poelzig influenced peers and paved the way for postwar crystalline and cavernous interiors, distinguishing his oeuvre from contemporaneous rationalism while grounding it in empirical site and functional demands.[1][8]
Major Realized Projects
Poelzig's early career featured innovative industrial designs, including the sulphuric acid factory in Luboń, Poland (then part of Germany), constructed between 1911 and 1912. This project exemplified emerging Expressionist principles through its use of organically shaped brick massing, creating a dramatic, sculptural form that integrated functional industrial elements with architectural expression.[7] The factory's design emphasized vertical towers and undulating walls, marking one of Poelzig's first major completed works to gain recognition for advancing industrial architecture beyond utilitarian norms.[9]In the same year, 1911, Poelzig designed the 51.2-meter-tall Upper Silesian Tower in Poznań for an industrial exhibition; originally temporary, it was repurposed as a permanent water tower with a distinctive tent-like roof structure evoking nomadic forms.[10] This brick-built tower showcased Poelzig's interest in symbolic, regional motifs and structural innovation, blending practicality with expressive geometry.A pivotal theater renovation followed in 1919 with the Großes Schauspielhaus in Berlin, where Poelzig transformed a 19th-century market hall into a vast Expressionist auditorium seating over 3,500 patrons.[11] The interior featured a cavernous dome adorned with stalactite-like concrete formations, creating an immersive, cave-like atmosphere intended to evoke ancient rituals and enhance theatrical impact for director Max Reinhardt's productions.[12]Later projects reflected a shift toward modernist functionalism. The Haus des Rundfunks in Berlin, begun in 1929 and completed in 1930 with inauguration in 1931, served as the world's first self-contained broadcastingcenter.[13] Its triangular plan, asymmetrical massing, and integration of studio spaces within a reinforced concrete frame prioritized acoustic efficiency and administrative flow, establishing a benchmark for media architecture.[14]Concurrently, the IG Farben Building in Frankfurt, constructed from 1930 to 1931, stands as Poelzig's largest realized administrative complex, housing the chemical conglomerate's headquarters in a sprawling, block-like structure with varied facade rhythms and internal courtyards.[15] Now repurposed as the Poelzig Building for Goethe University, it combined monumental scale with practical office layouts, though its subdued expressionism drew mixed contemporary reviews for departing from Poelzig's earlier organic style.[16]
Unbuilt Designs and Competitions
In 1916, Poelzig entered a competition organized by German authorities to design the Haus der Freundschaft (House of Friendship) in Istanbul, intended to symbolize the wartime alliance between Germany and the Ottoman Empire through a multi-purpose cultural complex accommodating concerts, exhibitions, festivals, a library, and a café.[17] His Expressionist proposal featured a symmetrical megaform with cascading terraces rising as a ziggurat-like landmark on the city's skyline, incorporating double staircases or continuous arched galleries, elongated arched facades, and a rational grid plan enclosing two courtyards for spatial flexibility.[18][17] The project remained unbuilt after the competition was awarded to German architect German Bestelmeyer, reflecting post-World War I geopolitical shifts that undermined such alliance-building initiatives.[17]Poelzig's 1917 competition entry for the State Ukrainian Theatre in Kharkiv envisioned a massive 4,000-seat venue for theatrical and musical performances, emphasizing acoustic optimization and monumental scale through undulating forms and tiered auditoriums as depicted in surviving sections and perspectives. The design, later revisited in drawings around 1930, integrated Expressionist organic motifs with functional staging for large-scale events but was not selected for construction amid Ukraine's political instability following the Russian Revolution.[19]During the Weimar Republic, Poelzig submitted designs for urban high-rises in Berlin, including a 1921 perspective for a skyscraper adjacent to Friedrichstraße Station, rendered in charcoal on tracing paper to evoke a towering, crystalline form integrated with the rail infrastructure.[20] This entry, part of broader competitions for Germany's first modern skyscrapers, highlighted his shift toward vertical Expressionism but went unrealized due to economic constraints and regulatory hurdles on building heights.[21]In the early 1930s, Poelzig competed internationally with an entry for the Palace of the Soviets in Moscow (1931), proposing a colossal structure blending neoclassical monumentality with symbolic elements to house communist assemblies, though it lost to Boris Iofan's neoclassical tower amid Soviet preferences for ideological alignment over foreign submissions.[22] His late-career 1935 contest entry for the Friedrich-Theater in Dessau demonstrated emerging neoclassical restraint, with plans for tiered seating, light-admitting facades, and simplified geometries suited to opera and drama, but it too remained unexecuted as Poelzig's health declined and Nazi-era politics marginalized his work.[1] These unbuilt schemes, preserved in drawings and models, reveal Poelzig's adaptability across stylistic phases while underscoring the era's frequent disconnect between visionary proposals and practical realization.[23]
Academic and Institutional Roles
Poelzig began his academic career in Breslau (now Wrocław), where he served as professor of style at the Akademie für Kunst und Kunstgewerbe from 1899 to 1903.[1] In 1903, he was appointed director of the same institution, a position he held until 1916, during which the school was elevated to academy status in 1913 and became known for its innovative approach to arts and crafts education.[1][24]From 1916 to 1920, Poelzig held the role of city architect (Stadtbaurat) in Dresden while also serving as a visiting lecturer and professor at the Technische Hochschule there.[1][24] Upon relocating to Berlin in 1920, he established a master workshop at the Prussian Academy of Arts and directed its architectural studies until 1924.[24] He was appointed professor of architecture at the Technische HochschuleBerlin (later TU Berlin) in 1923, teaching there through the late 1920s and early 1930s.[1]In the early 1930s, Poelzig assumed leadership of the architecture department at the Prussian Academy of Arts, serving as director until his retirement on November 30, 1934, at age 65.[16] That same year, he briefly directed the Vereinigte Staatsschulen für freie und angewandte Kunst (Associated State Schools for Free and Applied Arts) in Berlin, succeeding Bruno Paul, but was removed from the position in 1934 amid National Socialist purges of institutional leadership.[1][24] In 1936, shortly before his death, Poelzig accepted a professorship at a planned academy in Ankara, Turkey, though he did not commence the role.[1]
Broader Contributions
Set Design and Film Work
Poelzig extended his architectural expertise into scenography, designing sets for theater and film that emphasized atmospheric depth, stylized geometries, and Expressionist distortions to evoke emotional intensity. His approach integrated sculptural forms and lighting effects, treating sets as immersive environments akin to his built structures.[25][26]In 1920, Poelzig collaborated with director Paul Wegener on the silent filmThe Golem: How He Came into the World, serving as production designer responsible for the film's scenery. He conceived a highly stylized rendition of Prague's medieval Jewish ghetto, featuring perspective-defying labyrinthine alleys, looming towers, and shadowed motifs rendered in preparatory sketches and models. These elements, built with input from Marlene Moeschke—who constructed physical models from Poelzig's drawings—amplified the film's themes of mysticism and horror through angular, cavernous forms that distorted spatial perception. The sets' design drew from Poelzig's broader interest in organic, cavern-like architectures, influencing the film's visual narrative without relying on realistic reconstruction.[27][28]Beyond cinema, Poelzig applied similar principles to theatrical sets, as seen in his 1926 pencil designs for A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Heidelberg Festival, which envisioned ethereal, layered landscapes blending natural and fantastical elements to support the play's dreamlike quality. His scenographic output, though less voluminous than his architecture, bridged stagecraft and early film production techniques during the Weimar era, prioritizing illusionistic drama over literalism.[29][25]
Theoretical Writings and Paintings
Poelzig articulated his architectural philosophy in several essays, emphasizing an organic evolution of form from constructive principles amid the era's stylistic ferment. In his 1906 essay Gärung in der Architektur ("Fermentation in Architecture"), he portrayed modern architecture as a dynamic, goal-less process shaped by economic and social demands rather than traditional monumental or religious imperatives. He rejected both escapist rejection of history and ornamental revivalism, asserting that "flight from everything historical can no more bring salvation than a purely decorative return to forms from the past," and advocated for buildings emerging from "sound construction and a formal idiom evolved out of it." Poelzig critiqued superficial decoration and sentimental excess, particularly in domestic design, where he prioritized internal functionality and objective tectonic clarity over external aesthetic imposition.[30]Later writings reinforced these views, adapting them to interwar contexts. In the 1922 essay "On Architecture of Our Time," Poelzig examined the integration of technical innovations with enduring formal principles, questioning whether mechanical efficiency alone sufficed for expressive buildings amid rapid industrialization. This piece, alongside related texts like "The Architect," underscored his conviction that architecture must transcend mere utility to embody symbolic depth, aligning with his broader advocacy for form as an emotional and constructive synthesis. These essays, often anthologized in collections of modernist manifestos, reflect Poelzig's resistance to rigid functionalism or historicism, favoring instead a contextual responsiveness rooted in material realities.[31][32]Poelzig's paintings and drawings served as theoretical extensions of his architectural ideas, exploring atmospheric and organic motifs that prefigured his built works. Working in watercolors, chalks, and pencil, he produced visionary sketches of crystalline forms, cavernous interiors, and elemental landscapes, often blurring architecture with natural symbolism to evoke psychological depth. His 1919–1922 sketchbook, for instance, contains exploratory designs blending sculptural massing with fluid, plant-like elements, illustrating his pursuit of architecture as Gesamtkunstwerk—a total art integrating painting, structure, and spatial experience. These non-realized visions critiqued mechanistic modernism by prioritizing emotive, tectonic expression over rationalist abstraction, with works like house designs in Dresden-Hellerau (1921) demonstrating colored chalk renderings of rhythmic, site-responsive volumes. Poelzig's artistic output, held in collections such as MoMA, thus functioned not as independent fine art but as conceptual prototypes reinforcing his essays' call for form derived from inner necessity.[33][34][35]
Political Engagement and Controversies
Involvement in Weimar Institutions
During the early years of the Weimar Republic, Poelzig participated in revolutionary artistic bodies formed amid the post-World War I upheaval, including membership in the Novembergruppe, a collective of avant-garde artists advocating progressive cultural renewal, and the Workers' and Soldiers' Council for Art, which sought to democratize artistic production and critique traditional institutions.[1] These engagements positioned him as a proponent of radical reform in German arts, aligning with the era's experimental ethos following the November Revolution of 1918.[1]Poelzig assumed leadership in the Deutscher Werkbund from 1919 to 1921, serving as its presiding officer during a period when the organization grappled with integrating industrial design into architecture amid economic instability and ideological debates over modernism versus traditional crafts.[1] Under his tenure, the Werkbund emphasized practical applications of Expressionist principles, influencing exhibitions and policy discussions that shaped Weimar-era design standards.[1]In 1920, Poelzig relocated to Berlin and established a master workshop at the Prussian Academy of Arts, where he taught architecture and advanced pedagogical methods blending organic forms with functionalism.[1] By 1925, he expanded his academic influence through concurrent professorships at the Technical University of Berlin (TU Berlin) and the Prussian Academy, eventually becoming director of the Academy's architecture department, a role he held until his retirement on November 30, 1931.[36] In these capacities, Poelzig mentored emerging architects, fostering a synthesis of Expressionist aesthetics and emerging modernist trends, though his directorial decisions sometimes sparked internal debates over stylistic purity versus innovation.[36][1]
Relations with the Nazi Regime
Upon the Nazi seizure of power in January 1933, Poelzig briefly served as interim director of the United State Schools for Fine and Applied Arts in Berlin following the regime's expulsion of the previous director, Bruno Paul.[16] However, he was soon dismissed from this teaching position and stripped of his official roles, including his longstanding appointment as Prussian building councillor (Stadtbaurat).[37] The Nazis viewed Poelzig's expressionist style and associations with modernist circles as incompatible with their ideological preferences for neoclassical architecture, leading to his effective marginalization in professional architecture.[38]Poelzig's work was further curtailed by direct prohibitions; due to perceived leftist political leanings, he was completely barred from architectural practice under the regime.[39] This exclusion extended to completed projects, such as the IG Farben Building in Frankfurt, which he designed and saw finished in 1931; post-1933, IG Farben, aligning with Nazi directives, banned him from entering the structure.[40] Unlike some contemporaries who sought accommodation, Poelzig rejected alignment with National Socialism and planned to emigrate to Istanbul, Turkey, where he had prior connections from unbuilt designs, but his death on June 14, 1936, preempted this escape.[41]Posthumously, Poelzig's oeuvre faced additional condemnation; in 1937, the Nazi regime classified him as a degenerate artist in line with the broader purge of modernist figures deemed culturally subversive.[37] No records indicate active collaboration or support for Nazi policies on his part; instead, archival evidence points to systemic exclusion driven by ideological incompatibility rather than personal political activism against the regime.[34]
Personal Stance on Politics and Art
Poelzig's involvement in the Arbeitsrat für Kunst, founded in 1918, reflected his early belief in architecture's capacity to contribute to postwar societal reconstruction, promoting collective artistic efforts over individualistic pursuits to achieve spiritual and communal upliftment.[42] This group, comprising Expressionist architects and artists, issued a manifesto calling for art to serve public life through integrated design, aligning with broader Weimar-era aspirations for cultural renewal amid revolutionary fervor.[43] His concurrent roles in the Novembergruppe and as chairman of the Deutscher Werkbund in 1919 further underscored a reformist orientation toward merging aesthetics with practical, socially oriented production, without explicit partisan allegiance.[42]By the early 1930s, Poelzig demonstrated opposition to direct political intrusion into artistic governance, resigning as vice-president of the Prussian Academy of Arts in 1933 following the Nazi regime's assumption of power and initial efforts to align cultural institutions with party doctrine.[44] This action paralleled Käthe Kollwitz's protest resignation from the same body, though Poelzig's tenure involved navigating internal debates over politicization, including avoidance of votes on controversial memberships to preserve institutional neutrality.[45] His later participation in architectural competitions in the Soviet Union drew Nazi epithets like "cultural Bolshevik," highlighting regime perceptions of his modernism as ideologically subversive, yet Poelzig rejected such labels, including vehement denials of rumored Jewish ancestry amid antisemitic campaigns.[6]On art itself, Poelzig championed an intuitive, organic Expressionism that prioritized emotional resonance and formal experimentation over ideological or functionalist constraints, viewing architecture as a Gesamtkunstwerk—a total artwork—blending sculptural massing, atmospheric lighting, and mystical symbolism to evoke transcendent experiences.[46] His paintings and theoretical sketches reinforced this, favoring romantic, nature-inspired irregularity against mechanistic rationalism, as seen in his advocacy for buildings that dissolved boundaries between fantasy and reality.[30] This stance implicitly critiqued politicized art by emphasizing universal creative autonomy, though it clashed with National Socialist preferences for heroic classicism, leading to his classification as a degenerate artist by 1937.[37]
Legacy and Critical Reception
Architectural Influence and Style Analysis
Hans Poelzig's architectural style is primarily associated with German Expressionism, characterized by plastic forms derived directly from building materials such as brick, glass, and steel, often juxtaposed to create dynamic contrasts.[1] Early works, like the Werdermühle office building in Bremen (1906–1908), exemplified this through the opposition of transparent glass facades against solid brick masses, emphasizing structural honesty and material expressiveness over ornamental excess.[1] In industrial projects such as the chemical factory in Luboń (1911–1912) and the Oberschlesienturm water tower in Poznań (1911), Poelzig employed crystalline geometries and organic, undulating shapes inspired by natural forms, distorting traditional rectilinearity to evoke emotional intensity and a sense of movement.[1]Later designs incorporated Lichtarchitektur (light architecture), using dramatic illumination to enhance spatial depth and symbolism, as seen in the Grosses Schauspielhaus theater in Berlin (1918–1919), where a stalactite-like ceiling formed a cavernous interior mimicking natural rock formations.[1] Poelzig's facades featured sculptural reliefs, repeating carved motifs, and vibrant textural variations, diverging from the sleek functionalism of contemporaries like Walter Gropius by prioritizing weighty, monumental effects and symbolic grandeur.[46] By the late 1920s, his style evolved toward restraint, evident in the Haus des Rundfunks broadcasting house in Berlin (1929–1930), with its brick exterior accented by colored ceramic tiles, and the IG Farben headquarters in Frankfurt (1928–1931), which adopted simpler, sparsely ornamented volumes aligned with emerging International Style principles.[1]Poelzig's Expressionist innovations influenced rationalist architecture in the 1920s and 1930s by demonstrating the integration of symbolic form with material rationality, paving elements for the International Style's emphasis on functional expression.[1] His grandiose, phantasmagorical proposals, such as the 1929 Reichstag annex, anticipated aspects of postwar modernism and Brutalism through their raw, sculptural massing and rejection of classical symmetry.[46] However, the Nazi regime's promotion of neoclassicism marginalized Expressionism, limiting Poelzig's direct legacy to niche revivals in theatrical and organic design traditions rather than mainstream modernist orthodoxy.[46]
Postwar Recognition and Restorations
Following World War II, Hans Poelzig's architectural oeuvre experienced a rehabilitation in recognition, as his Expressionist designs were reevaluated apart from the politicized architecture of the Nazi period. His works, which had faced marginalization under the regime, were increasingly preserved and adapted for contemporary use, reflecting a broader postwar interest in interwar modernism. The IG Farben Building in Frankfurt, completed in 1931, exemplifies this shift; largely undamaged during the war due to its requisition by Allied forces—including as General Dwight D. Eisenhower's headquarters—it was repurposed in 1951 as offices before integration into Goethe University Frankfurt's Westend Campus.[47]Renamed the Poelzig Building in tribute to its architect, the structure underwent extensive restoration and reopened as a university facility in 2001, preserving original features such as spatial sequences and materials.[48] Further enhancements included the 2006 restoration of a 1934 mural by Georg Heck, previously obscured by the Nazis, and the establishment of a permanent exhibition on the second floor detailing Poelzig's life and contributions, alongside displays of his original paintings in the campus casino.[47]In Wrocław (formerly Breslau), Poelzig's early structures also saw postwar conservation efforts. The Poelzigbau office building (1912–1913) at Ofiar Oświęcimskich Street 38–40 endured wartime destruction and remains a recognized example of his proto-Expressionist style. Similarly, the Four Domes Pavilion, designed by Poelzig for the 1913 Centennial Exhibition, was restored between 2013 and 2015, reclaiming its role as an exhibition venue within the city's cultural heritage framework.[49] These restorations underscore Poelzig's enduring influence on industrial and exhibition architecture, prioritizing structural integrity and historical authenticity over ideological alterations.[50]
Criticisms of Expressionism and Modernist Alternatives
Expressionist architecture, including works by Hans Poelzig such as the Luboń Chemical Factory completed in 1912, faced criticism for prioritizing subjective emotional expression and formal experimentation over practical utility, structural rationality, and economic feasibility. Critics argued that its distorted, organic forms—evident in Poelzig's cavernous halls and jagged silhouettes—evoked unease rather than serving efficient industrial or civic functions, rendering it ill-suited for the demands of mass production and standardization in the interwar period.[51] This romantic individualism, as seen in Poelzig's early designs, was faulted for remaining confined to the architect's personal vision, lacking the systematic approach needed for scalable modern construction.[51][52]Historians like Sigfried Giedion contended that Expressionism failed to contribute meaningfully to architectural evolution because it eschewed rational planning in favor of intuitive, non-reproducible gestures, as exemplified by Poelzig's unbuilt or theatrical projects that blurred into set design for films like The Golem (1920).[52] In contrast, the rise of functionalist modernism in the 1920s, championed by figures like Walter Gropius at the Bauhaus (founded 1919), emphasized "form follows function," rejecting ornament and distortion for clean geometries, reinforced concrete, and machine-like efficiency to meet housing shortages and industrial needs post-World War I.[51] This shift, embodied in the International Style's planar facades and open plans, critiqued Expressionism's decadence—termed by Neue Sachlichkeit advocates as escapist—and positioned rationalism as the path to democratic, reproducible building.[53]Poelzig's own trajectory reflected this tension; while his Expressionist phase influenced transient avant-garde experiments, his later projects, such as the Haus des Rundfunks in Berlin (1931), adopted stripped-down, functional elements akin to modernism, signaling the movement's eclipse by alternatives that prioritized empirical utility over mystical form.[30] By the mid-1920s, Expressionism's influence waned as functionalism dominated, with critics viewing Poelzig's early style as a picturesque interlude rather than a viable paradigm for industrialized society.[51]