The stunning Babelsberg Palace in Potsdam, Germany, needed careful restoration after historic decay and numerous repairs had weakened its glass features and compromised its appearance. SCHOTT used GOETHEGLAS to carefully and authentically recapture its stunning gothic splendor.
Key numbers
380
exterior door and window elements fully restored.
550 m²
of glazing required.
3 m
is the length of each large-format GOETHEGLAS panel.
1849
is the year construction of Babelsberg Palace was completed for Emperor Wilhelm I.
Background
Completed in 1849, the neo-gothic Babelsberg Palace was built as a summer residence for Prince Wilhelm of Prussia. It was made from the finest quality natural stone, terracotta and zinc castings, but it was the glass that really added the wow factor, with large-scale glazing offering stunning views of the natural park surroundings. However, subsequent decay and bomb damage during World War II was remedied with less appealing solutions such as transom bars and non-traditional materials such as float glass. Its former glory needed to be recaptured.
Challenge
The Prussian Palaces and Gardens Foundation Berlin-Brandenburg (SPSG), which owns the building, planned to use the Palace as a museum and drew up a masterplan to overhaul the palace and the park. SCHOTT’s challenge was to recapture the glazing’s original style while working with the diverse materials existing within the structure and adhering to strict conservation rules. The float glass installed over the years would need replacing with historically authentic glazing while maintaining 21st century energy requirements.
Solution
After examining a number of samples, SPSG and their architects chose SCHOTT’s acclaimed glass for restoration GOETHEGLAS for the project. As well as offering an irregular ‘wavy’ surface in keeping with the style of a 19th century palace, this robust, thermally toughened glass can be produced in large formats.
For the Palace windows, SCHOTT produced three-meter-long glass sheets, refined by thermal toughening and subsequent heat soaking tests. This enabled a large share of the all-glass windows to be installed. The 4.5-meter-high special formats were designed as laminated panes with butt joints. Insulating glass was also produced to address specific climate concerns, made with an outer pane of GOETHEGLAS and an inner pane of float glass.
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SCHOTT GOETHEGLAS was chosen for its historically authentic ‘wavy’ surface
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SCHOTT GOETHEGLAS offers thermal, solar, and UV insulation, as well as highly effective noise control
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Many of the windows in Babelsberg Palace required glass panels that were 3 m long
19th century glass made with 21st century technology
SCHOTT GOETHEGLAS achieves a historically authentic look by using the Fourcault production process, which reproduces the irregular surface characteristic of window glasses from the 18th and 19th centuries. The process also enables modern features such as UV protection and thermal insulation to be incorporated, with the option of further processing into insulating, laminated, or tempered glass.
Max Daiber, Project Head at SPSG, owners of the Babelsberg Palace
We wanted to have a glass for restoration that would attract the attention of viewers, but with a wavy appearance that is less obtrusive. We are very pleased with our decision in favor of SCHOTT and its GOETHEGLAS, especially since the refurbishment of the glazing had to meet a wide range of requirements.
Outstanding clarity for breathtaking views
The float glass previously used to restore Babelsberg Palace’s windows lacked the esthetic appeal of the original 19th century glazing and produced unwanted reflections. SCHOTT GOETHEGLAS delivers outstanding clarity, enhancing the breathtaking views over the park that so impressed 19th century visitors, while also retaining the irregular, eye-catching beauty of authentic historic glazing.
Used materials & similar products
SCHOTT GOETHEGLAS combines the historically accurate irregular surface structure of windows found in buildings from the 18th and 19th centuries with modern-day functions. Those functions include thermal, solar, and UV insulation, as well as highly effective noise control. A variety of processing options also allows us to offer laminated, tempered, and insulated glass units.
Stefan Gubelt, Dr. Krekeler Generalplaner GmbH, Berlin
SCHOTT was the only company to offer a three-meter glass for restoration with matching esthetics at the time of planning. In close collaboration, we were also able to meet the high demands of monument protection, as well as the static, energetic, and constructional challenges that pertain to insulation and composite glass solutions. We are very grateful for this because we have received positive feedback on the result from all sides.
Close collaboration for extensive approvals
For the Babelsberg Palace project, SCHOTT worked closely with SuP Ingenieure GmbH, a German civil engineering company, to examine the suitability of the glazing from a static perspective. While all SCHOTT glass for restoration variants adheres to European technical standards that regulate the framework conditions and bending strengths, the work of SuP Ingenieure GmbH resulted in the windows meeting the strict safety requirements of ESG-H glazing and being granted extensive approvals from the building authorities.