Opening of the Boros Collection in June 2008
Bunker in Berlin-Mitte
This June, Christian Boros and his wife Karen Lohmann are making their collection of contemporary
art available to the public in a converted bunker in Mitte, a central borough of Berlin. The first exhibition
exclusively shows works which incorporate the space.
The Boros Collection
Christian Boros is the owner of an advertising agency with offices in Wuppertal and Berlin. He has
been collecting contemporary art since 1990. Over this time, he has put together a private collection
with around 500 works by artists such as Damian Hirst, Olafur Eliasson, Elizabeth Peyton, Wolfgang
Tillmans, Anselm Reyle, Manfred Pernice, Tobias Rehberger, John Bock, Wilhelm Sasnal and Michel
Majerus. He currently has comprehensive groups of works of 57 artists. Parts of the collection were
previously shown to the public in two museum exhibitions.
The Boros Collection now has a permanent home in a converted bunker in Berlin-Mitte. The first
presentation of selected exhibits, to open in June 2008, will be exclusively works which incorporate
the bunker space itself. Sculptures, room and light installations as well as performance works will
create a new experience of the rooms in the bunker. Most of the works were installed and staged by
the artists themselves. There was no curator. The artists sometimes altered or added to their works
in order to overcome the sometimes difficult space, and some of the works were created especially
for the bunker.
As of June 2008 the private collection can be viewed by prior appointment. There will be two-hour
guided tours every Saturday.
The Bunker
In 2003, Christian Boros bought the 1942-built bunker and started to prepare the conversion of the
building for the collection of contemporary art. Jens Casper from the Berlin-based office Realarchitektur
was entrusted with the conversion. It took a year of planning and four years of conversion;
in addition, the 1000 square meter roof space was turned into a penthouse complete with terraces
and a roof garden.
The new private museum has 3000 m2 of exhibition space, with room heights varying from 2,30 to
13 metres. Many of the low intermediate floors were removed using diamond cutting technology – an
extremely time consuming technique. In addition to this, the concrete floors that were cut out had to
be broken up inside the bunker and then to be removed by hand. The 120 initial rooms were changed
into 80 rooms. There is no daylight. The building’s monumental character has been preserved:
all evidence of the war has been left on the outside and inside one can still see the different uses
of the building.
History of the bunker
The bunker is on the corner of Albrechtstrasse and Reinhardtstrasse in the Berlin-Mitte. It was
built in 1942 as the Reichsbahnbunker Friedrichstrasse (State Railway Bunker). Planning began in
1941 under the supervision of Albert Speer in line with the “Fuehrer’s Immediate Programme” for
the creation of civil air raid defences. The bunker was to offer passengers from the near by Berlin-
Friedrichstrasse railway station protection against Allied air raids. The civil population from the
surrounding residential area and visitors to the German Theatre could also shelter here when the air
raid warning sounded; it could house up to 2000 people. After the German surrender, the Red Army
took over the bunker and used it as a prison.
From the mid-1950s onwards, it was used as a store by the nationally owned Berlin fruit and vegetable
conglomerate. The thick walls and the sophisticated ventilation system provided an almost
constant inside temperature, making it especially suitable for the storage of tropical fruit: in the DDR
the locals also called it the ‘Banana Bunker’.
After reunification, the techno and fetish scene discovered the bunker as a party location. The
“Bunker” was considered one of the most hardcore techno clubs in Germany, with the SM and fetish
parties organised there achieving fame well beyond the borders of Berlin. “Sexperimenta” took place
in the bunker in 1995 and the bunker saw its last techno party in 1996.
It is a square building which is about 38 m long and 16 m tall. Inside, the shelter covers five floors.
There is a separate stairwell on each of the four sides. The external walls are made of 2 m thick solid
reinforced concrete. The original rooms were just 2.3 m high. The roof is 3.10 m thick reinforced
concrete. What was known as “blue concrete” was used to build it. At the time, this specialist concrete
was one of the most resistant materials and only fully hardened after around 30 years. The
surface was left as untreated face concrete with the traces of the boarding still visible. Because of
its historical significance, the building is listed.
Released for publication.
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Contact
Sammlung Boros
Christian Boros/Annette Schryen
Reinhardtstr. 20, 10117 Berlin