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Modern architecture
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===New Objectivity (1920–1933) === {{main|New Objectivity (architecture)}} <gallery mode="packed" heights="150px"> File:Ernstmay2.jpg|[[Römerstadt]], [[New Frankfurt|Frankfurt am Main]], by [[Ernst May]] (1927–1929) File: Neues-frankfurt heimatsiedlung.jpg|Heimatsiedlung in [[New Frankfurt|Frankfurt an Main]] by Franz Roeckle (1927–1934) File:Weissenhof photo apartment house Mies van der Rohe Stuttgart Germany 2005-10-08.jpg|Apartment house in [[Weißenhofsiedlung|Stuttgart]] by [[Mies van der Rohe]] (1927) File:Berlin-taut-bauten-naugarderstrII.jpg|Flats in Berlin's [[Prenzlauer Berg]] by [[Bruno Taut]] (1920s) File:Berlin Maeckeritzstr.jpg|Flats in [[Siemensstadt]], Berlin, by [[Hans Scharoun]] (early 1930s) File:Kaufhaus Schocken in Chemnitz 2014.jpg|Former Schocken Department Store, [[Chemnitz]], by [[Erich Mendelsohn]] (1927-1930) </gallery> The New Objectivity (in German Neue Sachlichkeit, sometimes also translated as New Sobriety) is a name often given to the Modern architecture that emerged in Europe, primarily German-speaking Europe, in the 1920s and 30s. It is also frequently called Neues Bauen (New Building). The New Objectivity took place in many German cities in that period, for example in Frankfurt with its [[Neues Frankfurt]] project.
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