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The terraced house with garden is part of a famous residential estate from the 1920s and serves as a private apartment. The property is part of the Hufeisensiedlung (Horseshoe Estate) in Neukölln-Britz, a listed UNESCO World Heritage site. The house, designed by the German architect Bruno Taut, is sparsely furnished, partly with classics of the 1920s-60s. The house has a lot of original substance, but is not a museum-furnished object. The walls are white, the floors are made of stripped floorboards. The house contains three stories with two rooms each plus a kitchen, a small bathroom (available for the crew) and kitchen. The stairwell is rather steep. The total number of rooms is 6, adding up to 124 sqm, so that the individual size is rather modest. The number of rooms that can be used for photo, film or video productions is subject to negotiation. In front of the house there is a little terrace and a long-stretched garden with lawn, perennial beds and two midsized fruit trees.
Additional location shoots in and around the neighborhood are available and can be discussed with the owners, a architecture loving-couple which is well connected and has published a lot about the iconic ensemble, including the website www.world-heritage-estates-berlin.com, which provides an overview of alternate iconic views in the immediate neighborhood.
Apart from their private home, the owners also run www.tautshome.com – a highly authentic, museum like holiday house, which is furnished in the typical style of emerging 1920s modernism style. This additional location was frequently featured on TV and various design, preservation and lifestyle mags. It provides a time-travel experience and might also be used as a photo-, film, and video-location – compare https://plush74.com/members/tautes-heim/