An internationally successful businessman, furniture designer and film director, Ernst Koller shaped the
international aluminium and metal world like no other. The Nestlé administration building in Vevey (1958),
the Iraqi Central Bank in Baghdad, the Hoffman-LaRoche skyscraper, and the World Health Organisation
building in Geneva are just some of his many creations. Among his most important inventions are doubleglazing
(1929), integrated wood and metal windows (1937), light metal windows and facades (1955),
whole-metal facades, prefabricated building, exposed building styles and minimalist skeleton building
styles. The constructionist and pioneer of modern building died in his residence in Binningen (Basel Land)
in 2002.
The innovative spirit of Ernst Koller lives on, supported by the Swiss School for Metal- and Building
Technology and by Berrel Berrel Kräutler Architects. The Ernst Koller Pavilion is intended as an inspiration
for young architects and builders working with metals.
The Ernst Koller Pavilion is located on Riehen Street (Riehenstrasse) in Basel near to the School for
Metal- and Building Technology. The unostentatious, yet distinctive, building stands in striking contrast to
an adjoining baroque garden. The Pavilion stands at an angle to the pavement and forms an ensemble
with three educational establishments, the Vocational School (Allgemeine Gewerbeschule), the auditorium
for the North-West Swiss Institute for Art and Design (Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz für Gestaltung
und Kunst) and the Swiss School for Metal- and Building Technology (Schweizerische
Metallbautechnikerschule).
The Pavilion structure was created from an pre-existing Ernst Koller aluminium H- section. The texture of
the glass exterior is created through a digitalised print of cross-sections of Ernst Koller’s work. The
Pavilion’s exterior is uncluttered and minimalist. The interior, by contrast, offers a richly colourful and
comfortable space with dominant tones of red and a floor notable for its exposed black steel.
The façade is particularly striking due to the interactions between these layered motifs, four consecutive
layers of glass sheeting and the reflected parkland. The Pavilion is lit at dusk from the inside, almost like a
lantern. Funded through the Ernst and Herta Koller-Ritter foundation and by numerous national concerns,
graduates of the Metal- and Building Technology School were significantly involved during the Pavilion’s
planning and subsequent erection. This small Pavilion stands in memory of the inventor’s greatness and
provides learners at various stages with a creative space for exhibitions and innovation.
Stories about Ernst Koller Pavillon (1)
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Our company, Berrel Berrel Kräutler AG, was created in January 2009 through a merger of Berrel Architekten, Basel and Berrel Kräutler Architekten, Zurich by the three architects Jürg Berrel, Maurice Berrel and Raphael Kräutler, with offices in Basel and Zurich. This association resulted in a gen...











