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Bonn-Auerberg

Measured against its neighbors, Auerberg has only just left its youth behind and has just grown up, while Bonn-Castell, Graurheindorf and Buschdorf bear the distinctive features of their venerable age. Many centuries there, around 100 years here. Auerberg has borne its name since 1966, derived from old field names for the fields to the left and right of the already Roman Kölnstrasse, not far from the Roman camp.

Auerberg now has around 10,000 inhabitants. In the new development area on the northern outskirts of Bonn you will find a quiet residential area in the immediate vicinity of the Rhine.

In addition, Auerberg has good shopping facilities, secondary schools and the Sportpark Nord with a swimming pool and is characterized by good local transport connections and its flat cycle paths, which can be used to reach Bonn city center in just 15 minutes. At the same time, nearby motorway junctions offer fast connections in all directions, especially to Cologne and Konrad-Adenauer Airport (motorway junction A565).

These are our properties in Auerberg:

  • 34-44 Londoner Strasse
  • Prager Strasse 11-19 – Prague houses
  • Prager Strasse 20-98 – residential courtyards Auerberg
  • Prager Strasse 21-35 – Prager courtyards
Construction

Pragerstraße 21-27 & 29-35 The Prager Höfe represent an ideal-typical living model for single people. They are study objects of individual life plans, located on the outskirts of the city. The Auerberg district of Bonn has a wide range of building types that were particularly tried and tested in the post-war years, with the row house type predominating. In addition, some point buildings set height dominants. More detached buildings can be found in modest residential buildings from more recent times. In this context, the Prager Höfe establish a city model of its own order: the courtyard, a translation of the square into the scale of the house, binds each of the houses into a self-sufficient unit and at the same time links it to the surrounding space. The courtyard houses are each developed on a square floor plan, with the courtyard raised above street level being surrounded by four buildings arranged at an angle. Its removal supports the idea of privatizing the area that can be accessed via outside stairs, which also embodies the center of the four buildings. Each of these houses an apartment on their upper floors; analogous to the gradual privatization of the exterior by raising the courtyard, the public area of the apartment is arranged on the ground floor, while the private rooms are on the upper floor. Below the courtyard, the motif of the common center is repeated in the form of a use-neutral space that is reserved for the residents of the houses. The courtyard houses enter into a dialogue with the neighboring Prague residential courtyards Auerberg through their materiality, but also ideally. The latter also concede a living model based on the coexistence of individual living units grouped around common courtyards. While the focus there is on the variation of the terraced house model, the Prager Höfe offer an alternative model for living alone, in which each resident is assigned their own house within their shared apartment. The individual is a visible part of the city here. The Prager Höfe are located close to the Rhine in a new development area, in a quiet residential area on the northern outskirts of Bonn, in Auerberg. Here you will find plenty of shopping facilities, higher schools and the Sportpark Nord with swimming pool in the immediate vicinity. Auerberg has good transport connections, the center can be reached quickly by bus and train. The A 565 motorway connection is only a few minutes away. Prager Höfe Auerberg, photo: Stefan Müller, Berlin