- Entries -

Conservation versus community in Potsdam (Germany)

Summary

There has been a intriguing debate rumbling on in Potsdam (Germany) these past weeks which nicely captures the dilemmas associated with heritage and conservation. We have been following events in Potsdam's Russian community. Just north of the historic and very attractive town centre is the community of Alexandrowka, a classic Russian-style village. It has a curious history.

There has been a intriguing debate rumbling on in Potsdam (Germany) these past weeks which nicely captures the dilemmas associated with heritage and conservation.

We have been following events in Potsdam's Russian community. Just north of the historic and very attractive town centre is the community of Alexandrowka, a classic Russian-style village. It has a curious history. It was built in the early nineteenth century for a Russian choir that sung to order at the Prussian court. Alexandrowka happens to be a rather nice spot. So we were the first to cheer when it added to the UNESCO World Heritage List.

Potsdam, like nearby Berlin, is very lucky to have a rich network of links, both historical and modern, with Russia. There are thriving, vibrant Russian communities in both cities today. That's the beauty of Alexandrowka - it captures two centuries of Russian settlement in Potsdam. There also is a fine Orthodox church at Alexandrowka. Archpriest Anatolij Koljada lives in a Russian style blockhouse beside the church and presides over the liturgical life of not just the Alexandrowka colony but also the 3000 Russians who today live in Potsdam.

Koljada is keen to see a new Russian community centre built near the church. The Potsdam authorities have declined the request, invoking the UNESCO World Heritage status as grounds for refusing building permission. A quaint fragment of Russia on display abets the agenda of the municipal authorities in Potsdam, who are anxious to promote tourism to the city. But having a real, living Russian community is something of an inconvenience. Anatolij Koljada is determined to press the case for the community centre, arguing (correctly we think) that the preservation of cultural heritage should not necessarily preclude the continuing development of those communities that are the targets of such conservation initiatives.

Nicky Gardner and Susanne Kries
(hidden europe)

Related articleFull text online

From Prussia to Russia: Kaliningrad

With the disintegration of the Soviet Union, the Baltic port of Kaliningrad found itself strangely isolated from the rest of Russia. Hemmed in by the European Union, the city of Kaliningrad is rethinking its role in the modern world. It is a remarkable city in a remarkable region.

Related articleFull text online

Potsdam's hidden history

Amid the parks and palaces of Potsdam (near Berlin) is an area known as the Neuer Garten ('New Garden'). For almost fifty years, part of it was an extraordinary 'forbidden city' - a place reserved for the Russian military and the KGB. hidden europe explores this area through the eyes of one woman.

Related blog post

Out of the ruins: in search of the old Magdeburg

Paul Scraton explores the German city of Magdeburg armed with a map from 1910. Largely rebuilt after the Second World War, Magdeburg's streetscape has greatly changed. The old map is not ideal for navigating the city, but it offers rich insights into the history of Magdeburg.