The Looshaus (also known as the Goldman & Salatsch Building) is a commercial and residential building at Michaelerplatz 3, between Herrengasse and Kohlmarkt, in Vienna. Designed by Adolf Loos and completed in 1912, it is considered a major building of Wiener Moderne.
The Looshaus was a pioneering reinforced concrete building in Vienna; this form of construction made possible large interior spaces and rational grouping of the manufacturing and sales areas, and Loos also used varied ceiling heights to save space. The street-level salesroom was divided by four interior columns into distinct areas, and had oval display windows and furnishings sourced by Loos in England. Three mezzanine levels served by short flights of stairs housed reception and changing rooms above the main sales floor, as well as offices and the accounting department in the centre, and extending on two levels over rented commercial space on the two side streets, store rooms and work rooms for all the stages in the production of clothing. Customer areas were unified by mahogany-clad pillars, consistent marble flooring, and brass; the screened-off production areas were finished in exposed concrete. Two sets of stairs and two elevator shafts served the upper floors, including apprentice instruction and a private vocational school which shared the top floor.
Under the Nazis, the commercial levels of the Looshaus were converted into an Opel showroom. In 1944 the building was affected by a bomb strike on an adjacent building. In 1947 it became a protected monument; it was somewhat unsuccessfully restored in the 1950s and in the 1960s housed a furniture shop. In 1987 the Raiffeisenbank bought it and thoroughly renovated it, restoring the commercial levels to their original appearance. The renovation was carried out under the direction of the architect, publicist and Loos researcher Burkhardt Rukschcio.
In the early 2000s, Designzone Looshaus, a facility designed by Paolo Piva for exhibitions and conferences showcasing Austrian design, opened in the basement of the Looshaus. The winners of the biennial are exhibited there.
In 2022, Rudolf Klingohr produced a TV documentary "Das Looshaus - Die Rettung eines Baujuwels" (The Looshaus - The Rescue of an Architectural Jewel), which once again summarised the history of the conversion in detail.
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