The Rote Flora is an old theatre in the heart of the vibrant Schanzenviertel in Hamburg. It was built
in 1888, and was one of the rare theatres to survive the Second World War without major damages.
After the war, and until 1989, it was successively used as a storing facility, a cinema, a
department store, and was meant to be turned into a musical theatre.
This last idea triggered the residents’ fear that such a transformation would cause a gentrification
process and the soaring of commercial and residential rent in the neighbourhood: after a few
successful protests the building finally remained empty.
The city then offered it to be temporally turned into a district centre (although soon declared it
squatted once the six weeks’ lease was over), and the building became an autonomous cultural and
political meeting place.
Since then, the building has been the cause of a political combat between the proponents of its
privatisation to commercial and/or residential purposes and the citizens’ will to keep it as a free,
diverse, creative, but most of all, community space.
A lot of diverse activities happen in the Rote Flora : it provides a roof for alternative concerts,
various taught courses, exhibitions as well as a place of entertainment and sport with its outside
space, climbing wall and skate park. The Rote Flora is famous for being the refuge of political
activists who support altermondialist thoughts, lead movements against nationalism and racism in
Germany, and battle against the privatisation of public spaces.
This building is mostly well-known for representing the resistance against gentrification by
refusing commercialization in a more and more gentrified part of the town.